The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 25, 1905, Page 1

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* G ALL THE NEWS THAT'S RELIA WILL BE FOUND IN THE STAR The Pioneer Qne Cent Paper of the Nor hwest NIGHT EDITION — ANOTHER LITTLE STROLL ABOUT TOWN BY THE MAYOR, THE CHIEF AND DAN DEAN INJURIES FATAL Strange Tale of Duplicity Revealed in This Elopement YOUTHFUL COUPLE DESERT THEIR SWEETHEARTS TO SEEK | marriage, | Young Faulkner and his sehool- | HAPPINESS IN EACH OTHER— HEARTBROKEN SEATTLE | girl pride are due to return to Se-| attle Friday night, under the wing of Blanche’s father, It ts said that young Faulkner comes of a wealthy family in Lexington, Ky GIRL AND JILTED LOS ANGELES LOVER THE VICTIMS OF CRUEL INTRIGUE—READS LIKE A CHAPTER FROM BERTHA M. CLAY but ran away from home when 12 years of age, and has been em | ployed in the Grand Union cafe,| (BY NAN BXYBEE.) room at home, heartbroken, Just; Corner Fourth and Yesler, as & recovering from illness and with | walter during the past few monthe, | A strange story of trusting sim- | this latest shock she has no spirit) Young Frank Steer, the jilted lover | Plictty and of el duplicity ts}to go on with her work, and feels | Of the bride, is maid to be the son that which lies behind the marriage | too humiliated over having been | Of & wealthy Los Angeles family @ Raleigh Faulkner, 21, and] jilted to appear where friends who| J. M. Taylor, father of the Blanche Taylor, 16, which is} knew of her engagement will see| 6irls, is a well known local printer, | scheduled to take place at Van-\ her ‘ Only once since the news of the couver Friday afternoon. The story concerns four young|elopement astounded the Ta people—only one of them their “teens” —and out of the wreck-/ter. That was when J. M. Taylor age there is left a pair of at least father, in his indignation, be- | s, and a pack his grip hastily and rmination to tele the Vancouver ° and} arrested m pur temporarily broken b brace of others whose 1 happi Bess must be sadly marred by the guilty knowledge of bold double @ealing, equaled in its cleverness only by its cruelty For Raleigh Faulkner, the bride groom, has been the affianced hus- band of his bride's older sister since last June, and even while Blanche Was packing her grip and hiding it fm the bushes ready for the elope- Ment, Raleigh was whispering Words of love and devotion into the @ar of Ruth, her sister, the trust fag girl who was still happy in the thought of becoming his bride next June. ‘Through all of the several months of Faulkner's clandestine courtship graph have the pair sue them and bring both back a thrash inch of his life. No, father will said Ruth, quietly. “You must not young Faulkner within “| that, Think what it would S | | | | | that not do,” to Blanche—it would dishonor her and just about kill her. young to know any better father. Let them be married, as she said in the fetter, at Van couver, then they can come back and everything will be all right.” No word of complaint was ut tered by the girl whose sweetheart had been stolen by her younger ais She was too @f Blanche, he had continued to ter. Her thought was all for the make poetic love to Ruth in the happiness and the reputation of family parlor. managing by Blanche, who had not even remem Blanche’s clever assistance to bered, in her selfish little note of @match surreptitious moments with | farewel! left in the family milk Blanche herself and to keep the pail, to write a single word of sym-| trusting oider sister in complete ig Borance of the subrosa love affair Meanwhile Blanche was busy with a little duplicity of her own aside from the betrayal of her sis ter. Shewas formally engaged to ® youth of 17 summers in Los An geles, one Frank E. Steer, who was couver to be married.” pouring out his impetuous first, That was all love to her in tri-weekly letters.) It was Ruth herself who found After the clopement it was found the note, and of what she thought that Blanche had written him that and felt when she read it she has she was tired of going to school, spoken nothing. It is her own bat and that if he didn't come at once tie, and she is fighting it out by/ and take her away she would elope | herself bravely and without com with Faulkner, who had told her | plaint he loved her. In reply to this the) When the indignant father of the Los Angeles Romeo wrote that if | two girle heard Ruth's words of im she did he would come up here and | plied renunciation, and that it was kilt Faulkner. Young Steer, with a|her wish that Blanche be allowed long sword strapped to his side, is | to marry Ruth's faithless fiance, bis probably now on his way up from anger cooled. His gentle, unselfish California, bent upon gouging out elder daughter had settled the the heart of young Faulkner. whole matter. Meanwhile Ruth Taylor, just r “Do you really wish it, Ruth?" he covering from s long iliness and/asked, and when Ruth swallowed completely crushed by the duplic-| the lump in her throat and nodded | ity and the unfaithfulness of her | her head affirmatively, he went out lover, and by the knowledge that/to send a telegram and to follow her beloved younger sister had | the runaway couple, it was true, but eruelly betrayed her, lies huddled |to bring them back to Seattle man fn the corner of a couch in her and wife, and not to prevent the} pathy for the trusting girl whose heart was to be broken and whose pride crushed by the elopement “Lam tired of going to school,” wrote Blanche. “Raleigh says he joves me, and I think I can learn to love him. We are going to Van ~ The THE STAR'S CARTOONIST HAS BEEN RE FIRST ON THE is "ONE OF ATT Jacob Taggerson, a Ballard street commissioner, died Thursday night 12 o'clock from injuries received ‘hile dumping garbage from a seow into the sound When the scow was towed out into the bay far enough ‘Taggerson went around to the back of it to release the windinss that holds the dumping platform. He did not get away quick and windlass arm the two| struck him and knocked him down | night on the platform. OTRERY WITH THE LATEST NEWS E STAR'S POLICIES, eattle Star WASHINGTON FRIDA Harry Gibbs, who was with | @erson at the time, became uneasy when he did not return, and made 4 search for him. He found Mr Taggerson laying on the platform unconscious, Gibbx landed him at the Fourth «a nue boat house and summoned Dr. Stuart upon examination that bis leg was badly broken and that bis skull was! fractured. He was taken to bis home, where he died about mid Hq was about 55 years old and was ried LOG FZ [eo Dt ARMY SCANDAL, Reed Is Wanted In Many Places PEACE IS LONDON, Aug. 26 think “Twas a dark and stormy knight/tant places were saying naughty | things about him and his autograph in their botel registers and bis un paid bills im their cash registers. who appeared at The Star office Friday, one certain Addison Archer Diptomada, in in how this Reed by name, who left the Hote! Vag%e and distant rumors which city that peace Lincoln on his shoulder blades andjare gradually assuming tangible) assured. — heels, figuratively, recently and per-|form are trickling into Seattle manently which indicate that the local an-| TOKIO, Aug. 25.—Unless the Rus He was dark and stormy because ‘The Star, Thursday, had told how his wife had draped the cunningest saffron-colored shade over his star-| board banquet lamp. and how it feeis to leave a fashionable hote' towns are interested financially in| Washington show an inclination to the whereabouts of this fat Falstaff-| really come to terms within the next| an knight now in Seattle's midst | few days, the conference will be and while it is just awful naughty | brought to an abrupt close. to say it, Reed doesn't seem to be} From high sources it is learned) suddenly with unpaid bills behind. | the least bit anxious that they|that the mfkado is incensed at the! Reed, who recently sold the local| should know just where he is for| present delay, and has come to the| Hearst paper a $350 gold brick,|any particular length of time, and|conclusion that Russia is merely | laboled “Bucceasful Advertising” |and it's a cinch that Seattle will| using the delay of a peace confer-| (nee files of the Times for the past | soon lose the genial gentleman with | ence as a means of reorganizing her | month), who also calls himself Allen | the gloomy stage setting around his| army and navy for a further strug Weet and the Lord knows how many | “spot light.” | gle. other names, wanted to borrow ten| In justice to Mra. Reed, be it said| Reports from the field are that large fron dotiars, and he told such | that she vigorously denies that she| Russia is rushing thousands of men a lovely story that he almost got it.| hit him in the optic with a parlor| into Manchuria, The Japanese com pesca of a number of eastern|sian peace plenipotentiaries at| | ONDON THINKS ASSURED | the clouds. portant peace developments de- tained him. Kn route to the station Komura’s automobile broke down. The train was held for bim. OYSTER BAY, Aug. 25.—Kaneko visited the president this morning. When asked what the outlook for ce was he replied like the weather,’ glancing at “What do you think of Lame dortfs statement that Russia won't pay nor cede any land?” I think be is making a mistake but the statement seems to be official and I guess I will have to swallow it The conference with the president lasted an hour. He probably would have gotten it| lamp or a steamer trunk, but she| manders are becoming restless and WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 25 if The Star man hadn't received a| doesn't say she's sorry hoe got it.| have urged the mikado to do some-|.m.. ‘state department w ae tip from ©. A. Harrison, manager of| With her both the incident and| thing, When Russia consented to| (rh tale department was ‘uisomm the Driard hotel, at Victoria, B. C..| “hubby's” eye are closed | the armistice she was probably fi ie eg coe gh we og that Reed was a hotel “dead beat.”| Mrs. Reed has added considerable| uring on the delay she so much |(hOt , ihe, Beaman, “nnn and if The Star hadn't also been in-| to the non-plussedness of her “suc-| needs, and it is believed that the Ban Francis has been selsed by Russian commissioners are prepared formed, by wire from Tecoma, that to haggle over terms indefinitely Reed kk” the Tacoma hotel there for about $10. ~ Besides being a “successful adver tiser,” Reed seems to be an “X Raise” expert and was very much grieved to find that the fish season ceostul advertizing” Addison by carefully secreting herself in one of the down-town hotels and insists that she is going to stay in hiding| until her financially frenzied “hub by” has ceased from troubling And, meantime, Reed is going about PORTSMOUTH, N. 1 A hiteh of such gravity has o« curred in the peace negotiations | that the proposed meeting on Satur Aug was closed in The Star office and|io here, and lo there, longing and| day may be postponed. There are that “suckers” wouldn't bite Hejlooking for the companion of his| various views in regard to what felt pained to think that cruet hotell joys and sorrows, with a lump in| transpired, tome eaying that the managers in other nearby and dis- his throat and a bump on his eye. | negotiations will continue despite the apparent adamant both nati wie * | off than ever * MAY AND DECEMBER FIN- #| Korostovitz announced this morn * ALLY W *| ing that it was not definitely de * LL. O. Lander, th year-old #| cided to meet Saturday. “But,” he *% Romeo, has finally succeeded #| added, “unless Japan recedes from * in marrying 16-year-old Lizzie #| her position there will be a meeting * Alexander *| Saturday and that will be the last After being refused the matri- #| one. There |e always a possibility * monial fervieo by Justice *| of mediation of the powers or some Knudson, of the four-|* Davis, of Seattle, they went to *| new move of the president.” British bark Hawthorne|* Vashon island Friday and were #| Sato thinks differently, He says now loading lumber at Port) * joined in holy wedlock there *| the meeting will be held as sched 4 was arrested Thursday by|* by Justice Van Linden. # | uled, and that others will follow. ir Z Teusenrink, of the) * * Japan, however,” says Sato, “has a c . at the Labor) 44 4 ee Me ee ye ey) sald the last word about Sakhalin ar breaking a*gov- < - - The envoys were constantly in nent seal apd stegling, and also) Rabbi Jogeph, who has bi communication with theie govern ashore contraband | ing for several weeks in the ments lant night. Komura and Sato jaroat be been placed in bond | returned to Seatttle on Friday went to Manchester this morning as a 1 while it was at Port! will officiate at th Temple guests of that city for a visit of her jin Hirsch on Friday evening. factories M }coor to the statement of the - Minister Witte said this after ‘eials, between $200 and $400; ST. LOUIS, Mo. Aug. The} nood that he had not received def. Worth of goods were stolen by the|Hva Alma was released after an jn-|inite instructions from St. Peters spection. The craft started to tow| burg, but admitted that there was the showboat up the river, but ran|@ probability that Russia woul short of coal and tied up at the bank | modify her position on the question to cut wood, Reports spread from | of reimbursing Japgn. the nearest village that she carried fever retugees, and no town would] PORTSMOUTH, N, H., ug. 26, allow ber a landing. No one would | Practically all of Komura’s suite a®- took them ashore at and disposed of them oe ee to ease nt ch, b & boat for Seattle. “teed the government men also at Chiet isl position of| Other high diplomate | CRRA ee hee | eclare that a settlement is further) Japanese. No reason or details are given. Pe’ BURG, Aug In regard to the statement published in America yesterday to Ambassador Lamadorff saying that pertaint isi will net pay an indemnity nor cede territory, the foreign of fice today denies emphatically that Lamadorft spondent, vd #Aye nO Kuch statement was is 1. Nevertheles vanined press agent of the foreign office r iteraten the sta nt that Russia will not pay the indemnity ived a corre ar OYSTER BAY, L. L, Aug Baron Kaneko returned from Saga Hill in great good humor, and anked if it was to be peace or war, he said “It will be say.” He added will make 1 wan has cost her more when deadlock, 1 should mphatically,“Japan more concessions, ‘The $900,000,000 to date. A few papers say she has offered to m peace for $600,000,000, Iwn’t that great enough concession? We will make pe if Russia wants it, but cannot give up everything. What we want is peace with justh for Japan, and honor for Russ#la He said he didn’t bring any com- munication from the ‘Tokio govern ment and sarcastically told the newspaper men that they had the power to make peace or war MANCHESTER, N Baron Korura and party are here ests of Th an Shaw, They are Viriting the cotton mills, om corted by Governor Mclean and other officials, They were *enter- oar enough to speak to her. A|companied him to Manchester, At : f six are aboard, all having the last minute Takahira decided Inspector Loftus, ven all the credit for cer Ke a morning paper, had | crow ¢ . wgptever (0 do with it, health certificates, not to Ko. tt te believed that ian tained at luncheon and will return to Portsmouth tonight. THE REPORTS OF THE SALACIOUS H., Aug. 25.—! TAGGART TOKIO, Ave A long conte ence fas held here this afternoon be tween Premier Katsura and the sec retary general for China of the for sign @ffice. Marquis Ito declared that the conference will have a bear ing “pen the Portsmouth peace conference RRR RRR RRR . * ® NEW YORK, Aug. 2%5.—Leo # # Stevens, the Baldwin Airsbip * *# company, and Roy Knaben- * |& Niauer have arranged for a race * # over this city within the next # & three works * . * [RRR ae ‘Fight Against Graft ‘Begun by Nominating Jerome For Mayor | NEW YORK, Ang. 25.—District Attorney W. T. Jerome was offered the nomination for mayor by the city committee of the citizens’ union jast night by a vote of 30 to 16 | The executive committee of the republican city committee yesterday decided in favor of fusion against Tammany in the coming mayoralty campaign. All anti-Tammany or ganizations were requested to meet at the republican club August 31 CARGO EXPLODES NEW YORK, Aug. 25. Struck by lightning during a terrific storm which swept over the lower part | of the r bay at midnight, the ship Marlborough Hill, laden with naphtha, lying in the stream mid way between Tompkinaville and | Stapleton, was burning early this morning, lighting up the bay from the Battery to Sandy Hook Five minutes after the alarm was |given one of the hatches, about midships, blew up. The flames poured through the hatehes, sprang into the shrouds and. began to eat away the sails and cordage. these burned the fire settled down into the hold, where explosion fol lowed explosion. DROWNED IN CLOUDBURST DENVER, Aug. 25.—A at Tabasco, near " floated the town tnd drowned nine persons. All communication with the town was cut off almost imme diately after the flood, and no far- | ther detaila have been learned, Ta- basco is a cont mining camp yn th extreme southern part of the’ state. cloudburst Inidad, Colo., has ! PENVPR, Colo, Aug. 26The latest reports of the coudburat at Delagua canyon give 16 lives as be- ing Jost and 18 houses swept away. Communication is not yet restored. It was found | After | THE STAR PRINTS THE NEWS iT DOES NOT SUPPRESS IT. The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares tu Print the News CENTS MONTH PER VOL. 7. NO. 155 25 AllKindsofGambling Going on in Seattle (BY DAN DEAN.) | DAN DEAN SHOWS MAYOR BALLINGER AND CHIEF DELANEY, Good evening, Mayor Bal | SOME PLACES WHERE FESTIVE TIGER 18 BUCKED, AN® Good evening, Chief of F laney! ' . PRESENTS HIS COMPLIMENTS TO THE RAINIER CLUB | Ready for another little constitu | tional? Weill, where shall we go this time? | wa Nice fe | No, much obliged, Mr. Ballinger; | m arte t, Mr nger. | really, f don’t care for automobile S the rides, Thank you kindly, chief; I ly won row. We'll loaf er attend the theater But, ride| it, too Something may, to Alki?) Now, that sounds invit-; And that's going some! ing, but I've a better idea. We'll stroll around a bit and seq = if we can't make a little money bucking the festive ter. | Beg your pardon, chief! No place in Seattle where we can gamble? Ob, well, of course you ought to] know, but there are some things | that even the wily police do not get} it to. We'll drop into Mullen & O'Brien's! woosTER. Ohio, Aug. 25.—Con-, them.” saloon, 111 Yesler, near Occidental, /tinuing her testimony WOOSTER, Aug. 25.—"Aunt” Lye and sec what's doing ternoon, Mra. Emma | tle, on the stand again this morning, Before we give the signal on the/; ‘ageart household said that Captain Tagart was drunle door at the end of the bar, we'll) night, in Manila, it was so hot that| many times at Fort Thomas, Fort Mine up and have « drink Captain Taggart told us to sleep in| Leavenworth and Manila, but What'll it be, mayor? And you,|(he dining room because that was| that he “always was @ perfect gen~ chief? the coolest place in the house tleman when full in Kentucky.” Charley, give the mayor a bromo| «,augustina, the Filipino maid lly” Taggart was on the stand Selzer sour in a long glass, and Tom! sjept there, also. At about midnight! this afternoon and described the wants pousse cafe with a dash of) | peeked and xaw the captain crawl{incident which the attorneys calb 4 ima under the dining table, and then Ii the “Love in the dark affair.” He J raw Augustina ¢ liow and also{said he took Mrs. Tagart to @ Now for the back room go under the same table. dance and had lunch in a dining Tap, tap-tap, tap! The door opens| “jovery day or two I would see|/room. They went into a dark sit- and in we go. We see a fairly g00¢-|them slipping around on their tip-| ting room where they whispered so aot Mean ae six by nine, fur “s and locking the doors after|as not to wake mother Taggart. nished with handsome, dark furni / ture, and in the center is the reer =a lation green-covered poker Grand Robber Thief” each deal means a contribution to the kitty. Yeu, chief, it is « professional game, not a friendly little bout mt drinks. Don't care to play here? Very well, we'll wander up to Second | | across from the Butler hotel and] |drop in at Gottstein’s cigar store. | EXCITED MR. BEAUDRY BOUGHT A BIG MUDHOLE FOR $3,000, In the rear we find a fairly stiff gamo of poker. the players are so| THINKING HE WAS GETTING A FINE RANCH—-HE TOLD engrossed that up an we enter they barely glance THE EQUALIZERS HIS TRO UBLES ‘ Way up Second, on the left hand _ am side, not an awfu ‘om a he bb aivesaaaaa So gt sly Up. ‘To ve dogs with ze grand mud-;the volatile ranchman, with the stairs an alleged club occupies « ze crepaud farm! ze bum] French frapped language, for # mo- suite of rooma. We can't enter|fanch! Sacre, take him, keep him,| ment, and told him that they were there, because the men in charge French gentleman, | am rob!”| not to blame because he had beem are very careful who is admitted the bad with ze low thief, | cheated . him that me have robbed!” “Ventre Bleu, I, I, ze honorable, But If we could, we would see one of| Such and similar expletive sput innocent, I am rob!” he broke the fastest games in the city, in| teTings were given vent to by an ex | forth and added I geet you zo which many well known business {Citable little Frenchman, named M.) wet, ze mud-hole, ze frog-pond. men participate. Beaudry, at the Friday morning ses-| You, you tak him, I am seek of 20 Oh, I forget to put a dollar on a f the board of equalization. | bargain. Too much by five hundred i while we were in Mullen &|. Beaudry, according to his story,|eet ees not worth what you say cote O'Brien's. Too bad! He looks like|2@4 come out to Osce thisjees. Tak him. ze wi ked, ze fou® a yinner to me. One of your | (ounty, with a well-filled wallet in|smelling bole of mud. I hay enough, sieaths, chief, sent out the tip. on | Tesponse to a glowing ad. published | I am cheat! him. A seven-to-one-shot, too. by a Seattle real estate dealer. The Gentlemen, I am cheat, and v Didn't know there was any book-| !atter succeeded in selling Beaudry] humiliate! In ze hole of mud, making going on in town, Mr. Bal-|%" Alleged valuable ranch, consist-| plant ze little seed. Ze seed he go | linger? Didn't you, either, chief?|!"& Of two 40-acre sections, for/out of sight, and I watch for Ask any of your detectives—almost | $3,000 to come up, but he come not. Ze any, | mean—they ought to be able As usual with the “easy mark * | seed he rot in ze ground, which ees to put you on, inasmuch as almost | Baudry had never seen the ranch | also rotten, in ze mud in which 7@ all of ‘em play the ponies every |UBtl he had taid down his hard-|beeg bull-frog love to grow. Tak ze day. Just drop into Williams’ sa ed francs, centimes and sous,|hole of mud, and I, I, ze innocent loon on First, or Clancy's on | #"d then it was too late to “kick M. Beaudry, who am rob, I go back | Washington, and you'll run acrose|. It Ws found that the ranch had/to that dear Paree, with sudden- one or more members of the de- | 0e® S0ld for $3000 and they thought ness!” tective force udry should be assessed at about| After “joshing” Beaudry for @ patronizing the books Yes, they also hang about Mullen & O'Brien's a good deal I venture to say that about every member of the Seatt detective force knows where there are a half dozen professional gambling games going on And I also venture to say, Mayor Ral Mnger that many a good five-dollar capes No Trace Found of a Missing Ballard Girl Beaudry was summoned be-| while, the board assessed the rancla board and the fun began. | for $300, and he was partially paci- dieu, eight hundred-twenty | fied. The ranch proves to be noth- ze miserable cur, ze robbaire|ing but a low, sunken swamp, ine liar-cheat, conspue him! 1| capable of cultivation and practical- ly worthless except, as Beaudry said, for a frog farm. Fs dollar, thief am enrage. The board succeeded in subduing Pinkertons. Now, mayor, what's talking so sharply to isn’t his fault. The chief is one of| the best fellows on earth; that's| just where he is weak. He's got a| heart inside of him as big as all| the use of Tom? It out-doors and he just simply can't on Ral Where is little Gladys May Mich- Jof the hired assassin, who, after tak- ink gions of the men working} sison of Ballard? ing a pot-shot in the dark at his oo | ‘The tlie police cannot locate] victim, grappled with him and stab Tom's too good a fellow for the il the child, whose mother is now a]bed him 19 times in the head with s. mn easy,” is what the fly| fugitive from justice and charged|a Jackknife. The first biow broke But— | with the forcible seizure of her 4-/ the blade, which was afterwards lo= One of these days Honest Tom |7°Ar-0l4 GauaMter a von neg glerynphennatten rT ee preepgec! Cog dh bag on bis ear, | man has been seen near the Provi-| Mra, Michelson is said to have com ‘Geek caisenian Will be] gence hospital, on Sixth and Madi-|afterwards confessed to her share in t stirred—yes, considera- | gon the plot, but Michelson would not aphiront | Minnie Michelson is the divorced | prosecute either Penton or his wifes Tn Gener, Theis me | wife of Adolph Michelson, who was|and lived with her three months aft- take if i ¢ might | warded the custody or Httle Gladys | erwards, until she secured a divorce, ake a walk down Yesler and see | nearly two years ago. Michelson allowing the action toe go the Chinamen gamble. There are| his ts not the first sensational | by default several well-equipped joints down | incident in the Michelson hous enton was held at the city jail eee under police protection hold, for Seattle detectives were|for four days and nights without Oh, yes they are, chief—and when | once called to the Ballard home to| charge, but refused to say a word im I say under police protection, I investigate a supposed burglary.| regard to the matter MEAN IT: Ihe burglar was T. & Pento At that time he was a waiter in Take, for instance, Louis King, | ox-convict, who is now said the Queen City restaurant on Ocel= who makes a fortune each vear| wearing the stripes peculiar to }dental, Mrs. Michelson was taking from his place. Do you think for| Quentin, the California penitentiary. |care of ladies’ wraps at the Third a minute that he could continue in|” Gity Detectives Corbett, Freeman | Avenue theater, After they met his business without the police | and Hubbard and ex tive Lane| Mrs, Michelson’s love for her knowing it? And do you imagine | have stated that Penton was a hired | band turned to hatred, and she is al- for an instant that he is being al-| assassin and that he ambushed him- ed to have agreed to ald in thé lowed to run just because he | self in the hallway of the Michelson to murder her nusband jort of chap? home, armed to the teeth, where he| Into such hands has Gladys May, NOT ON YOUR LIFE Jassaulted Michelson on that night,| Michelson fallen, and yet Adolph He has to cough up just the same] at the alleged instigation of Mra.| Michelson has stated that the moth= as do Mullin & O'Brien, and Gott-| Michelson, who had ente into a|er is entitled to the child if she loves stein, and Clancy, and the rest; | conspiracy with Penton to kill her| it enough to wrest it from hir just the same as did Scotty Fergu-| husband and secure $2,200 life in- he local police believe that thé son t fore things got too warm and which had been deeded to] woman and her child are on thelr surance jhe bad to'clone apt her. The plot failed, but MYchelson | way to join the convict when he is 1 know of only one gambling | aimost met with death at the hands | released from the California prison, house in the city, Mayor Ballinger where the games are running un-| = molested without digging up for | and in the city several natives and mclented SEA DISASTERS [27 2m’ aa AND THAT'S THE RAINIER dine Heroic efforts are being made tq CLUB! place the disease under control, ‘ It goes without saying that there MANILA, Aug. The cruiser ae - saan are big doings at this club, In fact, | Rainbow, the flagship of the Phil- SINKS wi some games are pulled off there|ippine squadron, with Rear Ad- that remind one strongly of the|miral Reiter on board, went ashore this morning at the mouth of the good old days in Hot Springs, Ark when “Colly” Ullman and his broth. | Agusan river, Butuan bay, in er, and Caesar Young, and old | Northern Mindanao, TOKIO, Aug “Tim” Byrnes, who used to run the wary transport Ki New York police, and the Pullmans| NEWPORT, R. I, Aug, 26.—After used to gather about the board and | colliding with and damaging the {stack up a few thousand on {little kerosene ofl schooner N. 8 ‘card! | Gallup, of New York, the battleship Of course, they don’t go so strong | Kearsarge arrived in the harbor last lision with the British along on Aug sea. One hundred and twenty-sevem invalided Japanese soldiers were drowned, | jat the Rainier club, but when old {night with the disabled craft and ‘seein Jakey Furth ang Jim MeKlroy andj her evew of two. others get going the playis worth “a pesecinercensie WEARERS Sonne: watching anyway j ‘ : | But say, they ought to have Billy CHOLERA ee ae sedis cs | Sutherland up there to make the fant enone int ‘game complete, They tell me, Meee ae. CLEVELAND, 0. Aus. 24.—Mrea, chief, that not long ago Billy and Dick Argyle, the ,bookmake know, got together in Billy's ¥ MANILA, Aug. 26.--Cholera has broken out In thik elty, Two sq diers at Camp MeKinley have di ig repo Hanne, widew of the late senator, who is very }!! at Bar bor, Mi d as being better, 4

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