The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 26, 1905, Page 1

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FIRGT ON THE STRERT WITH THE LATEST NEWS THE STAR PRINTS THE NEWS, . THE NEWS THAT'S R WIL BE FOUND IN THE 8 ONE OF THE STAR'S POLICIES. iT DOES NOT SUPPRESS IT. The Pioneer One Cent c -_ i The Only Paper in Seattle Paper of the Northwest 1e eS al eC ; is i r That Dares to Print the News _NIGHT EDITION. ATTLE, WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, AUGU IN MONDAY’S STAR DAN DEAN WILL TAKE THE MAYOR AND CHIEF ON ANOTHER PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOUR OTEL MANAGER IS SUED CAPTURED Is Seattle Clearing House | Pactfie Goaxt Steamship company, | ...Th* a*Fest of two men by the 1o-| POLICE UNEARTH WHAT APPEARS TO BE REVOLTING TRADE m oo cal pol fon day and subsequen has beer captured in Bering wea by |42\ belles on Friday and subsequent IN HUMAN SOULS—GIRLS ENTICED TO LEAD LIVES oF HAS. E. PERRY, THE GENIAL BONIFACE OF THE RAINIER the Japgpese for carrying contra | Jorsopments nave revealed mo an band of rf to a Russian port. She * SHAME IN ALASKA GRAND HOTEL, IS MADE DEFENDANT IN A SENSATIONAL was earring @ cargo of supplies to ing ts in the history of Beatth : SUIT BROUGHT AGAINST HIM BY MRS. GRACE NEWHALL, Py eget vek. ‘i Chief Delaney’a men claim that] the first degree after the death off Clarke found the trunks to be ake ceteris te recently. /they have unearthed a gigantic! Joy, but a jury acquitted her. Mre.| tagged “Valdez, Alaska,” but on Sat CASHIER OF THE DELMONICO RESTAURANT—SHE WANTS atte. ond between Be-| scheme by which young Seattle girls] Robb learned from her daughter|urday they had been removed. It ie VOL. T 26, 190 25 CENTS PER MONTH nh Francise d. Je ee ly the Spiller Willamette, but wes) jinska for immoral purposes earthed the Vile plot by which a| It le current report ot peih head ked a few yoars ago, salve : poral DUE arth \ p y which «| # current report at police heads Perch perme At 4:46 o'clock on Friday after-| dozen or more victims were to have| quarters that the two men under SPSS EEE REE REECE REE RS and puréhased by the Moran Bros | noon City Detective Charley Phil-|been shipped north on the steamer|arrest are but lay figures in the * company, Who later sold her to the ae a pe e, Be Iphin at her next sailing date, An| scandal and that the real erimin Mrs. Grace Newhall, # Pa: v r « dm * r iminale lips, Humane Officer Cle F praincice ‘fic Coast company, who re. t Sprengle and Patrolman C. G.| investigation conducted by the po-|are lying low until the troub! ® Defendant Charles BE. Perry. ® Despondent because of domentic that Dougherty attempted hig jife|2&m@ed Ber the Montara, Sho was| fii) VPecnmie Aly EetrOlan lithe Giant vembeed Sx.Gos capi pena aver meernty ® Bult Breach of Promine, * Datei: dortoke operated for some time under char-|\ 01 “rented 0. We Ma ne of il-|of th: plotters and their victims on| ‘These loca! slave traders are “e of va-| the eve of departure charged with having established a ainst him,| Patrolman C, G, Carr was sta-| systematic clearing house for young police have been un-| tioned at the Louvre saloon, at First] girls and received big prices fron ‘ ¢ any of the Intended | and Madison, to watch the rooming | the keepers of Alaskan dance halle vietins wh: Id lay Marvin | house above, as the police had been | and dens of vice for their harvest of liable to a more serious charge |informea that a room there was to| human lives. At 7:20 o'clock the same officers|be the rendezvous. Someone “tip-| When searched at police head= Robert MeNell, a local sa~| ped off’ the police plans, and al) that| quarters a lot of pasteboard cards who was promptly batled| could be learned was that one girl| bearing Marvin's full name were out by an unknown man, who put) had cor to the pointed place,|found on the prisoner. They read | up $100 for his release, McNetl will| but that whe left hurriedly after alas follows alwo have to defend himself a consultation with a “stall.” adie Minit ie edie tein edie tata ea Grand. # | troubles, James Dougherty, 35, at- bsanenginge ter to various companies, but war urant, ® etek eR ARR RA | later wold to the Pacific Coast com jtempted suicide by the gas route |» pany, Who are the present own ly Saturday nforning * LONDON, Aug. 26.—It te re # | Bho left San Francisco on July 9 Dougherty rooms at the residence | # ported from St. Petersburg tha’ with ber cargo for Petropavlovek of A. J, Lee, 806 Jackson, Karly in| @ 1,000,000 men will be mobil Captain Reilly, the master of the son = es the Lees - ~~ s "| & ized shortly to be sent tothe) Montara, is one of the best known and traced the same to Dougher Grace Newhall, daughter of J. E.| I learned to love him an only ® Wo-| poom, where the man oatey “ wb front in Manchuria. ¥ son eepins by Fn Fetifie coast ‘Hull, ee mae a Clear ree fae who has reached my a#¢ ©87/ stretched out on the bed, almost} SHAH ORARERRERE OS Wi INTON, Dc. he _ Festaurant, filed a breach of prom. | love. | ‘Ash ; 2 dee sult against Charlies B. Perry According to the charming widow, ae Re are ves gare a informed Manager of the Rainier-Grand hotel, | Perry was there with bells when tt noow tdken ee Anstrata oy et ® His Occupation steers Manager Raiule fame at Valdes, A cho ® Her Former Occupation ........ .Cashier Delmonico Rew “ wranecy haw b ae wo fo able to i on placed « . SERRE REESE EERE RAR ARR RRR * * * * Late Saturday afternoon Mra} “Every day we were together and | A l6-year-old negro bey, whe haw been attending hich school and@whe Rories was summoned and, after working over Dougherty for an nd one of the best-known hotel | came to doing the Lotharlo act. He} pour, aucceeded in saving his life le charged by hi " a charge of vagrancy | The fallure resulted in Sergeant yon eceeded : on h ia € ed b view » mothe: it rites u es cre’ lmen in the northwest. ‘The allega-|sent candy and Mowers and other! Detective Corbett investignted the| having atolen an i “r oe yee a the aastionn , el yon-|,, The, arreete were not made until | Sprengie bringing Mrs. Robb before vost W. Meer oes Hons contained in the complaint are | tributes dear to the feminine heart, | case from her, was let o6t dm. probatinc euak qo me Te eae Mra. Gertrude Robb appeared before| the state authorities to ask for a|*® lonaire. Looking for some- | as jet ot 7 jon 6 officers| ” » een | ® one to love et's cq SGensatiorial to a degree, and cover | but, even after he had proposed and| Ar the Lee residence the suicide! hy Judge Frater on Saturday morn- and have ne money. The boat | Crist Deputy Prosecutor Miller on| formal complaint against Marvin ‘Cai s100,000,006- tin os ed. Capital $100,000,000—In my dreams, Kind regards to all friends and knockers. Not married and out for a good time.” “ that Marvin|and MeNetl, but os her daughter rried, she wan 4 riday, complatr had enticed her daughter away from | wae of age and & period of alleged Romeo andj had been accepted, he was not In-| theory was vigorously dent Dullet stunts starting last Decem-| clined to hie himeelf to a jewelry _ ber. atore and select a solitaire. i} home and was about to ship her and| nied a complaint, although Deputy ccording to Mrs. Newhall's Everything went along perf: | rried and single, to| Prosecutor Miller asked the police tly | 5 five othe charges, her life has been wrecked | lovely,” sald Mra Newhall, “until | 4 4 dance halls in Alaska to hold the two men a charge of by the fickleness of Perry, who. | Mr. Perry's father died in Daven- 1 ~€ inner s ro er Mra. Robb, it will be remembered, | vagrancy pending a more thorough | elaims, paid court at her throne j port, Ia. He went there to attend phot and fatally wounded George | investigation. had won her trusting heart | the funeral and learned that his | Joy, a steamboat man, on the ¢ Later in the day Humane Offtcer| It is supposed that he produced un < | then coolly threw her over like | parent had left him a consi Jerable | 3 n dock tm June, 1904, becan ahe| cae learned that five trunks had/|the cards at chance meetings with @ischarded glove estate, lear by her daughter's co ~ | been delivered at the rear of the Re- | innocent girls, who were taken in Newhall was, until last Jan- Why this should have influenced sion that Joy had ruined her, Mra#.| gina bar, on South First, on Friday| by the catchy style of the paste- y if | wary, cashier in her father’s res-| him, I cannot understand I only Robb was charged with murder tn ning. board. ; aurant. the Delmonico. Her stat-| know that on Kis return he was not wenque figure, beautiful blonde hair | the same man (BY NAN BXY@EE.) COURT STARTED OUT TO BE SEVERE (ON “BAD BOY OF BAL. handsome features made her| “He kept away from me, and no - 4 the object of much admiration on | longer seemed glad to be with me.”| The heavy hand of the law fell LARD,” BUT RELENTED BEFORE MUTE APPEAL OF “LiT- part of the many male patrons In addition to charging Perry ua the restaurant. | with having refused to keep hia} “Pm Levi Williams, aged 12, and TLE FELLOW One bright December morning | promise with her, the plaintitt/ ‘Charles Claude Williams, aged 14, Satur E. Perry happened to drift | charges him with baving ruined her file or something: maybe a stick }to the reform school, where you Imto the Delmonico in search of | honor. day morning in the juventie court.|of dynamite or two,” replied the] will mot only have no chance to rt for the inner man, having} She wante $25,000 lad make bed boyk of them, but will ot the tempting dishes of his| Perry will fight the case to «| Half a doren other Ballard ur-| Claude Wheeler, who, it appear yourself, learn fome useful trade Own hotel. He knew J. E. Aull,/ finish, so he says. He does not/cbins, of the same ne were led, had received the stolen goods! Then, if you make a good record Proprietor of the Delmonico, and, |deny having been in her company, | &!¥en sound lectures by Judge Fra-|and helped to hide them under al over there maybe I will make an after one glance at the charming |nor having played a Lothario en-|‘¢r, and either on probation or wn-|shack in his mother's back yard, | order Igter to let you out and give eashier, asked for an introduction. jgagement with the handsome |4¢T promise to walk the straight | conducted himaelf quite differently.| you egother chance” oi Mrs. Newhall claims it was a case | widow, but be says that he never | 84 narrow path in future, were ul-| At first he appeared stolcally in-| fame tender chord in the hard.| 1% * 'audable effort to assess cor-) TAXES RAILROAD FRANCHISES $70,000 AND MAKES OTHER 4, but tng. has #ent to the prize court Seer etaeee Sete REE EE ERE HH _ Of Jove at first sight. intended to marry her and that she | /owed to go In fear and trembling. | different, and seemed as hardened| ened heart of ome of the worst of|Pormtions and firms heretofore es RAISES WHICH MAKES A TOTAL CLEAN-UP OF $200,000 FOR “We started to go together right | never expected him to. Levi Williams, who appeared to/ as young Williams, but when the} Ballard’s bad boys had. been|caping their share of taxation, and away,” she sald, “and he paid me| “It was simply a little case that |b¢ the ringleader of the crowd of | court spoke to him of how his own | touched by Judge Frator's allusion| incidentally, to keep the tax levy THE LAST DAY ' the most constant attention. Final-| is common with all men,” explained |»! boys who have been thieving | evil do would influence hia itttle)}to bis influence upon his little| rate down so that the present ad ly be proposed to me and insisted | the troubled hotel manager. “We | **¢ committing other depredations | brother to do wrong, the boy bang | brother And Claudé went to bis eeat |ministration can make capital out that I resign my position and live| were out together for street car |!0 Ballard for many months past. | his head in shame. Just then little | sobbing. wholesomely and mopping| of it at the next election, the board | Hhacty bt taken into tOnmecared alcieon, had been destroyed, the ae. om his bounty until we were mar-| rides and had many little suppers, | ¥8" committed to the reform schoo! | Leon Wheeler, a pretty, clear eyed | the fnstflowing tears from his eyes |of equalization got busy on Satur | coon ae Seek a Ge cant and |seexment of $1,500 on them was red. but that was all.” jfor seven years. The boy appeared | boy of 6, seeing that somethiag| with hit doubled-tip dirty little fist,|day, the last day of its sessions, and | * nai’ os oe ak phy woe p+ avian Bee the sie “T trusted him, and I did as he| Mr. Perry is a bachelor, and {9 /t© be a hopeless incorrigible. gix-|was making Claude feel bad, tod-| Judge Frater glanced in a troubled | raised assessments to the aggregate | °° wtinsa ‘ee tua burning anil «Sistemi ne Shater ves said. | said to be quite wealthy |gling and wagging bis h un} died acrows the court room and@}magner Gt the pathetic little flgure|of about $200,000. aay ar Ge tae eet coke saruanie, “wa: haneent | daunted even after being sentenced. | placed a sympathetic little fat fist |of the boy, poorly clad, earelessly-| Councilmen Mullen and Zbinden| Port) po the twa Properties can) clothing tire ian e000 of WB. and perjuring himself g-ibly to the|in the older boy's hand whispering | mothered and so sorely overtaken | succeeded in placing assesements of | TAI'D if Coimern used by| Hutchinson from $14,000 to $10,000, ‘court when called up to the bench. |some word of mfort on ti 1 ‘ 0) and $5,000 on the| comfort of ptoe. | by hia gin. Judge Frater had prob- | $40,000, $25,000 an - t ounceme th the and of Singe: | bunch of skeleton keys and opened /tie Leon began to affectionately | bute-he r ted |Great Northern and Columbia sponstudy Una dares soit: ie * Teles : leeveral houses, directing the” rest wh the buttons om hie coat, poket MERMIMK” tald hho , | Puget Sound railways, respectively. | “ith In = ng the personal prop-| The following raises were made | that erty of Cawsey & Carney, the con-| Barto & Reed, $5,000 to $12,000 of the boys in the work of plunder allen originally demanded bigher| (17 on “Te assensmene wae flaed Mra. F. N. Clark % 600 4 '500 but did x : ‘ J i . th mt i ews se the pl little fingers into the button | give that boy another chance M ng tools and implements. He him-|holes and otherwise express his; Clerk, don't make out a commit.|a#sesxments than these. ~ | : ° . dor © o co | ), but the figures had been | James Dignan, Queen City Laundry, self admitted that he had stolen the | fondness, the offender broke down | ment for him. Ill turn him over to|strike @ respongive cord in th i ot i Q y nine gold, silver and brass watches | completely, the tears streaming | TruaM& Offleer Ketchum ani see jf|county commissioners, who were leaving the amount at $1,070. | $4,100 to $5 Fairbanks-Morse ne board raised it to the original| Co 290 to $3,600; P. 3lenno: that lay on the exhibit table all inj trom his eyes | they een't help him to be a better | particularly anxi to see that tb foo a ne stati core mr pa suse to Aye c = Hosa, 908 ——— jone day. When sentenced to seven Do "you think,” said the court| boy over in the industrial achoo }last named company was not “hurt” | (fils) 0 Ito $750; William Jensen, 98500 to PEACK ENVOYS OF BELLIGERE NT NATIONS INDULGE IN Dip. | *e#rs In the reform school he turn-| severely, “that a boy with a nice| The mercy of the judge too much. The s men's were) On account of the fact that the| $4,000; Laack & Hawkins, $1,600 to ed to Deputy Sheriff Cameron and | little brother like that has any right | humillation of the boy mor jnot as high as th {frame bulldings on t ite of the| $2,500; M. P. Leavey, $1,400 “to LOMATIC SCRAP AND NEGOTIATIONS MA YBE CALLED OFF | remarked That won't faze me. |to set him bad examples, and maybe| and bls face was completely hidden | been, but they w proposed new Y. M. C. A. building! §1.800. J 4 I can get out of th easy ¢ teach him to grow a thief and «| in a fair of grimy lit hands as he|couraging step in t ALTOGETHER “How will you do it?” Ca mM} man that everybody will despise? 1) left the court-room, tears trickling| “Of course — anked. think rude, that for the sake of| through bis fingers and making| frankly these assessments are a ‘Ob, I'll get hold of a key or a] your brothers, I had better send 1) white streaks through the dirt agatelle compared with the t capacity is taken into consideration. (southwest corner Fourth and Madl- should ha at least an en right direetic jained Mr. Smith, | ik RR ai SBRAARARARAARRAAKRAAA® It in believed the three specific! * ® | propesitior mbodied in ® PORTSMOUTH, Aug. 26. * mted to J | | | | H| ussia’s | — jassesaments, but they are a good] a this af E soon | starter | ® M. Witte said this afternoon: | ernoon, are reiteration and di ry | When they were informed, how-| to pay cash under | er, that the city of New Y« nees, the refusal to! succeeded in collecting $1 ( swer, p # “All depends upon Japan, # , termination # and whether she will make #/any ctreu ® concessions. | do not anticipate #| purchase half of Saghalin, and that jof taxes re # any favorable result from to- #| the Russians a Hing to retm ® day's meeting and am anxious #| burse Jape care of 5 who we i 1 not pay & to get away.” #| ers and othe asonable charges cir franchises, they | *® Sato, when informed of * ia not believed that Japan “i to con rably encour # Witte’s statement, said | accept t t | , ~ Fork cass was § ® “All right. We-can act ac- #| break off ne tle i ght] jcourt five years, but the city won % cordingly then. wit 5 na « " find} jon we aker grounds than those pc fight by President Rooseve ® it is feared Japan may cali #| so le The How York ® Russia's biuff by breaking off # was fought jer a state | while the constitution of this #& negotiations. * while the consti nc sxpreasly provides for the taxation { franchises }of Puget sound have been asked to JUDGE FRATER’S IRE AROUSED OVER NEGLIGENCE OF PAR. that ENTS OF ERRING CHILOREN—WILL RECOMMEND PARENT WEATHER FORECAST. eat owners from all sections,to build and own wharves, docks and shipyards; to rent waterworks and reservoirs; to manufacture lum- * Fakaeeankaeen nnn! iii ss ie ili — ; AL DELINQUENCY LAW Fenight and Sunday, fair; frech| Prosecuting Attorney Mackintosh | sttend a meeting at Seattle at 2|ber and machinery and to do a ship PORTSMOUTH, Ang. 26.—The| «, 5 eben as - went winds and ¢ ration Counsel Calho jock xt Friday afternoon for|chandlery business. peace envoys and members of staff" | gown the Jap eo Genie tor] J Tvabie at: the. devetiidacsend in ethers - oa j appear ne she, Board eae is » purpose of considering prop: All th minent tugboat com- were up early this morning, re-| cash, . on od to the Matel. “Here are 12 boys in this roted formed them that they had the! cation of eff a merger of all/ panies of Seattle deny that any ceiving and sending final messages) “ Wrest, Wily recomane ‘ ° diene ois. eal ce of Cake folate TAGGAR? power to do so, stating that their! tagpoats on the sound. Robert Hays,|move is on foot, and state that to and from their respective gov-| Rev. Charles A. Kiilie, who, with | legisiature at its next se Siet | earted om the.soad to serious criss jauthority In the matter was clear.| of this city, is said to be engineer-| they have not yet received any notl- Graments. preparatory to meeting] 0) siiie ie visiting Seattle, haa {it Dass ® law making all parents everal of them are guilty, now |. The railroads will probably ¢ ing the plan and le outlining | fication of a meeting to consider the today. Russia's answer to Japan's| * Hite, is visiting Seattle, has the state of Washington responsible | i nm Seton no 5 Arend jthe matter into the courts in order! the matter have be sent t matter. Officers of the Puget Sound last proposition is likely to be pre-/had some remarkable experiences|for the petty crimes and misde-| oi ona if they were grown men SC. DAL jto del ho collection of the taxes, / terested parties Tugboat company voiced the senti- sented iets thie: etsitnier spo he | Moanors of thelr children, where It} 104 them to the state penitentiary |! for no other reason |. The name proposed is the Consol-| ments expressed by all in thelr { The session ts expected to be}? a son years since b¢/can be proven that the criminal ten-| 114 condemn them to many long Another important thing = which | idated Towing Company of Puget|statemont that the report was “hot 1 short. One of Japan's commission- | pine et cht : 4 | dencies of the children @ risen "| years behind prison walla. It is an " the board aid ard aA suggest - ound, The objects of the company | air,” but rumors along the water- % ers will receive Russia's answer in work has been essentially th t| parental negligence * awful thing to contemplate, whes WOOSTER, Ohio, Avg The Aud tor Agnew that he assess the) are given as follows: To build and| front persist in whispering that &mé then propose an adjournment | of @ pioneer, always on the frontier! Judge Frater so stated Saturday) oo uous ty th of the tender|jadgeimanounced today in the Tag lease of the old University | operate tugs and steam vessels of| something of the kind is being ne- together with the Post-In liz | |telligencer building, which reve ts} tion. Five mes he} morning from the bench, addressing until next week, probably Tuesday, | line of civ - very description on Puget sound; | gotiate s of these boys, and of what|@art ¢riml that testimony will be to allow time for the transmission | has stood face to face with ath,/11 incorrigible youngsters who had|/ = thetr ¢ ‘ rits, e 0 sho ov he n of the reply to Tokio, has been beaten and stoned by igno- | been hauled up be him, and their ener tae weagsene gh: tad <tr) yt . lb ac gag a tha |to the state at the end of the lease a —_ : rant, fanatical mobs, had his cloth-| parents and relative time they, besotae anewe. aoe prineipals could take care of them-|A® the law states that it is Agnew's GROUND UNDER at Everett, and had been working on ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 26.—The| ing stripped from him, been attack In some states said = Judge 1 want every father and mother| selves, but whatever they are guilty|@uty to “make such assessments the Interurban for the past year. gtatement was made today at-the|¢d by highwaymen, was for several| Frater, “the parental delinquency | where the assessor fails to do it, he here to think o| s seriously ajo ehildre * innocent and the . Bp H foreign office that the government |days in the hands of Boxers who| law is already in force, and I think | [Oro to think of ih Rata: Wore bes he» oe Gilibe te cane oo weve | will undoubtedly take kindly to’ the CAR WHEELS i % nore’ than Once striped and drew| Washington is sadly in need o' a-aned bed Bod . tae |“suggestion” and place an assess: { entirely agrees’ with Witte that air t | r ywn flesh and blood fn such a way nefit them the most. “Billy” Tag-| compromise should be offered Japan [thelr Knives to Kill him and ii fone iy soph dr Fd duty ta | that the country will be no wore! wart was on the stand most of the| ment of § i Be cll rll | The only question now is whether ” parents to & sen 7 for the children they have brought] morning {proper ~ a q Claude E. Binns, a brakeman on the Interurba SP fepan will reduce her demand for) | Mr. Killie will sp twice at the| wards society, as well as towards] (0 \i) Ol tt , company owns the lease and build It is believed here that| Second Presbyterian church, Harri-|themselves and the children they kt MRRRAKARR AA K Hing, Which have heretofore escape n, was fatally injured peace is certain to be concluded son and North Third, on Sunday. Inj bring into the world. I want to say deny eoltnie Nermn's bat porate # | assessment Friday afternoon at Wapato on the| VANCOUVER, Aug. 26.—Two | the morning he will tell # of his|to every father and mother here|{)°CO tinitted negligence of m * THIS WIFE-BEATER * he assessment of 000 against | way to Tacoma by falling between | youths, Ralph Criss and Ralph Gil- i ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 26 first experien and of the events| that I hope the day will come, and] ¥¢ tom that had ¢ vy 4 torts * INCORRIGIBLE #| the Sunset Telephone company and|two freight cars, His arm and leg | lihan, were drowned in the Colum- Meyer had a conference with Lams-| leading up to the Boxer outbreak.| very soon, when any parent who emphatic remarks * Charles A. Waidley, of Green #|of $190,000 against the Independent | were cut off by the wheels, and he| bia river here. The boys were | dorft today. In the evening, by the ald of a.stere- | fails to keep his or her child off * Lake, was arrested Friday, #| were allowed to stand. The mem-|died in a Tacoma hospital Friday | swimming. Young Criss got beyond | coeeinnee opticon, he will show views of the| the streets at night, and out of bad # charged with beating his wife. *|bers of the board say they do not] evening | his depth and was drowning when LONDON, Aug. 26.—A dinpatch | siege, forbidden city with its pal pany, or who fails to send t SHEEPSHEAD, Aur 6TH | % He was out on bail, having al- #|know whether they separately as-| The motorman of the train did | Gillihan attempted to go to his res- from Moscow says there is a rumor sand thrones, scenes of martyr- ren to school regularly, will be| track is drying out and is tnt * ready been sentenced by Judge #| sessed the franchises or not. The|not notice the accident, and Binns | cue he boys struggled to reach 1 ‘on the exchange that the treaty of| dom, where eleven Americans, four|held accountable in the criminal| condition th w expected, though! ® Gorden to 20 days in Jail for | assessments are too low when the'lay where he had fallen until some ety, but were unsuccessful. An- peace has been signed. | British and ireds of Chinese ‘courts, Such parents are guilty of| slow and a trifle holding. There is} ® the same offente *|heavy capitalization of the com- residents of Wapato noticed him|other boy attempted to ald them, | mertyrs were beheaded and burned an offense against law and order,| practically no betting on the Fu-|® * | panies, particularly the former, and and sent him to Tacoma. He was! but was power Young Cri | PORTSMOUTH, N. H., Aug. 26.~ at the stuke. All are invited, as well as of neglecting their most | turity ieee eee een eth k aa am 'thelr immense revenue producing at unmarried man, with his home body was recovered yesterday, a

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