The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 28, 1905, Page 1

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THE STAR 18 STRIVING AT ALL TIMES TO GIVE ITS READERS SOMETHING A LITTLE BETTER THAN THEY GET IN ANY OF HER NEWSPAPER e Won My Heart I Want His Name = eR RA RR RR RH) MRS. GRACE NEWHALL TELLS OF THE ROMANCE BETWEEN This story is told exclusive 4 HERSELF AND CHARLES E. PERRY OUT OF WHICH HAS ly to The Star by Mrs, Grace ® Newhall, who has filed a breach ® GROWN A SUIT FOR A FORTUNE of promise sult against Chas, .#| ny E. Perry, part owner of the ® Rainier nd hotel #| be better off if I did. On the con-favenue, Thad only returned to Se Mrs. Newhall, in sensational w| trary, | LOVE HIM AND ALWAYS | attlo a short time before and did not allegations, claims that she has w}) WILL — snsajestsicine been riined by the defendant @| Which ppasibly bears out the and wants $25,000 damages. # | Aphorism about the worse you treat » %|* Woman the better she likes It BERRY REE M MYR EBB! MY Perry has treated me Itke a - cruel master does his dog! He first «BY MRS. ( NEWHALL) | won my love, then literally kicked ~ " from his doorstep, He took me You ask me to tell the readers of away from home and friends; In- The Star of the feelings of a woman | duced me to give up my means ted livelthood; taught me to realize th You ask me to tell them how it/ without him life would be a blank into his wor then feels for a woman to give her love. her life, her soul to a man, only to be finally thrown aside like a worn glove It ts not easy for me to bare my heart to the public; to let them gaze | finally Induced me to ¢ keeping the most sacred ¢ possession me go my way My way! What did tt mean? ad unmolested into the pages of a| A long, dreary road into darkness broken life, and I would not do so| with no parents’ love or pardon; Were It not for the fact that I feet] with no kind friends to offer a that, in view of the publicity already given to my sult against Mr. Perry, it is only justice to my name and| that of my family to give the real home's shelter; with no money for food or clothing; with a heart sore and bleeding @ name dishonored through trust in a man! facts in order to vindicate myself. That's what Mr. Perry wanted There is an old adage that “Hell | me to do. hath no fury like a woman scorned,”"| And now let me tell you the td, io and I presume that most people be- | whole story — Meve that my suit against Mr. Perry apo, MRS, GRACE NEWHALL emanates from a desire of revenge. I do not During the latter part of Decem- ber I was cashier in my father's restaurant, the Delmonico, on First Plaintiff in the Sensational $25,000 ‘This, however, is not true, Breach of Promise Suit hate Mr. Perry —————— have many friends or much oppor- tunity for pleasure or recreation. One day I noticed Mr. Perry enter the restaurant. Oh, well—I might as well admit that I loved him the first time I laid eyes on him. And to thie day I ot explain why, except that he is different from other and pinned him against a car. B. F. Brown was thrown back to such @ position that his right leg rested across a coupling and the dirt fel! on top, the weight breaking the bone off short. He was otherwise EXTEND SALOON LIMITS uninjured. men. A scheme to enlarge the saloon} Both are unmarried and residents| Mr. Perry immediately axked my Himits by including the west side | of this city father for an introduction to me and of Third avenue from Union to Cherry will be taken up by the li- (Continued on Page Seven.) Pee eee eee eee eee. * eense and revenue committee Mon- . day afternoon. * THREE BURNED TO DEATH & ‘The matter has come up because | * BY ENEMY. * ‘of-the application for a license for|® At 2:50 on Monday afternoon # ‘a saloon at Third and Madison, As|* the sheriffs office was notified the extension of the limits will|* by wire that three people had & make it possible to place drinking been burned to death at Kerrys & places opposite the Plymouth Con-| * Town. Wash. * gregational and First Methodist ‘The bodies of a man, woman & churehes, the Anti-Saloon league, |* #4 child were found in. the & the congregations of th two} ruins of a saloon near the & churehes and interested property |* Kerry mill. Foul play in sus. & owners will make a big fight | * preted. */] James Bugene Lambie, a local against the extension. Sheriff Smith sends » deputy # Ana on the 4 o'clock Northern Pa- # | florist, Sunday evening swam across RRR RRR satic , train to investigate. ©) 1 ake Washington, a distance of Kerys town i about 60 miles from Seattle. */ three mites, during & storm. Starting ovt from Madison park PORE ES SEES SESE Far 4 o'clock for a customary swim, be was overtaken by the gale that came up from the south, and think. *S Thon. F. Ryan, of New York, ® controller of the majority of ‘® the stock tn the Equitable Lite, ® Is in the city, on one of his oc- ~ * * * * * ® casional visits to the Coast. He # ing it safer to make for the farther ‘® will spend a few days here, # coqneejnstiaainn shore than to try to return, he cross %® prior to @ visit to the Portland # ed the lake He was nearly two % fair. He will return to New &| RAVENSDALE, Aug. 28.—There | pours in the water. ® York by way of ‘Frisco, He is #| 8S & serious rear end collision! The feat, at least In such weather ® accompanied by his private #| here on the Northern Pacific last) prevailed Sunday afternoon, has ® secretary and is traveling in his & | Bight which might easily have cost| never been accompliahed before. ® private car “Pere Marquette,” # | Several lives. While a local freight | Lambie is an athlete, a former foot- & and is a guest at the Washing- #|tTain was unloading at the depot|pali player in the Seattle Athletic) % ton hotel. #4 through freight came around 4) ciub team and an expert swimmer, - : #|Sbarp curve and smashed into the! put by the time he reached the fur- RRARRAARH ERE HHH local before the engineer could! ther shore of the lake after his bat STRUCK BY CAR Sidney Neilson, 9, came near be- {ng the victim of a fatal street car accident at the cornet of East Pine slacken apeed. just having time for | tie with wind aad wave he was com himse'f and the fireman to jump. | pletely exhausted The engine plowed through the/ hen half way across he met KR caboose and two cars of merchan-| F. S{rand in a canoe, and it wa dise. The caboose caught fire and burned, with the way bills, and it/ed to reach the east shore inetes is impossible to identify the two/ of returning to Madison. Strand hi cars of freight | also been caught in the storm. Lam. the latter's suggestion that he decid- | A SHORT STORY FROM THE BEST WRITERS OF FICTION WILL bE FOUND ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR EVERY DAY. Seattle Star SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1905 Hew the Three Wise Directors Solved the Puzzling Problem Of Seven Dainty (BY NAN BXY@#EE,) The three members of the Mt View school district’ were “up againet 1t” Monday morning in the county superintendent's office. Confronted by seven — pretty »}olma’ams, each with gently pleading eyes, and all filled with common desire to teach the Mt View, the board found itself in a puseling predicament To whom should the fob go? Director Hamilton Carr, diple matic, suave and anxious to please, laid before the other two directors the individual recommendations of each of the pretty applicants, bnt when he had done this, he discreetly passed the matter of selection up to the helpless remnant of the board, saying be had no preference him self, and that any one of the charm- ing pedagogues would sult him beautifully The seven pretty schoolma'ams jamiled sweetly and waited Director George Holbrook serateh- ed his head and after a thoughtful period, sald that any selection made by the one remaining member of the board would be agreeable to him, Thon he looked relieved, and every- body, Including the seven pretty schoolma’ams, turned expectantly to Director Michael O'Day »w Michael O'Day ts Irish, and not the man to rush into trouble, He said it would not be him that would be after disappointing any one of the charming young ladies, “even by making another of them as bappy as they all deserved to be. Sure, he would be for taking the whole seven of them out to Mt. View if 1t could be done, but it was not in the heart of him to make any of them (eel bad by making a selection, With trie Hibernian tact Mr. O'Day had also passed some pretty compili- ment 4 squared himeelf all round making each one of the seven pretty applicants feel that Mr. O'Day really had @ preferance, if he were only at Uberty to say #0 Once again Directora Holbrook and Carr tried to put the selection up to the diplomatic O'Day, feeling that he could probably settle the LAMBLE SWAM ACROSS A STORM party including F. KR. Osborne, Two of these canoes hed capsized, and Osborne and his companions hung on to the light shells until they drifted up on shore. Finally Lambie and Strand decid- ed to make a dash across the lake in jor to seoure help. It was dark by that time, but they made the jirtp safely. At Madison they found a launch which was gent after th aways | that had been left shivering around Ja fire on the other shore. | Lamble had been in the water for nearly two hours, and had been posed to the chilly wind for © than an hour in paddling across the |lake Im the canoe, but went to work jagain as ueual on Monday morn~ ' | The storm was the most severe that has occurred on the Iske dur- nt summer, Scores of ta and salting craft cht unprepared, and thone the of the iske were obliged pase the th around mpfires until Monday morning. Jing the 5 ‘7 No one was in the caboose at the! ble followed the canoe as best he} Chest BRerstrom found his sloop and Bellevie it 5:30 Sunda: f- | a. uney S| time. Very often several of the|could, and both reached land at) unmanageable in the wind and the He was riding a wheel north on|¢Te® are asleep in the coach, and|about the same time. There they | boat turned turtle. He was rescued Belleview as an outhound East |! this had been the case it would | found stranded four eahoes and a! by the steamer Cyrene, have been impossible for them to} have escaped Both train crews were sent to Se attle this morning pending an in- vestigation TRIED TO WIPE Union car came over the brow of| the hill, and a collision followed. The car was not going at a fast mate and it is owing to this fact that Young Nelson was not killed in- @tantly. As it was he was uncon- selous for hours, and is still in a} Precarious condition. “BUNGOED” Five hundred Seattle people took Dr. Smith, acting company doctor 0 T Fe advantage of a “$2.00 special rate ee en nes U THE ROW ndvertined by the, Northern Pacific Was a passenger on the car and Mount Rainier on Sunday to visit and from all accounts the trip will not become a popular Sunday div sion for pleasure-seekers for states that the boy and the motor- man both did all possible to avert the accident. Dr. Stith, was just re- Ben Taro, a fruit peddier, is held }at the city jail without charge, al som ae, == a by two panwee | noeee at 12 o'clock Monday he| years to come, unless the rallroade ly at ae astaedt cartier In the | attempted to kill several employes} and the weather-man get In closer Daernace H ied tre th }of commission houses on Western | touch, for a faster schedule, combin- | coe “ rom the car | avenue with = big revolver. ed with favorable climatic condi pod sratne nivke ot eee the et | But for the timely interference | tions nick o' © ca Sunday's experiment proved a de a of Patrolman Kelly, David Lioyd, a salesman in the employ of Ryan| cided failure as regards these most and Newton might have been the|important features—the train vietim of Targo’s vengeance. Lorn | vice between Seattle and Tacoma be McKinnon, a fellow employe, follow-| ing an extremely tedious one taking ed Taro who, after drawing a re-|two and one-half hours to make th volver of Lioyd, attempted to pre-| ran of 30 miles, on a level gra vent him from summoning an offi-| while the Tacoma Eastern covered struck the boy in the head and broke the wheel to fragments. The boy Was carried to the home of his par- ents not far distant INJURED IN ~ LAND SLIDE cer In front of Ferguson and Kly | their miles of an upsrade pull ces’ commission house at 913 West-| from Tacoma to Ashford in the same ern avenue Taro turned upon Me-| time. Kinnon and struck him a number of times and at the same time again attempted to draw his gun From a scenic standpoint, under | the most favorable conditions, there might be some excuse for a part of Two men were seriously injured McKinnon bears several bad cuts!the trip, providing the train got and a third badly bruised by the)about the face as the result of the| wrecked before the terminal was faving in of a sand bank Sunday) row reached. Morning in the deep cut being made| When Taro caught sight of Patrol As for getting a clorer view of “by the Great Northern railroad at} man Kelly he tried to “ditch” the | Mount Ratnier, or rather any v Interbay for additional switching | gun but McKinnon threw him down|of the mountain, whatever, aid yards. and held him until the officer “nab-| have been better accomplished from The men were shoveling dirt into| bed” bim. the top of the Alaska building or @lectric dirt cars when the bank,| Lloyd states that he was showing| from the back door of most any Se which is more than 16 feet high,|Taro the different varieties of|attle residence, and this was one caved in without the slightest/bananas at Ryan and Newtons'| of the principal expectations of the warning. when he and Taro got into an alter-| excursioniats, cation, Taro i# an Italian, aged 21, and jthe comission men are afraid that injured internally and head badly|if he is not punished for the gun ised. He was stooping over! play that he will resort to further When the earth fell on his right leg violence Several fishing parties helped to swell the list of disappointed as ow ing to the muddy condition of the stream there was nothing doing for them. Faster train servi W. McAfee was injured the most severely, his right leg being broken, chest smashe, several ribs broken clear weather and clear water will be necensary to make this outing a popular one. The few redeeming features of the | trip were the courtesy of the Taco- | ma Fastern train crew in stopping ja few minutes enroute to allow the jexcursioniste a view of the grand jeanyon; thelr haste in getting away and the herole at }from Ashford; tempts of Capt. Harry Thornton, Capt. Charles Genero and Bill Jones to cheer the smoking car oc with their Seattle spirit in ou lof song and wit | PEACE PORTSMOUTH, N Minister Witte this H., Aus. morning wan sked about the report sent out to |the effect that the president had |been authorized by Japan to waive All questions of indemnity and to offer to well whifen at a redemp- tion price to be fixed by a mixed commission composed of representa. | tives | mata “That in merely an incorrect ver- sion of what f explai a few days ago. It in an atte ton the part of of neutral urop Japan to get Indemnity under an- other name. Russia has rejected it JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Aug. 28 The American steamship Peconte Philadelphia to New Orleans, in a gale at midnight sank, carrying down 20 of the crew of 22. The two survivors reached Amelia Island at ne , School-Ma’ams question more gracefully than either of them, but O'Day firmly refused to make himself popular with one schoolma’am at the risk of tneurring the dispieasure of the six too ately Assintant Superintendent Spence came in just about this tin He was appealed to, |, honest and full of modest ammurance, gazed seriously at the di rectoredrom third place. Miss Grace Albert directed the young idea suce ¥ for several terms, and folt secure in her experience. They all waited ‘The beard fumbled its three hate ewkwapdly in ite six hands, and could) Game to no decision Then Diretter O'Day leaned over and whispered something. The faces of Directoms Holbrook and Carr light ened~and ail three retired to the superintendent's office There, be hind clesed doors, they put three littlerpleces of card-board into a bat, gad Assistant Supt. Spencer, DiindMfolded as required to reach {a bis hand. ‘That was how Mins Grace L. Al- bert came to get the job of teaching the ME Wiew school, District No 120, Monday morning. TO, DEPORT HER it Vernet, 14, a Parisienne was from a house of il! fame over Beimont saloon, on King. by Officers Clarke and vi Monday morning. She was takeo the home of Police Ma-/| trom Helly and will be held pend- ing An investigation. At the same tna arresting officers took into ¥ Marcell Moran, held on a charge of being a disorderly wom an. ‘The cave will be Iaid before the 4 tion authorities and steps to have the deported. the that the woman is a pro- | eu apd that the little girl is) one of her victims. Se Mi din ade tintin ieee liedted * * @ KICKED HUSBAND FOR® SEEING WIFE. * eg J. Davi ted tow his wife Sunday and bid # in the barn near the home of # W. H. Kilmer to accomplish * ia farpose, Kilmer raided the # bara and ended up by assauit- © ing Davis in a brutal manner. * | Davis was given a complaint * ® cha « Kilmer with assau't & |@ and battery, His wife was in * \s the employ of Kilmer * * teeteteeee * ERE HE WANTS One Million dollars for the water department and $185,000 for the | Nghting department will be appro | prtated for use next year if Super integ@ent Youngs is given by the cunetl all the money he « fe the agmunl estimate which he has given to Cc Her Riplinger ‘Thin enormous sum the supertr tondent desires to use in extending the Righting distributing system: in building two reservoirs of 60,000,000 gallons capacity, coach, ome at ( other om Beacon Hi ing acforee me expemnen. ‘This amount, taken with the » whieh other departments are for, wilh make a total more: than $1,500,000 for running th city government next year GOT THEIR’S tw. the two men n onon charge costing $100, Lake and the for construct ad for the re ular expense Marvin and Robert McNeill, arrested Friday after of vs but raney who were really held on suspicion of shipping young girls into Alaska for hemornt pores, were fined $100 nd sentenc days In po- ' part of Mon ternoon. Tor petive Charley Phillips, Hu mate Officer Clarke, & Sprengle and Patrolman C belongs the credit of bringing the tw inven to time. Steamer Santa Clara is tied up }at the dock in Moran Bros.’ yard ‘and t« receiving @ general overhaul-| ing. nd four of the} THE STAR PRINTS THE NEWS, iT DOES NOT SUPPRESS IT, The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News VOL NO a5 CENTS PER MONTIL 1 167. Breath of Poppy Plants Produces Vivid Dreams (BY DAN DEAN.) SUPPOSE THE MAYOR AND CHIEF DID HIT THE PIPE, WHAT This Is certainly a glorious night WOULD THEY SAY IN THEIR SLEEP? for a stroll, may Tam glad that sere schoolma’ams were put OU) you and the el able to take | a of the running by having their ded see eiad ' pamepenteredfor other schools, But | OU) ning constitutions fens pial there sill remained, smiling and pa he air is warm and balmy, sug eves or con men, otherwise you | tives : tient, thtee of the prettiest of the) estive, In its drowsy Influence of) i) be oblleed som y tos | Never let your ire be aroused at applicants, each firmly bent on be |the permeating watts of the poppy ” 4, on ing t ape | vet ce ing the Mt. View schoolma'am for| Plant em in police cour _ Unbutton your coat and, tn « digs the enpulng year Speaking of the poppy plant r instance, I notice about town | "fied manner bit your star, at A pair ot appealing brown eyes,| Chief, did you ever inhale the de-| Boston Charlie aad patie tline naying with just a twinkle of mischief oo fase amaike of the eforsania pep: ‘ nme in th try I'm a detective; honest to good - yy plan ‘ it or | hens Fam stram and the smartly gowned lit-| ‘Then we'll drift down to a fa-|§ l¢ t|Heve you, cut him dead the next tle figure of Mise Ruth Hilen poised | ™0us local hop joint where, for the] making this A t-| time you meet expeclantly. waiting to be selected. modest sum of two bits, one can} ance. It in r , te not allowing more than a A pair of soft bluc-gray eyes,| Dit the pipe to further notice and| for a rew eto } zen gambling hells to run at 0 gently hopeful, looked out from un-| 4rift peacefully away into the land| knowledge of the faces or history oo or arre ting young women dor. the rim of « demure little bon-|°f #¥neopated nod of such @ naughty man | for doing nothing; for your faithful net, whose soft chiffon lining as|. Here we are. This big structure | However, there is one complaint 4 venting of saloons 4 other fe- blue as the eyes, framed a pretty|here at Fourth and Washington ts/1 have ffer—you have not sorts; for working against the rest pink an@ white face that seemed to| the Montana stables. Right through | rested a ne . tae force and giving me the dou. aay “Please, Mr. Directors, choose |thi# alley and into this little side| weeks! This in ve nfortunate je-cross—I thank—umph, umph, met* This was little Miss Kdna| door inasmuch, as there are scores of |"™P"! (Deep snores.) Howe who had taught one year Holly ma, John, Want smokee| hotels and flat buildings up tow Solin 1 won't walk ae 4 and wanted to teach another pipe? where you may find many rewpect-| yo?” 8 a “y wake Aud @ pair of hazel eyes, straight-| You make yourself comfortable fe girls to drag into court eas | Here's a dollar for the dope the change. It was worth it Tinga-Ting-a! Bo long! JUDGE FRATER SENT JUVENILE HOME HAPPY | COURT'S HEART WAS TOUCHED AND ELMER JOHNSON LEFT FOR BUTTE WITH BIG BAS KET OF LUNCH AND LOTS OF WHOLESOME ADVICE jover there, mayor. and the chlef) 1 nave heard several times that ¥ jand I'll take the other wide of this] jtors to the uit | magnificent apartment [ment when y | “Here comes John with the Iay-| jout. He'll roll the pills, Nasty jlooking paste, isn't it chief? But} just wait till you get a whiff. | | After you, my dear mayor. No, | not that way; it will make you sick That's not a Carabana, you know | Ah, that’s more like it | You're next, Tom | ‘Now, John, one and | Ah, just Heten narcotic soliloquy THE MAYOR'S PIPE DREAM Beautiful! Beautiful! A city with a real executive gov ernment; with a real police force! A clean administration; no petty graft; no tncompetents; no gam- bling in the uptown districts; no low dives where women congregate elty diner your #t laim to be That's right more for them) to the mayor's Judge Frater of the Juvenile court) home and set out to see the world. This little trip, with all its hard- | bas made at least one solid friend! ships, has taught you Pers 4 in the business districts! among the youngsters who have] who has a good home is lucky, and Ah, I am indeed proud to be at! been hauled before him to have|I think you will now go back te the head of such a municipality Justice, under the juvenile law, met-|your mother and be a good boy, To you, a committee composed of | ed out to them staying there with her and helping the most representative bodies in! Eimer Johnson, aged 14, run-|her ail you can while you are grow- Seattle, | extend my thanks for/ away step-son of J. M. Guthrie, of|ing up into the right kind of » your wish that I should again be @/ putte, who floated in to Seattle via| citizen” candid ¢ for the mayoralty, I un-| Spokane, Portland, and Tacoma a| “That's what I am h ’ vkane. di, c eo! going to do, derstand that you offer me an ab-| couple of weeks ago, left for bis | judge,” the boy replied, “you have solute guarantee of re-election by an | home in Butte Monday morning | treated me right, and I am mighty overwhelming majority But "Though my heart t# sad at re- jecting the offer, I must say to you that, due to my extensive practice and my longing for the simple life 1 must refuse your— Ah, don’t insist; don’t make it so glad to be going home. I have seen this country out here now, and I'll a satisfied to stay home after this.” The court inquired as to whether the boy had any money to buy lunch with on his way home, and finding that he had not, the court generously supplied with good things to eat en route, and good ad vice to last him a life-time. Elmer} jis about as bright a fourteen-year jold as ever got hotd of a yellow back penny-dreadful, and when he set out to find adventure and see the country some three months ago. hard for me. Yes, I realize that|/he went at his traveling right. He| reached down into its individual my duty toward my fellow citizens | worked his way from station to sta-| pocket and pulled forth a gold piece. demands that I tion, and refused to accept a single “Here,” said he, handing the mon- Gentlemen, gentlemen, this is too} penny which he did not earn. Clear-|ey to Truant Officer Ketchum, “T much eyed and clean-minded, the bright| Want you to buy this boy a big box youngster, when brough: before| of good wholesome lunch that will iI 1 ACCEPT! | Judge Frater, answered al) questions | last him all the way home on the But |pat to him promptly, honestly and|train. I think he deserves it, and Only on one condition—that my] with a sound of philosophy which|I want to see him taken care of trusted men on the police force re-| made a “hit” with the judge who| right.” main with me. For how could 1/ has, for the most part, to deal with; The boy left the court room with run the city without the aid of the) youngsters of both mentally and|the officer, but returned half an {ficient never-sleeps under my dear friend Tom? Gentlemen, I wil! ran again—not | for any added glory or emoluments morally dull perceptions Judge Frater turned the young ster over to Truant Officer Ketchum to be taken care of at the parental! hour later and walked up to the bench in the midst of a learned legal argument being made by two local attorneys. lof office, but because I believe that | school, and wrote to the boy's par “Goodbye, Judge,” said the boy the sacred trust of the people in| ents, who sent back a ticket for the|/ reaching a neatly scrubbed little | me should not be cast aside for any| boy to Butte Monday morning|“mit” over the bench, “Goodbye | private gains Judge Frater had the boy brong! I'm much obliged to you for what Once more I-—umph—umph-—-| before him and gave him the tick-| you've done, and I ain't going to umph! (Deep snores.) et forget it. I'll not forget to write | I am glad to know you have| you that letter, either.” | Dear old mayor, He certainly had | never stolen anything, Elmer,” said] Judge Frater shook the hand of |a lovely dream. | the court, “and I hope you will con-| the manly little fellow warmly, and | Now the chief has started. Lis-| tinue always to live the right kind] legal proceedings were at a stand- ten! This ought to be good jof life, I think you have started|still while he bade his juvenile | THE CHIEF'S PIPE DREAM }out splendidly, notwithstanding the’ friend from Butte goodbye, and sent i> good men: On this the new | fact that you have run away from him away rejoicing. Jera of a new adminis 2 under | |the old regime, 1 we say al} ‘“ 3 jfew words to you in commendation | NARRO | posit. That was the last the firm of your sptendid service during the | W saw of him. He was traced to dif- past two years | ferent cities, but was always too | First of all, let me thank the smooth for the sleuths, He came to detective department for the able] Fj tre Washington hotel a few day co-operation they have given me g | 28° and registered there under the | Their method of never working name of William Bones, under my instructions has pleased After the loss of the money the me greatly. The fact that each | firm in Chicago notified the Mooney man does not confide In his chief] Mrs, E. A. Paxton, of Seat & Bolland Detective agency, and anything about the former's move-| nearly met her death § y after. |that firm sent out ctreulars with ments or what he ix doing {s a! noon in falling from the gang plank »s' real picture and a descrip- great assistance in the conduct of | of th at tal Humane Officer Clarke re- The: Secen, | saat jcelved one of the circulars and, in I am glad to note that you spend| In attempling to cross the narrow | "ding It over, thought he had séen so much of your time about the| gang plank Mrs. Paxton slipped and |'®€ ™an somewhere. He then re- bar-rogms and gambling joints. By | fell overboard, dropping a dis j called the fact that he had seen the. so doitg you can always tell wheth-| of 15 feet into the water |man im the hall of the Washington er gambling is going on in town.| she was promptly dragged on| tel. He went to the clerk and Of course, it is not your duty to! poard and was uninjured | gave him one of the circulars. The arrest the offenders, nor should Th arkable part of her es-| Clerk, after looking at it, sald he you ever tell me when you discover |cape was that but a very narrow | ‘ought a man ans these place at would be {n-| space separated the boat from the |*°r/ption was in the house. jurious to the servi whart, and had Mrs: Paxton anki _ While they were comparing notes In this respect I have only one] fatien straight as an arrow's flight | Bbs came in and Clarke put him complaint to make. I find that the] she would have knocked against the | W"@*r arrest. A reward of $500 was detectives when they get good tips| piling and undoubtedly been killed. | °ffered for his capture, The reward on the ra do not turn them Into “nan will in all probability go to Officer my offi nor inform the mayor . jark | thereby depriving us of an oppor EMBEZZLER Is The prisoner is now lodged In the tunity of getting onto a good thing. county jail, where he will be held instance, the other day at until word is received from Chicago, & O'Brien's there was a CAUGHT > ——= aplendid 4-to-1 shot, Several of my BRR EN ER ENR ER NK trusted sleuths covered the bet, but ny Tiel * * not one of you had « * “My Impressions of the % for your chief to give rm Gus Bobs, alias William Bones, |#* Fair,” by Miss Bertha M. John- This is bad work for experienced | who is wanted for embezzlement, |%# son, the first installment of # men such ae you and who is known as a noted hotel|# which appears on page three & Your vit of loafing about sa- | re was arrested in the Hotel | # of this issue, will be continued & loons, however, is highly commend- | Washington on Sunday by Hum * in Tuesday's issue. * ab) ome day, within a few score | Officer Clarke, aft being re * * years, a rowdy bartender will break | nized by J. Anderson, night « eee eee eee eee eee et a beer glass and then will come your | the well known. hotel - “ Sunoee for ancimpartant arrest Soba wae 10 ihe employ of Cha WEATHER FORECAST. Whatever you do, confine your ac-| A. Stevens & Bros, of Chic night and Tuesday, showers; quaintance entirely to bartenders} about a year ago. He w to warmer tonight; fresh to brisk and bookmakers. Do not cultivate the bank one day with $3 » to de. wh mated

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