The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 28, 1905, Page 7

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STREET CARS COLLIDE As the result of @ cole “Aw get up out of there You're jnot hurt,” was the remark credit Nision between two electric cars at! od to one of the street car men 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon on the! who seamed to look upon the acel double carve between Pike and! dont as a huge i Pine on Minor, Mra Lisste Spaight One of the conductors, though. THE SEATTLE STAR 4MONIAY, AUG. 28, 1905. from clouds of | buildings, dust ewirled into ge open doors of stores, covering an4@ spolling perieh ripped able goods, billboards were demol ished and telephone and telegraph wires wore quickly put out of bust news in all directiong, GAMBLING . DEN 18 DYNAMITED SAN FPRANCISC( Forty or fifty gamb} » Aug ra sitting round of Black Diamond, sustained severe! took great pains in caring for the the i tables in the Tahoe clu injuries, and Mrs. Harper, residing] injured. Mra, Spaight and Mrs,| @t 2 o'clock this morning were at at Tweifth and Jackson, was prob-| Harper continued their journey to| tied out of their chairs by a loud ably fatally hurt, Carelessness,/ the home of Mrs. Wobster at] report in the front portion of the several passengers allege, of the! Twenty-fourth and st Union,| premises, followed by the crash of motorman in charge of Bast Union| where Mra, Harper was examined! *hivering glass, A bomb had ex« car 1056 was responsible for the ac-| by the company's physician, Later] Ploded tn the narrow entry passa cident | sho was removed to her Mre. Harper now tes at her home! she continued to grow worse fm a critical condition, Her spine! is injured, thigh fractured and the! back of her head badly trutsed Mrs. Spaight is suffering from sprainad ankle and has numerous bruises about the body. The other passengers were not hurt seriously aithough many of them were jammed into the we A | work and badly bruised, The Were crowded and ramping at a high | Tate of speed, it ts said, though the force of the shock de railed them and stopped traffic for an hour or more Mr. Spaight is a well known busi neas man of Black Diamond Passengers on the car unite tn blaming the moa in charge of car number 105 and stated Monday that | the other motorman and conductor by their herote actions averted a | horribie slaughter. |troubie, Brainard Cohn, a tailor |ahot and probably fatally wounded his father-in-law, W. Posnansky, 1 |¥eaterday morning. Cohn, accord- SPOKANE, Aug. 28.—As the cul-|ing to his wife, served 14 years at mination of long standing family 205 Quentin for manslaughter leaving his victim for dead, the WONDERS NEVER. would-be assassia ran out of the }house, He is now held in the city jsle for life at the hospital before AT LANG'S IT'S ALWaYs al | entering charges agatoat Dim. DEEP CUT ON THE PUREST Ayer AND MOST RELIABLE \CH.LD MEETS OURGS. WE KEEP NO OTHER, atarch Jetly MURDE: RS RE LATIVE Mondoe’s ( Ste sine Willie Fitzgerald, 5-year old son of William Fitegerald, a prominent business man of Calgary, Canada iv Wiltiams Shaving Soap Dr. Merck’s German Besema. ‘oint ment fell from the second story window Scalpicide, for i and falting|of the Graves home, 321 Queen Dair, 31.26 stee Oe Anne, Saturday evening. fracturing Dr. Oagoods Cataith and Stomach | his skull and dying an hour later m.~ hee ras teees >4 The child's mother, who ts at the um. full haif pint. Portland fair, and his father, who a ee Pa is in Calgary, have been notified, A bottle Dr. Merck's Bigod and § s Remedy $1 23 IT PAYS TO DEAL AT LANG'S. 20 HURT BERLIN, Aug. 28.—Twenty per- sons were seriously injured during |a performance yesterday by the breaking in of a terrace 16 feet above & stage upon which were 30 or more players. The panic-strick- en actors ran Into the street im their stage costumes. Four of the in- |Jured will probably die. STORM! Aug. %3—A eT FIRST AVENUB. COLMAN BUILDING Between Columbia and Marton | \ | | MARKET DAY We don't set aside special bargaiy ery day is market days, With ws day. We invite a quality and price. Se Cetling H 60 Maydole Hammer 700 Maydole Hammer ‘We Maydole Hammer $2.90 Stilson Wrench 50 Stilson Wrench L25 Stileon Wrench 09 Kigin Wrench comparison . | | PENDLETON, Ore, BE yesterday afternoon, Hobs Posies et rn ro. ‘driv. |*mount of damage. The wind rag- er, ate ing ings. Farms in tho trail jof the storm suffered heavily, un $25-00 harvested wheat was destroyed, and te stacks of unthreshed wheat and straw were scattered about the fields. For ten minutes the dust was so you. Cycting will give you a good foundation to bulld on. $40 Fagte ti 956.00 Coas SPINNING’S CASH STORE, 1310 Sc_ond Avenue. ‘That headache may be caused from eyestrain. Let us ex amine your eyes. |many people were nearly suffocat ed, as it entered houses and stores, | setting im places a quarter of an inch over everything in the build j ings SPOKANE, Aug. %—The most terrific wiad and dust storm known jim eastern Washington and nortly jern Oregon in years swept over the country lat yesterday afternoon md continued into the night. In Spokane much damage was done. Best Optical Work om the Coast, |Piate glans windows were smanhod as AWHINgs Were torn down. signs were The average boy wears out two pairs of trousers to one coat The new Four-in- hand suit takes this tn- to consideration and supplies the two pairs of trousers. It gives onepair of reg- ular cut and the other pair of knickerbockers. The coat can be worn either with or without the belt W. B. HUTCHINSON CO. Cot. Second and Union Cor. Colby and Seattle Evesett home, as| The lookout san reassured the ex The cars were not badly smashed, | for the exits. | Jal, but the ‘potice are waiting tar reshit “et the TRAGIC DEATH) earted « tow days ago from Se cited players and there was na rush PROBE! SECRETARY BONAPARTE WILL INVESTIGATE THE CHARGES GRAFT AT BREMERTON (8p WASHINGTON. jal to The Star) Avg, 23.—-As_a fuvestications made by Special Agent Piokerell of the charges of alleged graft at. the Pu get Soumt navy. yard, Seeretary Bonaparte has held a conference with Assistant Secretary Darling, to whom Pickerell's report was for attle. Secretary Bonaparte refuses to discuss the re but admitted that the department would take cognizance of the charges and would make a full and complete la ation, and either exonerate or convict those against whom the charges of corruption heave been made by the special agent Tho secretary t# inclined to be lieve that the charges have been exaggerated, but informal com plaints have been made a of times previously, and parte feels those not implicated and the duty of the department as well to know officially the true state of affairs at the yard RESCUE IN Rona MID-OCEAN LONDON, Aug 2% —The Atlan tie liner Maryland, from Baltimore arrived today with the crew of the) bark, Sieben, on board, | had rescued in midecean | Nor weeia whom «| The Sieben, € pt. Kundson. satled S¢ | disastrous dust swept over this city] from Conway, Wales, August §, In Going @ large! ballast from Tangier, N. 5. but be ame waterlogged. The Maryland 4 ¢ | 0d for over an hour, shattering plate] took off the crow om August 24 and Many more bargains in store for | Siass windows in town, and destroy-| before leaving the set fire to the/at Fort Sheridan and I am eure be) ville goweps of poisoning the cap versal NEGRO LiANCHED NEWBERN, N.C, Aug TH —An thick that it was impossible to dis-| armed mob of more than 100 masked | tinguish objects five feet away, and) men marched to the Craven county jail‘eariy Sunday morning and after compelling the jailer to give up tho keys dragged John Moore, a negro, 20, from his cell with # rope around his neck and lynched him at the Neuse river bridge. The body was riddied with bullets. Sheriff J. W. Biddle pleaded with the mob to let the law take ite course but It was hooted down. A call was sent out for the navel re- serves bat they arrived too late te be of any assistance. Moore entered the small country store of George Kubanks, about feven miles from bere, for the pur- | pose of robbery. Finding the prop- alone he strock her with @ meat axe, frac skull. The negro fled but was captured several hours lat er in a swamp after a hard chase $300 ROBBER} ‘The Panama Talloring 1610 Sixth company, is minus clothing valned at about $300 as the result of wholesale robbery which the po ee belleve to have occurred early Sunday morning. Entrance was effected by break ing in the thin glass of a front win- |dow. The hole was so small that | detectives think that the looting | ¥as done by boy crooks, as a man jeould hardly squeeze through the aperture Once inside the thieves evidently took their own time in smuggling out the clothing, as the floor was littered with the butt ends of nu merous cigarettes. Patrolman Al yey first found the evidence of rob bery and reported it at police head quarters. Mason and Weber, the proprie j tors, stated Monday morning that they received several large con signments for Monday. Besides private stock, the thieves carried off @ large quantity of clothing left to be cleaned AZATLAN, Mexico, Twenty Mexican killed at the port August 28 laborers were works at Maza |nillo Sunday by « premature explo sion of dynamite, It is said the explosion was caused by the care lessness of some of the men. All of the bodies have been dientified MANILA, Aug. 28. Th Taft party arrived at Olongapo, a naval base near here, today, number | that it is only fair to} MRS. TAGGART ON THE STAND, MRS. TAGGART, THE CENTRAL F SCANDAL SHE T WOOSTER, ©. Aug. 24.—MPé Taggart extersd the courte ahix morning prepared to take the stadd. While waiting, the attorneys of op- ponents engaged lu & controverdy Werts and Smyser catied each ottter liars, The court threatened to pap-| toh th e ‘. Order whe finally r 1 After Captain Taggart had ‘epn | recalled to the stand, this morsitg }to make a denial of the statement t he had sat on a sofa in a come promising positign with andtiier| officer's wife and averred that he had never quarrelied with the offi-/ cor in question, Mra. Taggart, the} falr complainant in the now cele brated case was called to the stand to tll ber story There was a moment of hushed silence es she iked nervously to} the stand and took ber seat. The! crowd which jammed the ourt | jroom to its doors, craned — th necks and every eye was fixed on) the handsome woman | Without a tremor in hor volee,| and ta a firm tone she told her| story. She sald “Tl em 35 years and born and raised in Chicago. I am the adopted danght or of Mra. Culver Mr. Culver was a total abstainer and I was brought up that way. I met and loved Cap tain Taggart while he was statloned I believe ft was @ case I became il loved me of love at first sight TOURE IN THE GRFAT ARMY CHED IN COURT. shortly after we were married but soon joined my husband at the Piattabur barracks where his mother i a furnished housa 1 drank my first gh { beer at Platteburg, the in baving it io the vane at all times. He always wide-board | f Nquors. Then matntained @ well-filled with @ goodly assortment I was very happy while th we moved to Fort Thomas, when I met Captain Rither, then an en. listed man. When he was commis sioned he became a friend of Cap tain Taggart Th tain and | loved company and we entertained great deal Our home was a popular gathering piace for the young people and went everywhere we were invited | I paid much of my expenses myself That was never a subject of conver sation between us ‘The captain was ambitious and 1 tried to make him rise.” Mrs. Taggart said that when she Joined her husband in the Philip pines after a long separation she found him a changed man. She believed that the hardships of the tropical campaigns had injured his mind. She sald he was 80 jealous that he magnified tmnocent hap penings into terrible offenses. The witness sald sho treated “Billy” as she would any brother or sister of her husband's accused Orr tain’s mind with clons nded susp! STORY OF MARS. NEWHALL'S LIFE | (Continued from Page One.) we then met and not mine Yrom that very firet meeting it} seemed that Mr. Perty Inid siege to! my heart, He visited the restaurant | It was at his request) frequently and we soon became rood | ; friends. All the iittle arts known te 2 man did he use in order to win my | love. Night night we were out together; street carn. rides and long walks. Many time I have neatly frozen to di @ Madison car in order to be aide! ur favorite meeting place, we ate r and some of th on boat where of my a meal happiest by Mfe were spent, wax Mhnca's Tee taurant on Columbia street Keven fn such a public place Mr. Perry could not conceal his affection for me. He used to reach under athe table to hold my hand and f ly for ything t to eat an minded hin Grant's cafe one of our favorite meeting pihwes end Mr. Perry « » seemed tuite partial to the Pike and the Butler, And fo things went along; I txiting daily deeper into Cuptd’s trap, yehlle Mr. Perry was, without doubt, In the same predicament. Otherpvige how could a man spend after evening in a womar pany, professing love to her, payitut| ' her every ttention and = Shinty sweeping her off her feet with Hts Gevotion? Finally on March 1, 1906, he rp- posed to me. eating and when he said It was while we jvere dear, I love you SUICIDE IN CHURCH MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 28.—But a few minutes after the clone of F W. B. Riley's address at the Firat Baptist church, a man who is thought to be W. Rowen, of Sublette, 4 want TH, got Up In a pew and fired a bul fet through his heart, dying in stantly, On search of his clothes a raft for $700 was found on his per son, made out in the name of W Rowen, of Sublette, 1. Some amatt! change Was found in another pocket you to be my wife. Will you” It was the happiest moment in m whole life. I aceepted him—not be anse I needed his mt not be Wext Boor to Bon Marche WEAR, TIONAL Men’s $10.50 Suits for.. Men’ AN IMMENSE STACK OF ODDS AND ENDS, BROKEN LINES AND SIZES, ETC.---THE CUMULATION---MEN’S AND BOYS’ CLOTHING, UNDER- SHIRTS AND FURNISHINGS FOR MERE FRAC- $1 and $14 = A. Bridge & Co., Popular Price Clothiers. A FOUR DAYS’ RUMMAGE PRICES 2.50 Suits taurant in aptte of the latter's pro- teste. Of course, the tr ¥ ox tinting between my fiance and myself soon became known to my family and our estrangement followe 1 held myself aloof from all trier for did not Mr. Perry t me that some day, when I wife, they would all be glad to speak ° Night after night Mr. $5.00 $6.75 Great Sale of Boys’ School Suits Tuesday A. Bridge & Co. 1415-1417 Second Ave. Perry was! SALE }1 had made him the happiest man/ elevator in the world. He ordered a quart) “Where is Mr. Perry?” I asked the of champagne and we sealed our | man running the lft gagement. Mr, Perry does not| “He's asleep in room 616,” he re- drink, but he touched his lips to the| plied. “He does not occupy his own glass in salutation room any more for some reason.” It wae on the ninth day of March,| That reason wax plain to me; Mr. 1905, that Mr. Perry, with all the| Perry was scared! persuasive arguments of a man who} I went to room 616, but found that knows that he holds @ woman's| he had arisen. I discov heart in the hollow of his hand, ted| his own apartment, ‘how me to my downfall. We registered 1 was you, G at the Sprague hotel, on Yesier said he. “You knew I wouldn't b Thereafter we practically lived as| you arrested. man and wife. 1 know that full He told me that I should no longer | “You haven't spunk enough.” | work for a tving Wr sat down he kissed me What's the use of my future wife|and embraced me. He acted Itke «| | getting up by seven|crazy man; first caressing me, and} in the morning T™ he urged. then pacing the room, waving hia! So, 1 finally left my father's res- | arms and cursing. | I did not ask for money. 1 simply | axked for what he had promised me | his name. Finally, wh corr nm I saw that he would I told him I would go} @ mo one knew me, and could start life anew. He 4 he would give me transporta- 1 to New York wil 1 T must live until I away fo when I get} | there, ity | ern ince that night of ba oF we nae me whee 3 montel, 6 exception of the time|! told him e wor ve me - neko sige pein gene woe eels ae os bts father's funeral, Mr.| $200 and my ticket I would leave | rooftops the foul word, “blackmal | He throws mud at the woman | Perey wae in ay spans Aacatilinds (¥ Now, note the craftiness of the| paket batene pag le he Was) When’ he could not come, he al-|man, He told me to go home and | Fee te Le cae we went] Wax telephoned me. We ate to-| Write him @ letter demanding the ene ee Taam ola mary. We went! gether, walked together, spent the | Money and ticket, and promising to nat Ser, 5 Sat aust. sims. 0 Gays and nights together—in fact,| absolve him from all obligations. If ying a fm only the marriage ceremony lacked |1I had done #o he would have used | A few good times ta ieaten an Gate cal Ge the letter as evidence of blackmail. | This is how a man brands his] what made him change is beyond| Then it was that I went to my at- | taw @ heart and honor.| ay my comprehenston, jt =, Judge Humphries and Mr. Wis is how he describes her battle] when he ret 4 from lowa,| Page, and filed my suit against principle and better-self lost| where he went to attend the funeral| This is my story! It is not a new | in the impetuous whirlwind of hla] oe nix father, he was a different |one—the sufferings of woman be- wo = cause of man form a thread-worn You're} 1 | only a woman | tale in this world. | the sweetest, truest, best it ding Towne arise And I know what most of you will man In all the world - |may, for when a woman falls, the dod knows I would not harm a hair|'"% Sway from her can | world points at her a finger of f your head, Trust me! Lat ua be| ANNOWED we wth ie ete a ney {acorn and heaps aympathy on the happy now—who Fe ee ae evant & womans Intuition | “Unfortunate man who has been en- f on we will be man rere | tl me that the man I loved dia| sled by the woman's wiles e. Surely a few n are for me the way he weed to.| Women have ays been legiti- ' PA | neeused him of his in| ™ate prey; men always legitima an ours tnd he said) something | huntsmen, Still, deep down In her | And after the woman falle—~after to assume any | Pe@rt every woman knows the tn- | she gives into his keeping all that | Juwete of tt all; they have all had | he asks eturn for 4 promise antil ‘Brvaee ae a then the loveslight in her eyes no 4 aske « s his heart h to buy For ; 1 'me that THE BEST WAY peng. Bar rang fg me ane} try “New System Dentistry and the huntaman, flushed with vtc This after he had coaxed me away! te —y socks new fields for ne W@ar- 1 from home and from my work! | What's the use of going into the There are some women who sub-| horror of it all? | mit to this; who, broken like a reed I am not going te show you now | = — t torm's wake, drag their bat-| 4 fering a ation ¥ 1 # into a dark corner to] endured. 1 am going how you LOOK FOR OUR ADS. IN weet their lives el ai wea Wt for her MONDAY’S PAPER. Wout LAM NOT THIS KIND OF] rights! A 1 _-veu' ‘wilt pret by se. doing . One day I's ed Mr. F y and We are going out of business. I have been w 1 and Tam go- led a view | 1g to have ju from tag] “Go to my s,” he replied, | man who } ed fe, then in| sharp H, LEWIS & CO., 700 First Ave. the courts am man's} “I wi 2 personally first playth 1 lay, to] was my a I am ng to | oe 7 be pat head and said nice] the Rainier-Grand hotel « NOTICE To thing a pet dog, and the| morning next to be kicked under the table} I shall station a police officer at SUBSCRIBERS t to whi ly to joyously|the door and he will arrest you, out again at my master’a| sald Mr. Perry Should your copy of The Star fail to lick his hand and fawn| But I knew him better than that./¢o reach you by 6 o'clock any eve- t I knew that he would not have the] ning, please do us the favor to call Perry I have given my] courage to openly defy me. up our main office (Sunset, Main} goul, my hor my all! I did not go to the hotel that Sun-| 1050; Independent 1138,) between 6} In exchange for these he promised | day, howe I let him wait andj and 7:80 o'clock, and we will send me his neq 4 tits protection muffer in suspense, as he had made] you a copy at once. If you should Was th r compact me suffer, oh, #0 many times. miss it more than once, please tole wny mar righty, so One morning, however, I went to} phone us every time you miss it joan, that bin name is better th the Rainier-Grand, Being well a In this way we can be certain of | oman's honor? quainted with the place (God knows | giving our subscribers a perfect ser When Mr. Perry proposed to me 1 wish I had never seen 10), I went! yico—and tt ts the only way snd Ta ed him he told me that to the back door and took the freight THE STAR PUBLISHING Co. | ENTIRE SEASON’S AC- | Men’s $15 and | $16 Suits for Men’s $18 and $20 Suits for $7.95 $9.00 to fight their battles. Some have won! should thank ¢ Some, like myself, have falten, For this God should pity them! For this they LITTLE ROCK, Ark, Aug. 28-—~ ‘The governor this morning issued a proclamation forbidding freight, wenger or bage trains and ts from entering the state from Louisiana. VALUES THIS WEEK IN HOUSEHOLD GOODS. Jersey Lily American Castile Soap, 3-Ib. bars, full weight, per bar -25¢ Household Ammonia, % ° including bottle .... Borax, best grade, per Ib Gasoline, % gal. tle... Wood Alcohol, ae rs Best Wine Vinegar, made from sour wine, large bottle. . 4 Best Witch Hazel, pint bottle Antiseptic Solution, household remedy for pote mouth wash, catarrh, ete, large bottle .... ry best California Olive absolutely pure, full pint Glycerine, % pint bottle... Carbolic Acid, best grade, pint Okévs Seweveuende Carbolic Acid, crude for infecting, pint ........ WE DELIVER FREE. Both Phones 982, is It Will Pay You to Walk A block or two out of your way and buy your sheet music of us 15¢ 4 copy. You can always do better at CLINE’S PIANO HOUSE 1307—1309 First Ave. Just Above the Post Office, Diamonds, Rings, __ Brooches, rf pine Linke Links, Studs, Ear Screws, Bite Houghton & Hunter Jewelers 704 First Avenue

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