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f | | @VERY WOMAN IN SEATTi® SHOULD READ CYNTHIA GREY'S HUMAN INTEREST ARTICLES IN THE STAR. AS THE STAR PREDICTED THE SEATTLE FOLKS NOW KNOW ft The Pioneer One Cent Paper of the Northwest Sea WASHINGTON m7 URDAY oT! rs DAY, “TAINTED,” tle CR 16, THE STAR 16 NOT REPUBLICAN, NOT DEMOCRATIC. iT 16 JUST INDEPENDENT, THAT'S ALL. The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News perp MONT Te DR. MATTHEWS BRANDS JOHN D. ROGKEFELLER AS A THIEF AND A GRIMINAL SCORES THE BOARD OF MISSIONS FOR ACCEPTING GIFT OF TAINTED MONEY! “BOXITIS” STILL PARALYZES ntatiously given, but if, as in| case of Rockefeller, it Is given | F Presbyt | with a blare of trumpets and for} iret Presbyterian church, thinks! missionary use in a f Dr M A. Matthews, pastor of the prapoition | P |products are sold th » jladde: oxle ior of the .- Uke Dr. Gladden, moderator of th j assumes an entirely different as } Congregational church, on the ps peet tainted money question—ooly more 80. SS gaia ELECT OFFICERS ernoon, when asked to exp i views, “that Dr. Gladden and his followers in taking up the urday morning's » of the mion question} a | Any have in mind the findings of i Board of Comminsioners | congressional committee appoin for Foreign Missions was devoted to | some years ago, which declared that| routine business entirely. A devo. tt the Standard Oi! company had al service at 9 o'clock opened the eld where his| * supine morning's session and was followed by reports on the missions under the RAKKKAAE KAA A AAR up milllons of dollare by] direction of Secretaries Smith and * *) of monopoly, manipulation] parton and on the home dep * PROGRAM # | of stock and secret ratiroad rebates. | ment % Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock ®] “In view of there facts, whic] 4), section of officers for th % a celebration of the Lord's sup- #| were proved in court, Rockefeller 16] suing year was by % per will be Meld at the Ply- #&] nothing less than a rot & Crit) ing oficers were ® mouth church, At 4 « ok at #| inal 1 am speaking of Rocke |} Samuel BL Capen; viee president ® the First Methodist church a ®&/ of course, simply as the most con-| ry Hopkins; prudential commit ® meeting for women will be held ®/splouous representative of a certain term expiring 1907, Rev. F. J Wunder the auspices of the Wo- w/ class of monopolists In this country.) van porn; prudential committee ® men's board of the Pacific. At #/ To denounce Rocke 4“! torm expiring 1908, Rev, Edward © % the Firat Prosibytertan %| criminal from the pulpit and then tod ay Samuel C, Darling, Frederick ® at 4 o'clock a children's w % | accept his contributions Is manifest-| romdick, Arthur H, Wellman; corre # ine will be conducted by | ly wrong. To illustrate, 1t would be] sronding secretaries, Judson. Smith, ® fetary H. M. Tennel & | wrong to vilify as a thief @ MAD) jones 1. Bartor siiue H. Pat % Francisco, Sunday evening de- #| who stole a steer, and then to accept) ton. fecording secretary, Henry A. ® votic service, followed by ®/& part of the beef. It would be} gimson; ansintant recording necre- ® address by Rev. William J. | equally inconsistent to denounce &| tary Ioaward N & Dawso DD. of #/ man asa hom gs eas the statement etary. ES svennenien ® Eng. will commence # | could be proves n lawin; auditors, Kaw im 0 %| “I think, as dose Dr, Gladden, that | Frank H. Wiggin; audite WF a * #| there is no objection to acceptiOg| iam m Plunkett ; " RAR AA AHA eee eRe Re | Money from a thief if secretly or} An outing is being enjoyed by the board on Baturday afternoon, The or ree © Starr was char by the Seattle chamber of pmmerce and left at 2:15 p.m. for et wound navy yard at Brem the board will spend looking over the bat equipment of the yard Sunday's services will open with a devoth ting In the Py mouth chureh. meeting will b led by Patton, At 11 sek Sunday morning Rev. Josep! Twitchell, of Hartford, will de iver the annual sermon at the Ply mouth church. where the aftern tleships an yal 8 Tr Secretary Mayor Jones Admires Policy of Ballinger JEFORM MAYOR, OF MINNEAPOLIS, NOW HERE AS DELEGATE TO MISSIONARY BOARD, GIVES AN INTERESTING ACCOUNT OF HOW CORRUPT CITY WAS PURGED SEER EERE EEE ERA RHR THE TRIBUTE OF MAYOR JONES OF MINNNEAPOLIS To MAYOR BALLINGER. If the impression which I received of Mayor Ballinger at my meeting with him Friday be correct, Seattle is fortunate in her chief executive. I found that he ix confronting the same problem that I am and tn much the seme way. He seems to be level- headed and to have a fixed purpose. He is not a petty reform- * & Doser or @ chariatan. His reforms seem to be on broad ines.” eee eee eters ete eee ee eeee SESS CEE EERE EEE EEE RE REE Mayor David P. Jones, reform mayor of Minneapolis, and R. A Ballinger, Seattle's reform mayor, met Friday afternoon and ex- changed mutual felicitations upon/ the good work accomplished by each in both cities. Mayor Jones went away feeling that Seattle had the best mayor on/ ‘arth, and Mayor Ballinger has been | thinking ever since that Minneapolis | is very lucky. Mayor Jones is here as a delegate to the foreign missionary board. As resident of the Minneapolis council became mayor to fill out Maver} Eames’ unexpired term. A demo-| erat filled the office for the next! two years, and then the voters, thinking that he was not ood enough. replaced Jones in the posi- tion last January. With refreshing frankness, Mayor Jones Saturday morning outlined’ to the Star man his views on munt- cipal subjects and what had been! done to purge the boodie-ridden me- Saloons are not allowed in the rest- denet section. The idea that they should be Ie fallactoun, “Street walkers are rigidly watch- ed, and are given workhouse sen- tences when caught. The result ts an almost complete eradication of the evil. “Minors are not alllowed at pub- Me dances. That ordinance I enforce rigidly. “The result ha not ben, as we asserted by some, to make Minne- apolie a quiet, Sunday schoot town. | ‘The city ts growing faster than ever. “The direct primary voting sys- fem has been put in vogue there. It has come to stay. It is « big use- cess, although unsatisfactory to the machine politicians, Though not perfect yet, it soon will be. "There is not much agitation In Minneapotia, because the public uttl- ity evil is not very prevalent there ‘The street system is the bent in the world. The fare is 5 cents but there fs little dissatiafaction be- | car tropolis of Minnesota. He sald cause on a transfer passengers can “We started out in Minneapolis to| travel 10 miles. There te some de- Sccomplish four objects, and have| mand, however, for city Nght and come very near doing it. These ob- Jects were the segregation of the im- gas plants “The water plant is owned by the} Moral element of the city; the res-|city. It# net profits $200,-| they attacked the little girl and friction of the liquor traffic; the| 000 to $200,000 « year. The surplus | produced evidence to show that she Suppression of gambling, and the| has generally been used for exten-| had played a game called: “Run annihilation of slot machines. sions and betterments. For the ex-| sheep, run” with the boys in the “We beat the gamblers. Then/| tension of the pumping plant $400,-| woods. The name of the game they came to us for terms. We de-/000 was recently expended. There |aueht the popular fancy, and ‘Run manded unconditional surrender, | is a uniform flat rate of § cents per sheep, run’ was a byword every and got it. Slot machines, as in Se-| 1000 cuble fe though for book-| Where at the time,” Stile, are limited to vending pur-| keeping purposes a» much as he Ford vs. Ford case was con Poses. They can be played in cigar| thing else, park and library dep tinued by request of the plaintiff! Stores, but the player must get some | ments, ete., ore given water for half Sort of cigar for every clip he| that price Makes. This system has greatly dis- “However, most people prefer to eouraged the slot machine players. | use meters, even in the renl¢ “Gambling behind closed doors we| districts, because they can thus get &re combatting continually. { am|thetr water almost twice as cheap. furnished with a contingent fund of} There are 12,000 meters In une. $1,000 to $5,000 a year for the pur-| “The city’s garbage incinerator, pose, a fund, by the way, with|the De Care, is odorless and a suc- Which Mayor Ballinger should be| cess. The health board collects all Provided. The best detectives are| garbage free of charge, nithough the put to work to keep tab on snch re-| appropriation for the purpose forts. They sometimes spend weeks | not been sufficient.” fm making the necessary acquaint- ances by which they can enter the| ‘BUNCO ARTIST ms. Men outside the city are| has Sometimes used. This policy has Kept the knights of the green cloth On the run, “Blind pigs and liquor-selling Grug stores also cause us some| George W. Spencer, 34, landed at trouble, but we keep the evil very! police headquarters Saturday after- ‘Woll suppressed. We.have the sup-|non possessed of the complete out port of two of the best judges that) fit of a “bunco” artist @ver sat on a municipal bench, and Patrolman Hubbard arrested that is the most important factor| Spencer in his room in the ES tn our success, Convicted gamblers | stricted district. A “flash” roll, nd blind-piggers are given the! {tation ‘s-Fargo papers, — limit, workhouse sentences, That’s| opium pipe, ete, were found in his what counts. ‘Baloons valise. City Detective Wappenstein knows ¢ restricted to the pa-| trol limit» district in the business | Spencer and stated after the arrest bection, and they are easily kept| that he t# well known throughout @rderly. The mayor has the arbi- the east. Spencer is held without Wary authority to revoke lice Re. vuweeeeseeeeeeeeeeenenns | | Ford ee | N P. OFF bet TALS JJOINT ©, Rept, 16.-— Northern Pactfi "ofticlale to- day made public a statement from President Elliott that the Portiand & Seattle rattroad ts organized and owned jointly by the Northern Pacific and Gre: Northern; that they will im- mediately build NHnew from Ken hewick, Wash. along the north bank of the Columbia to Van- from Portland to the Bast Seeeeeeeeet eee eee eee eee SEER OR “Run, sheep, run!” The words were uttered in a stage whisper Saturday morning by an old-time attorney, as the Ford va. Ford divorce was called Reminiscent smiles were provoked by the remark, and a recent ar- rival in Seattle asked the aignific ance of the phrase. Suaan 1. Ford wae mere'y euing William Ford for divorcee on the stereotyped and un. Interesting ground of non-support and the sudden craning of necks and show of interest needed ex plaining. “Why.” said the man who had whispered, “it is the wife of Parson Word who is seeking the divorce is the preacher who got in trouble here four or five years ago, A sensational mix-ap, the trial of which consumed three weeks and kept the whole country interested Ford was accused of wronging a lit- | tle 14-year-old girl. To defend Ford until additional evidence could be secured tht * * * . * tt * & will be * ® fore * *% conference on Monday, to no- ® ® tify John PD. kefeller that ® & the gift of § nlready re- ® ® ceived from him for education- & # al work, in connection with ad- # ® vancing the work in ne * fields, In not “taint + # that the balance of the $100,000 & *& donation, of which It te a part, # * will be acceptable as soon an t * convenient, in order to push # & the work with aw little delay as ® % possible. * * a tk Tk tk kk tk VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 16 Several accidents have happened on the Skeena river o f late which ha deaths, th news s which reached Vancouver Friday by the steamer Amur. The death was that of @ man name Swanson, who was struck by & boulder while working at the Lorne creek hydraulic claims eulted in last SEATTLE’S POL ICE DEPARTMENT While “boxitin,” flow troubling the momentarily ch of John Brill, of the Summit saloon 4 conference between the chief exe cutive and Acting Chief Willard and Police Captain Laubaeher develops the startling fact that in spite of Captain Laubscher’s warning #a the new disease loon keepers are decidedly reluctant in suppressing the evil Mayor his Rallinger is now on pd will be practically for to issue orders to arrest the liquor magnates who have turned up their ine at the antiquated ordinance. The saloon men are evidently wait ing for a test case to be tried be fore acting Captain Laubscher and Mayor Ballinger have been practically iso lated from the police department and the new malady has spread to the rinks of the patrolman, as not one teport on conditions since the mayor's orders were Insued has been turned in at headquarters, Evi dently the work will have to be donayover again, and this time ar rests) will be made, as the mayor has fated that does not intend to whit for a test case, “L have insved my orders and they { (BY DAN DEAN.) The foreign minstonary board has that the must be obeyed,” ts the elty hall/ donation from that ¢ of slogan. |grafters, John D. Rockefeller. ‘Thin While most of the saloons have! was done Friday afternoort yemoved doors and curtains from) At present the mission boxes they ha topped at that and! “scrapping” to wt |Doxes #till remain at the r of ent wiice of that he many taloons or in other rooms in open defiance of the ordinance and the mayor's orders ' jfants, each the joy air of fond baby in the wo kith and kin, pride of a parents, rid to ite will be dren up in nw double-chins by the Jud, and there Will be a tremen yg chorus infantile sounds, pitched in vary- and each the! Babies Will Lord it Sunday at the Exposition Sunday will be a great day at{ifig keys, expressive of the Indi | vidal Moods of thousands of babie the Lewis and Clark exposition, for] Gan McAllen, the “father of the | the #oing to have it all | fair,” will have the most strenuous] | their way. Thousands of in | day he has ever had. & an divid e@ ‘the babies into seven classes ratiging in age from three months to | thrte years, and the finest baby tr jeaeh ot will receive a prize, Bach their beat bibs and tuck carried | baby on exhibit will presented the turnstile and put on| with a houvenir medal, The fattert| |baby, the darkest-eyed, the biuest- Several thousand, fat-lexged, rely- | eyed, the brownest-eyed the poly, wriggling and chuckling little! grayeat-eyed will aleo rec indt | youngsters will say “goo-goo’ and | vidtal prises, as will the baby with | #0 through their other Infantile ac-|the fnest hair, The best-drense [complishments and tricks when| baby, the most originally dress ucked under soft, velvety little} and the best hatured and the cro lent Dabiew will not be forgotten show will begin with a at 2 o'clock. | Tron Hook on Arm Was A Dangerous Weapon J. T. Rodia, fruit stand proprie- tor, and John Hogan, fisherman, en a Bios 4 will ridge both | caged in a serious fight on South mbia and Willamette | £aken ‘Waihionen, Fite for entrance into Pertiand, giv- aieat ond gton, rag ing the Northern Pacific and , Qreat Northern @ direst. line According to Rodia’s story Hogan, who was intoxicated, grabbed (wo peaches from a boxful in front of the stand. Rodia asked payment for the stolen fruit. Before he fin ished the request for a nickel the peaches came at him like bullets and he starte! after Hogan Rodia is a cripple and one of bis Gave Money to Republican Fund YORK, Sept. 16.--George Perkins, member af the firm of Morgan & ¢ and firat vice w York Life In- wan the star wit: .P preatdent of the surance company ness at y y's session of the! special legisiative committee. prob |ing life insurance companies meth- lode, and his testimony was rep'ete with revelations tn the development } of finance as applied by companies. The climax of the day came when Mr. Perkins was asked concerning | an entry of $48 in a ledger, marked “ordered paid by the p dent. The check was made | payable to J. P. Morgan & Co. kins frankly stated that It waa tribution to the national repub- lican campaign committee and had been paid to Cornelius N. Bilas | SEEKS DEATH WALLA WALLA, 8¢ 16 NAN PATTERSON. Thomas McCool, 17, son of a well ee known pioneer resident of Walla Martin. The ceremony was planned! Walla, tried to commit suicide Fri- | fOr Ist night, but had to be post- day by taking several grains of | poned. arsenic, He said he was tired of | - - living and wanted to die. A woman who was near when he took the Deserte poison summoned a doctor, who| aaved the boy's life, McCool served - one term in the reform school. He] VALDEZ, Sept. 16.—J. H. Hughes, | broke his leg lately while beating | asatafant engineer of the She'ikoft his way | to Spokane. Med in the hospital of heart dis. eane | A relief has been sent by the gov- for a man who was stricken with BURNED ALIVE paralysis and deserted by partners with no provisions. Indians report j Jed the matter, His name could not | | AVON, Conn, Sept. 16.--Seven | bertearned. people were burned to death here) yesterday In a fire which consumed the plant of the Climax Fuse com pany, and others sustained serious injuries, The fire started from (he explosion of a fuse and spread so rapidly that ft could not be cheek ed. The lows to the butldings will reach $100,000. NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 16 noon 22 new cases and one ce from yellow fever were reported. ath insurance 1 Mt arms is but a stump to which fastened an iron hook. With thir weapon Rodia had a decided ad vantage, Hteraliy “throwing the héoks” into Hogan, and putting the fisherman to flight. Hogan was aft- orwards found cowering {n a saloon nearby by Patrolman Anderson who chased him three blocks before he conght bim. Patrolmen Bunnell and Dolphin assisted in sending the two men to the station. They are charged with fighting and will be taken before Po Judge Gordon Saturday afternoon. NAN PATTERSON MARRIES AGAIN WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—Nan Patterson was remarried at noon to day to her former husband } | } FIVE KILLED | | IPINCONNING, Mich., Sept. 16 brne Stave mill exploded this morn- ing and killed five ail injured 10. Two are fatally ingured, @T. PETERSBURG, Sept. 16.— 7 ar left this morning to visit for two days in Fintand | aand to take | fields of labor } it in rath to them make vd fiithy ne of them back with them entertaining to fi their pleas fe sivid rinti nt me to the ¢ United te inside heath negroes. natur Mex may as the hund: Witt ft wo what 4 th WwILt uaand. be d to ¢ away from hie ot become that am the wil potth Or the kinky-headed Ethe | from his awe of the big, yellow wur The millions spent in foreign min. } ary k seems. to the writer used in the exploitation of one n brand of religion to corner market and “freeze out” th Nine out of ten men believe, an doen the writer elgn Fr that the whole fi mionary idea is wrong. T has right and at to the of more Mare BAD CHECKS The police received evidence in two forgery cases Saturday when the Seattle bar and J. H. Ryan, a saloonkeeper on Washington, turn- ed over to them two bad checks. One was in favor of Homer BR. Warren, and signed “P. F. Schar- smidt,” calling for $3.15, The check | Was cashed, but came back marked | “no account.” Ryan states in his report that be | knew who concocted the $15 check, signed “W. B. Everett,” with the same blue pencil. Now that the| leon Ryan wants the police to cateh the man be trusted. English M P Hired Man to Murder Wife. Sept & former member of Hament on a charge of attempt- hire a private detective to |areist him in murdering his former | wife is still on. A man named War ley, & newspaper hawker, te: ted that Watt had asked him to murder | his wife by chloroforming her, and jthat he gave him instructions as to how to gain access to her apart ments. 3 KILLED MANY INJURED of San Diego, Cal, badly cut by glass. whow | Eamond house, on Washington be- tween South First and Occidental, reported at police headquarters at |2 o'clock Saturday morning that he} had been robbed of $44. Part of the money was in the shape of a check which had been indorsed by | McDonald. Mrs. Duboise, of 606 Sixth, told| the police that she had been robbed of a_ viol which was stored at 1434 Weatern. BREMERTON, Sept ~The gunboat Concord was placed in com- mission today, with C. J. transfer from the Newport, R 1, naval college, in command. ‘The Concord haa been ordered to take the place of the Bennington tn the Pacific squadron. ‘Phe transport Solace is en route from olare island with a part of the crew, paper has been found to be worth- | 16.—The trial of |“"% CHICA 16.—An engine on a par train of the Balti- | more & Ohio was “sideswiped” by a | witch at Kimmel, Ind,, this | ning. Engineer F. P. Snyder | Boggagemaster Frank Smoots ia passenger named Walter Wilson | were killed, and 21 were injured, | among them being W Shaw, | | James McDonald, a roomer at the! Bousch, | Heathen in Foreign Climes May Be Our Broth ers, But: WHY NOT LET A CHINAMAN WORSHIP HIS JOSS UNTIL WE CONVERT OUR OWN PEOPLE, 18 WHAT STAR WRITER WANTS TO KNOW tin f hundreds of men and wo-;¥ 1 the c * This million came mverting heathen of other|from the Congregational denomins until it han at least done ution alone, Think of fortunes wt il-ncrubbing in their| poured Into the heathen lands by than has a man to|the other churches and by private en and stocking acrosm to! parties! ibor'n children while his{ At least three ml a year are ingsters are going bar ontributed by us toward foreign Plymouth church on Fri-| Can't you, Mr. Reader, suggest « | 4 gument | way in which that great sum could to an old, whiteshaired missionary, | be umed for better ures? ho sat next > me in the r of Here in a «cestion from one well known Seattleite the writer Miately replied that the| talked to Friday night. What do 1 tials and the| you think of we it as much o That, with th three millions, @ thore living next door | number of homes be ¢ ablished for the street |the bringing-up an jucation of » from one tree,” maid| young boys, who at present make the venerable gospelite. “The souls|the streets their homes, Let them over acroms the seas are worth av-|be given healthy, cheerful and up- ing just a# much as are those be-| lifting environments. Let them be i ng to the members of our own| taught good trades and the knowl- families edge of the sweetness and purity in | That, from an purely religious fe. | viewpoint, fe 4 pretty strong argu-| Of these hundreds and hundreds ment to advance, and would hold|of boys almost all would grow up water if we could truthfully aay that|to be good citizens, wage-earnera, ur ow ho were cleaned of sin [wnd help to make this country’s fue nd not th would take the unit-|ture bright with the possibilities of ed efforts of a dozen times the num- | fered in the presence of sturdy, hone ber of fo any apprect | of our country. } When the reader Is told that the mission board, now in session, spent a cool lion last year in its work, he must not suppose that that was all we Amerteans contributed to- en m effect on the n orale saionaries to make | est self-reliant young men, | Instead. Of trying to cram our own pare ticular brand of religion down the unwilling throats of a God-fearing race who, when torn from their own beloved creed, founder about help- lensly in the maze of a new one. GREEN KLONDIKER THE | VICTIM OF GRAFTERS Prosecuting Attorney Mackintosh j has beld that he cannot grant a | complaint to Ben Seter, a miner, | who was robbed of $200 in the Old | Paris house by an inmate of that | resort last Wednesday night City Attorney De Bru'er holds that {t 1s impossible to “vag” Lucy Green, stil! held for the robbery. De jer states that long & women of the underworld pay their | monthly fines, $10 each, the city |cannot prosecute them, although they may rob victims nightly. “It's up to the state,” says the leity attorney. “If any one gets robbed by these colored wenches then the state must take up the |work of prosecution. My hands re tied.” Although Seter positively identi- fied Lucy Green as the negress who gave him the “strong arm,” it looks as if she would get away with the money and escape prosecution. Acting Chief “Willard offers a possible stop of the crimes commit ted by Lizette's pickpockets and the inmates of both the New and Old Paris resorts, He says that an ac- jtion should be taken to prevent |fines being collected from women |under suspicion and when they in- }sist on remaining in the city to ar | rest them on vagrancy charges | This solution is commendable es « else can be done Ben Seter, the vietim from Dawson, Alaska, He worked |hard for his money and is now suffering from sciatica rheumatism Jas the result of his labors in the north I was looking for the Scandina vian-American bank,” stated Seter to a Star reporter, “I could not find it and wandered down into that it is a miner | part of the city. I do not drink, but I suppose ft was my fault for going into such a place. One of those wenches threw her arma around my neck and, though I ruggied hard, I could not away from her. I did not feel her take the money, which wae all in $20 bills in a wallet In the inside of my coat, but I missed it soon af- terwards and she was the only woman that laid hands on me down there. I immediately reported my loss to Patrolmen Burkman and Crandall and they took me back up- ‘airs, whe pointed out this Lucy Green. Sinee being robbed Seter has vis~ ited three clairvoyants, and from each of them has learned that the right woman has been arrested, but he is disappointed also to learn that |he will never get his money back, | according to the mediumistic trio. Mrs. E. Emmett, 323 Pioneer building, South African medium, evidently familiar with the crafti- ness of colored women in general, told him so, Mme. Yvonna, astrol- ogist at the Rochester, 116% Pike, strengthened the advice, and Flor- ance Marvin, who claims to have predicted the great Seattle fire, af- ter @ consultation, agreed with her competitors. Seter believes them and has decided to admit defeat, Friday he appeared at the Wayside Emergency hospital to be exam- ined, a8 a local medical institute threw him into a fever of fear when they told him that he was in the last stages of consumption. “I don’t think I'm sick as that,” reproachfully remarked the Kion- diker, who has evidently fallen jafoul of many types of “grafters” during his stay In this city. That paupers from the east, eape- cially New York, are being dumped rests jlished by many recent ar the Seattle police | Friday afternoon Humane Officer Clarke took into custody Henry | Felter, brought to the police station by a man who found him wander- jing ou the shores of Lake Washing- ton with a small bundle done up in a red bandanna handkerchief. After Clarke talked with Felter he de- cided that it was a case for an in- sanity commission and later had Felter taken to the county jail, Fel- ter is 85 and could scarcely walk. ju came from Elm by N. Y., and, in a given him enough money out here. For a few months sald that he was an inmate pauper establishment near Tacor into the cities of this state is estab-/ told the humane officer that he} Wears Three Suits at one Time, Does Pauper but he claims that they attempted to choke him to death and he pack- ed up his effects and ran away. He had on three complete suits of cloth- ing. Forge Kartolo Shumizu was arrested Friday by Deputy Sheriff Moe, being charged by G. Yenari, head clerks of M. Furuya Co., with forgery. Shumizu is charged with forging the name of Tataro Uyenura to @ $30 certificate of deposit, and wil having it cashed in Kent. After being arrested by the deputy sher- vague way, stated that some one had | to come} iff, Shumizu confessed the erima, and attempted to buy off the officer by offering him $10. The informa- has been filed in the superior t and the case will go there di- a