Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
° ° ° re) ° ° °6 . CRIMINALS CONTINUE TO_ | REAP * Police Vigilance Is° Unavailing. MRS. MARSHALL FIELD, JR., IS MARRIED IN LONDON itle’s police force seems en y unable to cope with the gang} adiietheitpilateidibinananoneenis Sipieves infoating the elty, Crime Wealthy Chicago Woman Weds a# though such a thing Residences s Englishman---Very Private fw did not oxist tins Are being boldly enter Affair. Gerery day and jewelry and earried away with as much (By United Press.) LONDON, Sept. %.—Mra, Mar shall Field, Jr, widow of the son of the Chicago merchant king, was |B | married in the registry office here |today to Maldwin A, Drummond, | the second son of the late Edgar A. Drummond The greatest efforts were made to keep the wedding secret. The two sons of the bride were pres ent at the ceremony. The only other attendants wore Craig Wads- worth, one of the secretaries of |the American embassy, and the Duke of Westminster. There were ho other witnesses except those required by law. Wadsworth act ed as groomaman. Drummond is prominent tn the upper cireles of society in London and is connected with several titled families. His most intimate friend ts the Duke of Westminster, who was present at the wedding. He has Sam as if one were walking his own property. Hold-| continue, The business Ta wierery is apparentiy one of ed die profit in this city. Yes é in particular a rich harvest geaped by the yegsmen and and stores [tn various of the city were entered and Mai and other articles of value ‘The potice now have a num ie of robberios under investiga MRS, MARSHALL FIELD, JR, Drummond had been well conceal ed and was suspected by very few of thelr friends. t who conducts a sport t ae cere at 606 Third ay. when he opened the this morning that {t had been the night, en- been gained by re rate from one of the a windows and taking out a Chicago ts Surprised. CHICAGO, Sept. 3-—The an houncement of the wedding in Lon- don of Mrs. Marshall Field, Jr. of glass. A large poke Peace with cement, found |*80¥" the bride nine years and|/came as a great surprise today alley, furnishes the only beat hem acquainted with her late| Her sons, Marshall Field, who is | mow 15 years old, and Henry, 1, After the ceremony the couple | are the heirs to the great Pleid fit residence of Mrs, R.A. Tea- hat 1401.6. Union #., was Into yesterday and the fol- articies stolen: Two gold pair of gold apectacios, gold case wateh, pear! stickpin, | r spoons and several of silverware. foo of T. A. Brady, Sixth Yesler way, was entered , who made away with the thief. wr hammerless guns, one Win rifle, & Martin rifle, a pack = for an automobile honeymoon | estate, atimated at, $160,000.00 r and several pairs of q | She is the daughter of Henry Huck, knives pve Rang It Is expected that the news ofthe millionaire brewer of this city were vf the marriage will be a great dis-| Marshall Field, Jr, shot and kill Rob Hote! Room. appointment to King Edward, who| ed himself while cleaning a pistol em workers gained entraoce | bas m trying for two years, it) at his home here three years ago. of William McGinnis,/is said, to arrange the marriage| Immediately after the funeral his oe hotel, 400 Fourth av..jof Mrs. Field to Prince Francis| widow went to Kngland with her| a valuable gold watch, | Teck, an impecunious relative. The|two sons, She has returned to} ' of Feruvien and Sate attachment between Mra, Field and| this city a few times atnce then mecoins and @ number of other | cep ee “ SNES — en } Special Features Promised |cept this invitation, the mange: | » | ment promises to secuge attractions which will have special interest for for Workingman’s er Holiday. |laboring men | PRE te | ‘That Labor day, whieh ts also the | Labor day will have a literal sig- opening day, will be the banner day | nificance at the first annual West-|of the fair, seema now a foregone lasive servant «iri thief |ern Washington fair if the plans of conclusion. One of the features of operating in several jair management carry through, t ay will the running of the La been the fai he di i th La} nvitation having been | bor Day Handicap, Some ood horses from the Meadows will run | them to attend the to this event, which is over a mile/ If the unions ac: | route, viting a body dollars were taken from ph J to work at 10 o clock and fociock in the afternoon she d. taking a pocketbook ¢ several dollars, a pair we shoes and a small bank with aw Fas a man and woman on the shore ear the spot where the body was register at the Butte cafe, a walter named found. They had left # canoe on Mystery. n Ralph Olmsted a few eee NE The young men remarked that it was found (wo days ago pear Juan) date because it was the day follow a 10 LOOK the officers who are investigating | the men of the Atlantic battleship [Pike st. at 2 o'clock this morn-| Identity of Victim Seems to BH. Winters, the proprietor, Bell Be an Unsolvable A man anawertng the the beach and were attempting to of the thief was arrested start a camp fire. Tater. At the police station] The mystery surrounding the | would be difficult to build a fire his name as William |@eath of the woman whose body /in that place. They remember the ita, om the east shore of Lake|ing that on which a searchlight Washington, is still unsolved, and demonstration had been given by em the supposed murder have little! meget then th te of Beattie. ? ISSING BOAT | 0x2, 0% tatnoming te ee ’ i u Answered Description, * ie It is believed that the woman was! & stranger in the city, as mo One| agar and Brooks say that the ited Press.) answering her description has been woman was short and had light hair, 0 Gept. 3.—Instruc-|reported missing. The theory ts ad-| soswering in these details the de | were sent y from the|Yanced that she was @ possible out-| scription of the dead woman obtain- it to Admiral Chas. |of-town visitor to the fleet celebra- 4 by Deputy Coroner Wiltate fn command of the Pa-|tion. Any local disappearance, it) Deputy Sheriff Liner went to the to keep a|is said, would have reached the ears | geene of the tragedy again this steamer |of the authorities, | morning and spent the day search. nm heard Provide Possible Clew. | tng for clews to the identity of the A ible clew is furnished by | dead woman. the fam |Ben F edgar and Wesley L. Brooks,| A revolver and a small kaife are Patrick, /two young men of Kirkland, who | alleged to have been found yester- day near the spot where the body lay is R Mrs. Wm. K. Riddle, | report that while riding in a row also of the 4 th ‘fen Pree boat on the evening of May 2 ey for Samoa, where she from Hawaii will pro- TERRIFIC GALE it is thought possible ship may be SS ——— Having weathered the terrific Att kthh hh hhh * gales which threatened the codfish fleet with destruction, and report ENCOUNTERS ©" «= who claim that the mor- | is very slight and hardly worth con sidering. as compared to the danger from indigestion by failure to give | the animals water regularly. TEACHERS LISTEN peasants * ing the finding of a wood pump, | SBAND SUICIDES. * which it is believed may have come TO LECTURES BF |} from a swamped dory, the codfisher cnncemnanenany anh ci? £8). ¥) Voun arrived at King & Winge's| Before the teachers’ Institute this ms |, Sept. 3— */ eharf at Weat Seattle this morning, | morning Dr. 8. M. Padelford spoke Donohue, *) with a catch of 168,000 codfish ey tee on “The Beginnings of Poetry.” mtand of Mrs. Alice Donohue, # " ory } Was murdered, and whic * Fishing was commenced on May 4 ternoon he gr a comet 4 | off Cape Pancof, where the Joe Raphaelite Painters.” | fished until June 7, when it shifted being exhumed last * = Berin, 7 ‘— sea. Poor catches were beommitted eulcide this #| Sage in Sune : Hed tended to tance sax | ‘The force of the waves which | Sakos, ¥ Geet Donohue might * dashed over the vessel carried a/ ° . | dory overboard } college and a come knowledge of w| - ee lat prosent touring the country lee y arco. * | SPEAKERS DENOUNCE turing to high schools, will deliver es ee SENATOR ANKENY. ——— | W. T. Dovel and Ira Bronson ad MAN ON TRIAL FOR BATTERY ee | dressed a meeting held in the in Tustics Carroll this aft terest of Cong. Wesley L. Jones, Is in progress the trial of candidate for the United States y ¥ senate, in the soctal hall of the| 2,600 hungry ones, Take the Yo Rodgers, @ fireman, charged se Seeault on the person of seth, Pp terian church last, semite and speud a day with the cane eae yeakers denounced | boys off the rails, the Brotherhood | Senator Ankeny asa bribe-giver. [of Raliroad Tra n mal Dyatt, manager of the suit ‘ of the William Walker Ss More, 1116 Beeond av. The MISSTATEMENT AS TO | INVESTMENTS ‘was buried for two tine matters. Tomorrow morning Prof Leo teacher amano cL RES A big free barbeque dinner at Ludlow Labor We can feed RAINIER’S HEIGHT BF siiosis you nave money tor investment in high class bonds Hl or stocks, we are in a position to execute your order in from two to four minutes over our private wire, on any of tho leading exebanges throughout the United States Thore are a large number of Secretary C. B. Yandel! of the Chamber of Commerce i# protesting against the misstatement made by the Northern Pacific Railroad com pany in its latest publication, “Kant ward Through the Storied North fame into the store where | etaployed and without any | on struck him with a pair knuckies defense maintains that| weet,” in that the altitude of Mt securities at the present mar asked Dyatt for an ex-|Rainier is given as 14,363 feet, ket prices that pay a good rate wife of an inault offered to| whereas the correct altitude is 14, of Interest, and at the same : and that during an al-|626 feet time are perfectly secure, Be. that foliowed he track sides, they are convertible tm iad ‘etme atte | VETERINARIES FAVOR jf (2, cash at a fow minutes’ no Bis brought out in a taik aur-| ~ OPEN FOUNTAINS & tor nae’ vo'tan turn over the A the jury w cash to you in any amount he Pratt had ahoved : wets immediately on the sale of the Rerking noaser® whi Open fountains for watering hore | Hh sseurtios mg at the store on are preferred to ordinary taps by : ——— an | Umber UF veterinary surgeons O , oti” celine te cotaves rele S» ©. Onhorn & Co, WrO4, * |l\ceived by Miss Anna Rasdale, who Commission Brokers ACTS | Nl! is agitating the placing of open Logan & Bryan, 6 fountains at vartous points in the Correepondente. 4 business district for the use of Yosemite und: 627 Firet Av. coe gg oe |B ind. 6558, Main 2723 That open fountains would spread We round trip : ..'\ glanders is contradioted by the vot” G HARVEST OF RICHES | night confessed to the police foree tality among horses from «landers | ~~; of the day was oceupled with rou | ite of the! a leoture, tllustrated with stereoptt- | con views, on “Features of Modern | and Ancient Greece.” | 9° THE STAR—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1908, LITICAL SCRAMBLE IN WEST VIRGINIA (By United Press.) NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—As the re sult of the hearing before the sub committee of the republican nation al committee a bitter Mght ia ox | pected In West Virginia between the Swisher and the Seherr factions of the party in their contest for con trol, The Taft presidential electors will be allowed to appear on both | tickets, which means in effect that} the national organization will take no part on one side or the other, | and will leave it to the state lead ers to fight It out between them selves, Hach side sought the sup port of the national committee, and each wanted to snut the other out of recognition » hype aalthe thyab td. iad nah *® FORAKER HAS NOT MADE PEACE PACT WITH TAFT. (By United Press.) TOLEDO, O., Sept. 3.—Sen ® ator Joseph BH. Foraker let ® loose a bombshell this after * noon, when asked about his * widely heralded “reconetiia * tion” with Taft. He declared * “IL have made no peace pact ® with Taft. The executive com ® mittee has insulted me inten. *® tionally by not inviting me to ® the opening of the state cam * paign at Youngstown Satur. ® day, There has been no recon ® cillation. No one has been au *® thorized to say what my course ® will be.” stat SSeS SEES EER ER EEE EK SUPERHERO E EE RHE BRYAN RETURNS TO THE FARM (By United Press.) OMAHA, Sept. 3.—W. J. Bryan today declined to comment upon the meeting of Taft and Foraker at Toledo tast evening. He left here to go directly to his Fairview farm. BIG TREES SAVED FROM FIRE. (By United Press.) STOCKTON, Cal, Sept, 3.—The forest fire which has ba§n burning in the vicinity of the Big Trees) since Monday is under control and practically out. “The only tree in the famous Calaveras grove which was touched by fire was ‘the mother | of the forest,” said J. Stephens of | Murphy's camp today, “and it was | only slightly damaged.” BURGLAR MAKES CONFESSION. BELLINGHAM, Sept. 3.~-Bert Davis, colored, aged 20, and famil larly known to the city as the Bel lingham boy prise fighter, Inet that he was reaponatble for every burglary committed in the city this summer, with the exception of | two. PUBLIC MARKET. j | | Shoulders of mutton and lamb| | jat § cents per pound, mutton stew | lat 5 cents a pound, Olympia oysters! at 30 cents « pint, tomatoes at 3 pounds for 10 cents, Crawford peaches at 60 cents a box, large! salmon trout at 19 cents a pound, | jloin steak at 10 cents a pound, pot) | roast at 6 cents a pound, prunes at 120 cents a basket, canteloupes at! 31.50 a crate, and Wenatchee water | melons at | cent & pound, are the | principal specials that will be on sale at the public market tomorrow A carload of Wenatchee water melons arrived in the market this! morning. This ix the largest ship: | ment of Wenatchee watermelons) ever made direct to the public mar ket. ALAMO CLUB DANCE. The Alamo club, which has been | giving a series of dances during the | past summer at Meydenbauer Bay, | will give its last party of the sea-| son on the evening of Sept. 11. The} steamer will leave Leach! park at) 8:30 o'clock STOCK MARKET FURNISHED BY 8. ©. OSBORN @ CO. New York, Sept. 3. ERE gy F 3333 rs] = 2 ESESTE = atic PPP; £535. 2 geese: men Sues Stsbze peaereztti 23 2 = - =, 2 eae 5 Bee | Rowena ot SLE = SSSsUsE irs SSPE T ET Mending Southern Union P SSSSVESLSSSostslTs ry a5? CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Chicago, Sept. 4. “ es ern: Bae, See erensronienes MRS. DR. OHO. W. MIRA children's diseane 410 Hine block. Both pho Low STtAME® YOSEMITE Grand Excursion TO OLYMPIA, THE STATE CAPITAL, i} | Under the auspices of George | | H. Fortson Camp, No. 2, United Spanish War Veterans, Sunday, Sept. 6 Léaves Pier 6, foot of Uni versity at, at 9:20 a. m Come and enjoy a day of pleasure on Puget Sound | Fine Seenery, Visit Tum: jf] water Falls | Music and Dancing Free ||| FARE 60 CENTS ROUND TRIP. | Refreshments served on Boat, | Tickets for sale at Bartell's | | Owl Drug Co. and ay.; Fruit | Stand, Plier 6; Ticket Office on | Dock and Members of Order ° 2 (PAID ADVERTIGEMENT,) ~ JIMMIE DURKIN Candidate for Governor On the Democratic Ticket S ® THE WORD DEMOCRACY MEANS THAT THE PEOPLE RULE; IT’S A FARCE SO FAR AS BEING A FACT IN THIS STATE TODAY. THE BEST EVIDENCE THAT THIS IS SO IS FURNISHED BY THE LEADING REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES WHO ARE IN OFFICE, AND OTHERS WHO ARE ASPIRING TO SUCCEED THEM. IN THEIR EFFORTS TO DO SO THEY ARE THROWING BRICKS OF TRUTH PROVING THAT IN THE PAST,AS WELL AS THE PRESENT, THEY HAVE NOT BEEN AS THEY WOULD HAVE YOU BELIEVE +THE SERVANTS OF THE PEOPLE — BUT ARE REPRESENTA- TIVES OF THE CORPORATIONS, WHO HAVE BUT TO NOD THEIR HEADS AND THEY DO THEIR BIDDING. DID YOU EVER SEE A CANDIDATE FOR OFFICE THAT HAD A CORPORATION BRAND ON HIM? NO, AND YOU NEVER WILL. WHY? BECAUSE THE CORPORATIONS KNOW THAT THE POWER TO ELECT PEO- PLE TO OFFICE RESTS IN THE HANDS OF THE PEOPLE, AND ALL THEY HAVE TO DOIS TO BRING OUT A HORSE FROM THE SAME OLD STABLE, NAME HIM REPUBLICAN, PUT A NEW JOCKEY ON HIS BACK, PLAY THE GAME OF PREJUDICE, GIV- ING THE PEOPLE ANOTHER GOLD BRICK, AND THEN LET THEM FIND OUT AFTER ELECTION THAT THE OLD HORSE AND THE NEW JOCKEY ARE EATING IN THE CORPORATION'S BINS AS THE OTHERS DID BEFORE. THE POLITICIANS STUDY THE PEOPLE AND GO INTO POLITICS AS A BUSINESS, THAT 18, WHAT THEY CAN MAKE OUT OF IT WHILE THEY ARE IN THE BUSINESS. WHAT ARE THE PEOPLE GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? WHAT DOES A WOMAN DO WHEN SHE FINDS THAT THE OLD BROOM DOES NOT SWEEP CLEAN? NOW TAKE THE SPECTACLES OF PREJUDICE FROM YOUR EYES AND TRY TO SEE, IF POSSIBLE, WHERE THERE IS A MAN WHOSE PAST RECORD I§ A BOND FOR THE FUTURE, AND VOTE FOR HIM REGARDLESS OF WHAT PARTY BRAND HE HAS UPON HIM. AND IF MEN OF THIS CHARACTER WERE ELECT- ED, THE TIME WOULD 8OON COME IN THIS STATE WHEN THE POLITICIANS WOULD BE ASKING WHAT ARE THE PEO- PLE GOING TO DO, INSTEAD OF ASKING AS THEY DO NOW, WHO IS THE CORPORATION'S CANDIDATE? I HAVE NOT CON- SULTED WITH ANY POLITICIANS ABOUT MY CANDIDACY, OR AS TO WHAT I WOULD DO IF I WERE ELECTED GOVER- NOR OF THIS STATE. THE CORPORATIONS ARE NOT HELP- ING ME TO GET THE NOMINATION, NOR WILL THEY INFLU- ENCE ME IN MY DECISIONS, IF ELECTED. IF YOU WILL USE YOUR VOTE—AS THE FARMER DOES HIS PLOW—JIN TURNING DOWN THE RANK WEEDS THAT TIME HAS LET GROW IN YOUR STATE GOVERNMENT BY VOTING FOR ME FOR YOUR NEXT GOVERNOR—I WILL GUARANTEE YOU A SAVING OF MONEY ON YOUR INVESTMENT. JIMMIE DURKIN EVERY LITTLE HELPS—HOW ABOUT YOUR VOTE? P. S.—THE PEOPLE HAVE TAKEN THE JOKE OUT OF MY CANDIDACY AND HAVE TAKEN IT SERIOUSLY, ANDI AM SIN- CERE IN ASKING YOU FOR YOUR VOTE, PROMISING YOU A STRICTLY BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DEVOID OF ALL PO- LITICAL GRAFT, AND WILL AIM TO GET FOR YOU ONE DOL- LAR IN GOOD VALUE FOR EVERY DOLLAR OF YOURS THAT IS EXPENDED. JIMMIE DURKIN.