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: THE STAR—FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1909. 9 RAILROAD MAN GO ‘Fistic CARD 1S MILLIONAIRE 1S WORKING HOSPITAL MANY Tie ES) ,, SIVEN TonIGHT) "” EQR $100 A MONTH FRANCISCO, Jan. 29. t BY K Mi. BEATON And then Governor Coagrove went pen of greater value than the mar U.P After several fighters - neler Bede Was privileged on Wedn ack to 90 years ago, when as /ket pr +t) ' Afternoon to nd an how 4 young man tn the prime of WW Remember,” ho sald, as I pado|!8 IN FIVE BAD ACCIDENTS AND | F platform of the caboore, | cluding Dick Hyland, had with BY T. J. DILLON ernore’ union ever hears of the Governor Cosgrove aboard his pri-|he camo to Washington and made|him goodbye, “that you are here| THEN SLIPS ON ICE rode the pilot of the passenger ¢n-| drawn from the bill, promoter eri nite . | wagos Mr. Hay is working for, he Yate Car on the tracks near tho d » home in the little town of Pom-|as & friend of the family, and not] AT LAST. gine through the caboose and three | Ghiries Lercar! today presented| O-YMPIA, Jan, 89~-A millionaire) Tie Ot Oe Oriental t at Olympia " oy. He had told his wife then,/as a newspaper man. Howard has! |cars before it gtopped; reault, both big qurd of fistic entertainers who| working for $100 # month, and wh W the stand mr after his inauguration, and | aid, that some day he was to/ arranged for a visit from the pat | L oearerie bipw- tsloeated low proken | Vi) dppear tonight at Dreamland | “finding” himsel ard of Am ; found him si governor of the state f th y8 tomorrow, and then] WALLA WALLA, Jan, 29.—Ry U.| In three Aces, n one! rink for the edification of the fans.| That's Act jovern i «i Hoe i pein to make chair, | ng with “Alwaye this has been my ambi-|I am to be officially interviewed,” | Pee Fiat on hie back with a disio- | place five ribs broken, skull trac | the program, barring further with: | » ‘ f| both ¢ n Olympia, is not tion,” he continued. “It wae the| | wae glad | had been privileged | ted hip, Charles A, Snider, a tured, 126 stitches had to be taken! qrawals, will be as follows: ‘Berry |4#*Y: Who, during t o | eve the Jenced impression I ga 1} mark at which | aimed through all|to spend thie hour with the gover-| "lroad conductor, t# In a h In one log. He spent 13 weeks In) Mustain va. Ollie Cornett, ten| Gov. Congrove, performs the duties | - 0 especially when he WOOK his hand was differont entire- my residence here. And | knew/nor. It took the lump out of my| pital making the best of his in-| the hospital jrounds; Jimmy Walsh va. Jimmy |of the chief executive of the state more t at to his private Ty from that which had come over| that some day it would be mine.| throat and had permitted me to | Juries, though a chagrined that| | Two y« ago, at ucks! Reagan, 12 rounds; Kid Harrison | The next day after the swearing in| we ides he gives away 88 1 gaged Into his face o| And then, when at last | had won| look at him through eyes not| #2 fey sidewalk had sent him to| Snider fell from a steam shovel on! yy. Low Powell, 15 rounds t voy. | Clear a with @& TS Walked down the aisk he | the fight, it did seem hard to me| dimmed with tears. He was the precincts of doctors and nurses, | Which he was working, between the of Gov. Congrove the lieutenant gov- | & eure 4 must oat at least Bali of the house of representa. | that | should be made to suffer as| stronger than | had believed him ' Five aa J ~ has been tn th poh 1 the depot platform; stx riba ROBINSON Is = oO SUE ernor took wafog official pemaones Tees ; Rives, and afterwards as [ looked|! have. But it ie all right now./to be from the impression | had| hospital, but the four previous | broken | in the suite for the governor and 40 the jot Ngee him, through tears that came Every day | am gaining weight and gained as he carla tise the legis. | Umes rallroad wrecks wer n-| Finally he slipped on an toy wide PAPERS FOR LIBEL. buckled down to earning his sal-|» Yu tick to ‘ oa biden, while he spoke to the as-|strength; and when the harvest lative hall. | wae eure that thie|##ble, Thoso injurtes all resulted | Walk and is in the hospital for re WASHINGTON, Jan, 29.—Hy U. | "°F while Senator Ruth, Bembled lexi rs and took tho | finatly comes it will find me ready | grand old man spoke truly when he| fom ratiroading, and this last one | pare | p.—-It was announced at the White |. "I'M not altogether satisfied that lace in the senate, @ath of office, which gave to him | with my ambition satisfied.” said he would return to Olympia to | id, too, In a way, Snider was on) | | House today that Douglas Robinson, |1'™ earning my mone said Mr.) will draw $19 a day for the remain- &n honor that he promised | He Was the Boss. perform the duties of his office, | lle way to his train when he fell Steamer City of Puohla arrived |i otnerinaw of President Roose. | Hay. “I've seen the time when $190 | Go. of the session Wife 80 yours ago should some day During our conversation I had I am going to take good care | But here if the Mat of Injuries he | today at Gan Francieoe and Will] Oy ees Qnesded to Geoeme & ¢ & month looked pretty big to me, ” de his own suggested that perhaps [ had bet-!of him d the faithful Mra, | Daa reo Presoes, Sout Tenigms slainant a pre d prosecution |894 T would have been tickled to “ee . Old Spirit Stitt There. ter go; but Mrs, Coagrove told me| Cosgrove, “and we wil! have him|_. Fifteen at Fromont Ship J. B. Stetson sailed this ote New York. We Vy vind other (death to take the office of governor Cheap Colonist Tickets Dread disease had robbed him | that I might remain until my train | back strong and hearty, and when | Neb. tra and Snider) morning for Seattle from 88n | newspapers for alleged Mbel tn con- | OF @Ven president of the United| wij) he sold again this spring, f Many pounds of flesh and of } eft we do you will find us at the buried in hours; minor | Franclaco ection with the publication of ar- | * that sum.” | westbound, via Oregon R. R. & Nav Strength, but the old Cosgrove 1 think, however,” she said,| governor's manston with the latch | niuries Norwegian steamer Coot! wailed | ticles referring to the purchase of Hay, the highest offl-\igaiion Company's picturesque ine, ‘apirit was just as evident as that father had better le down.” | string in easy reach of all our! Wikht years ago, at Starbuck, run-/ trom gan Francisco for Victorta|the Panama canal by the United @ state. Is drawing the| during March and April. From d @ver been. The light in h This was not entirely agreeable | friends,” away train caboose (8 / this morning, She will come to Bo-| States owest salary, He gets a little less | Chicago, $23.00; St. Louis, $80.50 EEE Was just es bright, and his |to the governor ‘ which he minor {| attle for a cargo than the janitors who look after the | Gmaha, Kanvas City, 8t. Paul and Were just as ready to turn a I told you, dear,” he sald, turn-|_ Talking Machines at Gut Prices, | juries | Ptanos — Good Ones, at Small | cleantineas of the senate and house, | all Missouri river pointe, $25.00. a ng to Mra, Cosgrove, “that you| Your last chance, Johnston's An-| Five years ago, at Missoula, pas} An elegant Johnston F Price Don't wait any longer of course is not in the same | Deposits taken at Union Ticket Of- *T have had an awful time these should be boas until I became goy- | Ua! Clearance Sale ends tomorrow, | senger train into his | $275, now $226. Johnaton's Johnston's Clearance Sale ends to-| class with the committee clerks. | fice, No. 608 First Ave. BB. ie wahtha” he nie nor. I Gm governor how, and *** freight, and who was on! Clearance Sale ends tomorrow morrow If the national organizer of the gov-| Hillis, Gent. Agt ‘Breotings had been passed. oy. hereafter I am going to be the me, times | just about gave up. T fought it back with @ arin But he smiled as he said it, and ‘Getermination to win and to fill his action belied his words, for he office of governor of this state very promptly walked over to the @ays I lay tm a stupor, ha of what was going on it was during this pe- awakening oceastonally naciousness, I would won if it was worth the effort The Shadow of Death, “Ae | told the members of the Vegisiature this afternoon, | was Garried down into the vailey of the Shadow of death as far as it has given any man to go and re And for some reason | came b. sk. Why, and how It happened. bay ft do not know. But the change sf came suddenly, and anexpectedly F to these about me; and since that time | have continued to grow “And now I am going to get well Gnd within a few months come back to Olympia to be in truth and deed the governor of Washington.” qupere | ee his head and of Mg. rch, fixed a pillow fe and ob 4 the comm Coagrove First Official Act. A few moments later Howard Coagrove suggested that he had a low matters of business to trans act that required the signature of the governor. This ed the rest ing period. The governor sat at the desk and affixed his name to arious papers submitted to him by Howard. The firat of these, an< he father wanted It to be the first, was the appointment of Howard to the office of private secretary to the governor I had loaned him my fountain pen, and when he had concluded, he returned It to me with the re mark I have been waiting for 20 years to sign my nAme as gov srnor, and that ought to make ae roe MAYOR WILL SIGN —_— WILL LET STREET CAR com. PANIES AND EWING FIGHT IT OUT LATER, | . Mayor Miller will tn all probabil. &, @ign both the pending Rainier street railway franchises ne afternoon. The franchise the Seattle Electric con: iF to parailel the tracks of the ttle, Renton & Southern was Ep on a hearing to be held tn @0urt this afternoon, based on an temporarily restraining the wee signing the ordinance. ided the court dissolves this ty regtraining order, the chief exPcutt¥e will undoubt sign the ordinance, as the in which he has to consider the measur: nes at midnight to- » psc youla Fe FEARLESSLY ra, wraees WILD PATIENT WHO KES DESPERATE ATTACK Por the fird (ime since holding Offiee as matin of the county jail female ward. one of the dangerous | @aties of her position was drought home to Mixs MK. Young, when, tare afternoon, she was com a. bettie with an insane Mise Young came out of aT hetperats struggle uninjured, it was only after assistance arrived that the woman was —— werd 3 o'clock yesterday putamen - SEATTLE - HOTEL I Seuttiel 1 hotel, one of the ks of Seattle, on Yesler way First] and Second avs., for mogths bh: been ont of fission, if to be refitted as a class hotel and opened up at Ed. Galtney, of the Cecti and Francisco interests at the back of the project, and pers were signed yesterday with managers of the Collins estate & lease on this building Several attempts have been made Ro Secure thix building for hotel . but all previous bids have rejected “COURT TO DECIDE "g THIS CASE Mandamus proceedings are to | Piistituted in the local courts Getermine the question of whether city of seattle can legally he Hable for » balance of $15,000 LL. 8. Green, the contractor who @ug & well to furnish Ballard with before the suburb was an mad to the city proper. Vhen Ballard was annexed, it is ed, there was still a balance of ‘something like $15,000 due the tor, who had contracted to mish a well from which to get a Teupply of water, The claim has (heen temporarily turned down by ‘the olty and |t is understood that cision of the court will be re the garded as fing. CPQVELIN LAID TO REST. PONT AUX DAMES, France, Jan b 98—By ©. M-eClement Coquelin P the Jeadir woch etor of his Hime, was buyied here this after . Two aig trgins conveyed the remains and close mourners the cemetery: Hundreds of per P gone attended the ceremonies ing from Paris and AR autoplanc, can't be tol om DOW, ONLY S20 SL 066 alleldahad 1) G@learance Ss: nds ove com adjacent towns tomorrow BOTH ORDINANCES The other ordinance ts one grant ing the Seattle, Renton & Southern & franchise to make an extension from ite main line, starting at Genosee st, and reaching a fast de veloping territory In previous decisions it is sald courts have held that the tribunal was not vested with power to inter fere with legisiative acts. Should the local court hold this theory it would undoubtedly mean dissolv tug the temporary restraining order In this event friends of B.C. Ew ing, who made the highest bid but was turned down by the corpora tions committees with the excuse that his bid “was not in good faith, say he will ask that the courts em join the Seattle E 4e company from actual construction work on the proposed line. ae ae eee Es ‘MATRON HAS BATTLE WITH MAD WOMAN —<—<$<$<——$ $$ —_________ Mary E. Johnson, who was arrested for acting queerly on was lodged in the county jail. The woman had not been there fire minutes before she began to realize where she was. Then trouble com menced 1 want to get out of here and go home,” she sereamed, “and I'm go- ing to get out.” At first the woman would not tell her name, and it was while trring to get her to tell what her name was that the woman suddenly at-/ tacked Miss Young. Miss Young struggled bravely, but wac having her hands full, Two deputy sheriffs, hearing the noise, rushed to her one the street TO OPEN THE THREATEN LIFE OF ATTORNEY LO8 ANGELES. Jan. 29.—Ry U Detectives today are trying to diseover the identity of the author of letters containing thre: to kit ted States District Attoruey Ovear Lawler. The letters have been sent to the attorney general, who ordered the investigation, The threats were evidently made by some rabld sympathizer of the al leged Mexican are imprisoned here letters states You know what happened to Heney. If you don't turn the im prisoned patriots loose what he afd, only worse DRINKS POISON In @ fit of despondency, Charles Mulligan, a plumber, who lives at West Seattle, near Luna park, at tempted to end his life by swallow. ing a small quantity of poison early this morning. The prompt arrival of Dr. C. A. Ganaway saved the man's life. Mulligan was taken to a hospital, where it Is re ported he will recover. One of the $4,000 TO COACH PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 29.—By U P.—Fred $. Noreross, Jr, well known in the Northwest, former | star quarterback aud captain of the Michigan football team, and late coach of the Oregon Agricultural college, has been offered $4,000 to coach the team of the University ot Alabama, His friends say that Noreross is Itkely.to urn {t down. Steamer Northland sailed this morning tor Sitka with a full cargo | | Rawhide Free Gold 5,000 for sale at 6 cents. | Herrin & o., 6 § Jchouerman Ms revolutionista, who you will get} later 216 PIKE : St. $15.00 Men's Suits $6.75 $18.00 Men’s Suits $8.75 $20.00 Men's Suits $9.65 $25.00 Men's Suits $11.75 $30.00 Men's Suits $13.75 Boys’ and Children’s Clothing at | HALF PRICE $15.00 Men’s Overcoats or Raincoats | $7.25 $18.00 Men’s Overcoats or Raincoats $8.65 $20.00 Men's Overcoats or Raincoats $9.75 | | $25.00 Men’s Overcoats | or Raincoats 1 $11.90 | $30.00 Men’s Overcoats or Raincoats $13.85 Young Men’s Suits HALF PRICE | FANCY VESTS weno GIVE-AWAY PRICES | ISAAC COOPER ——FINAL—— WIND-UP SALE This Tells the Story POY Mimew cee Nhnww KUPPENHEIMER’S SCHLOSS BROS. ABT & SONS AND OTHER HIGH GRADE CLOTHES MAKERS’ PRODUCT WILL BE UNMERCIFULLY SLAUGHTERED AT Taersuwe Maem 10h 246. Ceite AS. 4 Sue Ae oe ea Dress Shirts 78c $2.00 Wool Coat Sweaters 89c PRICES NEVER HEARD OF BEFORE JULIUS BAER SEE WINDOW DISPLAY: $1.50 Wool Under- 35c Men’s Suspenders 14c at 24 Site SP $1.00 Monarch Dress Shirts 45c 68c Men’s Wool Socks 9c The above notice from my landiord, as herewith reproduced, forces me to place the balance of the Bell Clothing Co. stock at prices too ridiculous to print. Sale Starts Saturday, 8:30 A.M. We must positively surrender our store by March Ist. The time in which I have to dispose of the stock is short, and | will spare no efforts to make this sale interesting to you. Do Not Miss It; Come Early; Tell Your Friends $1.50 and $2.00 Cluett YOU NEED ONLY TO LOOK AT MY DISPLAY WINDOWS TO ASSURE YOURSELF OF THE PLAIN TRUTH. NEW, SNAPPY AND HIGH GRADE MEN’S WEARING APPAREL AT LESS THAN BANKRUPT PRICES. Successors to the BELL CLOTHING CO, 216 PIKE STREET Between Second and Third Avenues SEE WINDOW DISPLAY 216 PIKE ST. $2.50 Hats, soft or stiff $1.20 $3.00 Hats, soft or stiff $1.45 $3.50 Hats, soft or stiff Mallory Cravenette Hats, all styles $2.20 $2.50 Dent’s Men’s Gloves 25c Silk Four-in-Hand Ti 13¢c 50c Silk Four-in-Hand Ties 22c Silk Wool Underwear $1.45 2 for 25c Men’s Socks C 10c White Hemstitched Handkerchiefs C Arrow Brand Collars, as long as they last 1 20 Good Working Shirts, as long as they last 32c Heavy Ribbed and Fleece Lined Un- derwear 34¢