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TEMPTS 10 NOEL BEFOR a MAN WHO oPURNG LOVE rn ROMANCE; » QCEANS OF TROUBLE Place in a Fashionable Hotel, Culminating a Do-| mestic Mix-up, (Ty United Pre NEW YOR nding a night Fe ot the of William B. | lowing the shooting Cralg, & prominent atlorbey in the Wa { awt night, | Mra. Neville actrees and Francis cial circles, was pre sented = fk arraignment on the barge of felonious assault today Craig swore thie to the warrant | morning Cra announced that he was jfeady to proceed with the case at Attorney once, but Frederick Dean has come to Mra. Castle's ald journment case Was postponed until Friday The magistrate refused to parole the woman into the custody of her }counsel and held her under $3,000 bonds. It was expected that the bond would be furnished in a few hours, Woman's Statement. After the postponement of the ease Craig, who te but slightly hurt | harried away fn his automobile, de- | jclaring that he would not return to/ town enti! the day set for the trial. | He said he had no statement to} make regarding the case or | shooting While awalting arralgament Mra | ic “astle sald that she “didn't intend to shoot Creal | ‘That story is fale he cried | | requested an a and the -~ MERONSO AND HIS @fample here of the fact ate some compensations outside royalty. Here ple whése marriage sorts of complications jand other people. phonso, of Spai and son of the Inf visited this country “When | saw him going up to the rooms of the Rocky Mountain club 1 pushed my way Into the elevator | jand drew my revolver. | was fully determined to end my life fn hin ‘There T attempted to place the Columbian exposition in Tevolver ta such a position that if to marry Princess Be (Td fire the ballet inte my heart | « 80 be did marry, | ee and see wha’ hap-| (Continued on Page 7.) onso was in wrong for denna aan neea ea ene| B Protestant, and Princess * *} fr marrying a Catholic. | le TAFT WiLL BE HERE. * to flee to Paris. le te * was in wrong with | @ President J. B, Chilberg of #| Ber ee erating the | the A-Y-P. this afternoon re # . i. ‘banahiag the | * ceived the following telegram #| from the country. ® from Congreseman Humphrey: # tion, yards of diplo- WASHINGTON, D. C, Aug. # fetal aancne Euro)» 4—President ‘iaft will arfive & in Seattle Wednesday, Sept. 29. & at 8:15 p.m Will leave Fri @ Oct. 1, at 1040 pm | *) have advised Mr secretary to the president, to @ consult with Mayor Miller re # garding program while presi. « dent ta in Seattle. * * * * are personal friends— of the results of Al- Beatrice being titled of folks like ux. IR FALLS. HIG DEATH rouoces ore KILLED BY DRINKING pee POISONOUS MEDICINE BUILDING. ——— the fourth story of 8) ‘That Laurua W. Malstead came to Course of construc-|his death from drinking medicine. Sy. and King st preseribed by a Dr. Branhaman, of Bratset, « carpenter,’ Kansas City, Mo, was the verdict that resulted Inj of Dr. ¥. A. Crookall, after a post after noon today, | mortem examination ut for Brat-! Malstead was found dead In a jwhack at 417 Van Buren av, The ~| medicine contained a large percent wered | age of carbolic acid, and the dead his home ad- | man’s stomach was badly ulcerated |The bottle was found near him The case will be taken up with the Kansas City police, who will in | vestigate the physietan day Carpenter, ® Sees dere eee ee W. B. HUMPHREY. MEEARSEREAA ERNE free. * Whirper or. W one of the best Nked Diilding He leaves a! P¥tar-old ehiid S HIS TEETH SAVING LIVES OF SI SEVEN WOMEN °°" KH EXPLODES ANo man, Rt tt TOWS BURNING TO SHORE eee * * # JOHNSON HEARTBROKEN. * * United Prev) * or + * + 7 * CLEVELAND. Tom L broken today May heart Aug. 4 Johnson |e His fight for Leent fares is over, He was + * * * * * iM, Wik,’ Aug. 4 * * defeated In yesterday's refer ® * * * * * * * * * feeth and ability to Wday enabled At Tieke, of Two i endum election when the prop: & here. onition providing for the grant of a franchise to Herman Schmidt, insuring 3-cent fares on a part of the city lines, was voted down by a majority of nearly 4,000, ee el Twin rive z there wa WOMAN DRUNK AND JAILED, We the bow of the |, , wan the Korea the »w wae i to Mary Leonard Were about 1 ‘ y Justice Brown. It Dieke th wan ¢ ely proved that Mary Pate ot watior ore ¢ « of a vagrant and wer b yi € ‘ bitual inkard Ri et the fire rea enough | i HELD FOR THEFT, — | 1. GC. Dowell wan arrested yeater- ‘ day on the complaint of Daniel Me- for stat wide | Kinley, who alleged that Dewell had | the, stolen $85 from him on May 8, Jus | lice Brown fixed his bast at $1,000 ' tment liver waits for ite approach. ithe wheels. | |namesake of | passes onward to the dog heaven. | el SEATTLE, WASH., THE TABLES TURNED Oo wee eram: ema 2 LITTLE DOLLIVER IS DEAD - AND MRS. SEARS FILES SUIT | Dolliver Was a Dog, but! Different From Other f THIS 1S A SMALL WORLD AND FULL OF IN. Dogs—Besides the Auto- | TERESTING INCIDENTS.--IF YOU DON'T mobilist Laughed. BELIEVE IT JUST READ THIS. ] a Time-—August 1, Beone—Twen | tieth and Broadway, in Ballard. Dolliver, @ fox terrier, the pet ot | ™ Mre. Nettle Bears, is sitting in the reet, walting for something to + nearhub of it corps While in the service. After Yesterday Howard Moe and his) he got hie discharge he became old friend, M. Kroyer aes gr into | @ vp wd expert telegraph operator a house of call on Second av. to|and works tn that capactty now for bark at, A large, red motor esr Sp- |Tuerdah the nner man, and stood |the Weatern Union tn Seattle pears in the distance, coming 8/7). oment chatting |. Howard Moe, the elder brother tntlee an hour, more or less He Enter « third young man. veer }has for the most part lived near hearing Moe speak, looked at bim,/ bis old home at Racine, Wis, al-/ liver makes a dash at the tires, nin dean: \eoked again, then| though he. too, served ‘with ‘the misses his mark, and goes under siroched out his hand, and sald army tu Cuba and was at San Juan How are you, brother Howard?| bill, Three day ago he arrived and the soul of the! Let's eee, Is it 12 or 14 years since|in Beattie with his wife on a visit the lowa senator! we met? {to the fair, and the last thing he And that wae all there was to it.| dreamed of In the world was that The motor car stops at a house up) The speaker, William Moe, who, jhe should meet bis young brother. | the street. Alexander Pearson, the | as a youth of 16, had enlisted in the | tm fact the latter bad almost been owner, alights, looks at Dolliver,| army in &t. Paul, had been ordered | given up for lost. | ! Vip! yip' and laughs loudly almost immediately to the Philip | The time changes to this moro-| pines, and from that day, In Octo | Running in Luck. ing. The seene to the King county | ber, 1897, had seen neither kith nor court house. Enter « lawyer, who! kin, files mult against Alexander Pear-| son, president of the West Const! Tanning company and owner of car| No. 1764, for $500 damages for the death of Dolliver, a fox terrier, in the name of Mra. Nettie Sears. Dolliver wae no common, every day canine, It seems. The com plaint relates that “this dog had been especially cared for by plaint iff and her family, and had become thoroughly trained and educated so that in sumerous ways tt far excell ed ordinary dogs in tricks and gen eral understandin | Mrs. Sears goos on to complain | that Mr. Pearson laughed and jeer. | ed when he saw Dolliver the victim | Juggernaut, all of} the injury the} plaintiff's feelings had already sus tained, However, he was running In luck, for the first thing he did waa to trun aerose his old friend, M. Kroyer, with whom he had been in partner ship many years before and whom he bad not seen for several years Kroyer himaelf has a history, so to speak, In the first place he has sliver ribe on hin left aide as the result of a bullet which he moet at | San Juan, and tn the second he Is |the Kroyer who made the record trip round the world for the Hearst papere in 1900. He started from Chieago and returned there In 56 days, and for this memorable feat fecetved a bauk book with a stngle entry. It read $1,000, Howard Moe |helped him spend some of that Then they drifted apart to meet in Beattle by accident. After that the brothers met and then--well then ithere was another glass of butter = Sigh ne all around Was a Soldier Bold. Hie duty with the army kept him fn the islands for several years, and! {thence he went to China and took! | part In the Boxer trouble of 1900, Always meeting with success, he waa at one time Inapector of con-| stabulary in Cuba and waa for the HAS AFTERTHOUGHT AND NOW ASKS FOR PROPERTY DIVISION WOMAN FEARS DEATH IF SHE ASKS FOR THAT WHICH 18 DUE HER When Mrs, Lena Cook was siren! a divorce from John L. Cook, owner | at 702 Third ay, last December 1, she told the court nothing of property whieh she and her husband owned jointly, nor did sho ask for her share of It i i " asked for her part This morning} 80Y WHO WAS DROWNED she filed a petition In the superior ACCUSED OF TRAGEDY. jcourt, asking that her decree be changed to give her her rightful share of the property. TRANCE OLD CITY HALL SITE (0 IN BIG DEMAND Many before the council specie) commitioe this Mrs, Una J, Jones was in the te Of habit of kicking her husband, Clar- the former elty hall H, Jones, bitting him over the head with mops, throwing hair brusties at him, locking him out of his house, and making life generally unpleasant for him, according to the latter, This morning he filed suit for divoree Henry C, Howland filed sult for eparation from Edith M. Howland, naming J. We Merry a8 06-respond. jent, Mra, Howland ie @ mantouriat sresealtscia came TRENTO.., Aug. 4.—The mystic! revelations mado to a clairvoyant while {no @ trance today led to the diseoyery of the body of James Cryne, atx years old, at the bottom of the Delaware and Raritan Canal, and to the apprehension of seven of the lad’s companions who are charged with having thrown him to his death Only of the the body was to be canal impelled the authorities to continue search, The officials con sidered the slender clue of a medi um's dream too ridiculous to be longer followed and had about given up hope of recovering the boy's body, Day and night for a week the canal had been dragged, In the searching party was James Cryne, father of the dead boy. The father was present when the dragging party found the remaing tightly wedged in the canal grass. Then came the astounding confes-| afternoon for use of the old The largest project that was Ist K. Struve to construct a I4-story office atruc ture and give the city the use of the two top floors and grant them the privilege of building other ad ditional stories at the city ex pense, providing that a 60-year leane was given. George D. Smith, a restaurant man, wants to build a restaurant there, and promised to give the city the use of a back room for the city employment bureau tf given a lease and the privilege of a three-story building L. B. Youngs, superintendent of the water and Hight department, | the wants the ground for his depart-|ances it looks as if the number ment, and Frank Goodwin, a real| might be exceeded any day, Not estate man, wrote @ letter saying | counting the litte folks, it comes that he would present a proposition | pretty near being @ letter aplece to within a week, [all the grownups in the city, ed was @ plan from F the persistent declarations medium that she knew that found tn the THIS BREAKS A RECORD. The number of letters reeetved at the & tle postoffice yesterday was just 185,000. This constitutes some thing of a record in the annals of postoffice, but to all appear two year's }got real angr land search the pas lexposition rtation =| couver | tlon HE SEATTLE STA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1909, TEN PAGES ONE CENT UNMANNED BY MONEY HE IS READY FOR PRISON CELL WOMAN GETS ANGRY AND MAN IS NOW OUT OF A JOB AND LOOKING FOR WORK Hore unreasonat sult one man lost yb. people are tr and from the ord standards, it ten't ¢ ator but if it len't it worth wh Here tt te Mra. Alice Kt parse on an Kastlake shortly after | o'olock on eft th ar and Ir a big fume a “i woe the lid what he ce volved Hgiby wdiiately raleed Freg Phillips the car He conductor of it and did not succeed © woman that the door and ever n or be searched, tne t Phillipe tr show that he did purse, but refused te juding lock the were, stating that had no right. t would get himself into trouble if he did se do #0, and all kinds of Conductor is Discharged Mra. Holbrook told her troub to the t i car inspector at ¢ with the that Phillips was fired off the « and discharged from the service He lost his job and the woman kept on talking about the theft of her pocketbook, until after two or thr saw ave tied in the Star the find some ® whe want columus The % of a pocketbook on this car A man living in Van and here for a day, had found the purse on the car, and, as he was leaving town at once, deft it with Mr. Crawford, of the exposi agency of the Vancouver World The latter advertived it Mrs. Holbrook answered the ad, de ecribed the parse and all were returned to her Now she ts sorry for her first an and for doing what st iid to get Phillips “fired.” Bhe writes to the superintendent of the Seattle i Blectric company as follows Tam sure that I wish to see Jne | tice done him (Philips), and there fore am writing full particulars of thie matter to you. | hope you can give him hie position back again. and its contents Too Late Now. But It's too late. Phillips’ place DINORGE CASE FARON FLEES “SAME OLD | ROUBLE” I6 NOTE LEFT ON TABLE TELLING OF DIGAPPEARANCE, (By United Press.) MILLERSBURG, 0. Leaving beh! & note sa same old field church, is missing f The cler had sum moned by. of his chu and answer ‘ ft who nh that of 2 " woman nl { to appear and inquiry at his home developed the fact that he had gc leaving the note on a table The minister was the moving irit in the Chautauqua being held and was to have given a plano jrecital Friday night pastor the Chris om this nigh vernal wit heases name Sl a i i ie lee a ad * * * WEATHER FORECAST. * Fair tonight; Thursday fair ® and warmer; light west winds. * It's @ emal) world, and Seattle is| most part attached to the signal | has been filled by another man, He | & ® hed Rete eee ee Arthur H. Smith, Pam« pered and Spoiled, Ad- mits That There Is Noth« ing but the Felon’s Life for Him. BY BONNIE WHEELER me, all th, who il d was thereby $197 Hit the H Places On $ ” i atives 1 bride zel D. Bish | 1 4 en Plimmer r found one ttle too high, Smith » is sald to have withy father in Winnipes, “ the arms of the law, Just rewent things look pretty dark geters, the chief of po og wiring that Smith, would have n “m= to do ase, as tt had al- 4 the family fortune similar escapades. knew the value of money it meant to have any re sald Smith this morn- And if this troub joesn't of me, I gi othing a be glad of all this t not for the little girl,” and t y dropped his head in bis han i Money His Nemesis. Gilad to be shut aw fre temp- tation. Oh, t pity Teo weak to make the good fight alone, and held back by the easy life he has led, Arthur Smith realizes that he is uhable to cope with tempta lon Wealth, which gives license and which has ruined more boys than it has made into men, has destroyed all the natural growth of this Cepeinets ox on epee Le a fa few was Hi ake & man SENSA TIONAL REPLY IS MADE IN DIVORCE CASE ONCE RICH MAN NOM PRACTICALLY BROKE (By United Pree) NEW YORK, Aug. 4—-Once John Hall Deane, a realty lawyer of 135 Broadway, dropped $100,000 in the collection plate at the Calvary Bap- tlet church and declared it wasn't much. Today, he ewore that his entire as sisted of §7 and that he owed 000. Deane sald the American Haptist Home misaton held a claim against him for $150,000. He was a wit- news In a suit against himself tn which an effort was made to collect 2,500 tion and no money SPANIARDS ARE WINNING MADRID, Aug. 4.—Comparative peace reigns at Melilla today ac cording to advices received here The government believes that the worst fighting Is over and that the tide has turned in favor of the Selmore | "HURL CHUM 10 DEATH; BARES DEED jslon of young Walter Hendershot, | who had been a chum of the Cryne lad, He told the police that com pantons of young Cryne had thrown him tnto the water and then allowed him to drown Four boys who were playing along the bank of the canal with the Cryne boy, according to the confes sion, suddenly seized their friend, threw him tnto the water and then realizing the ran away from the scene, leaving the helpless youngster to his fate Acting upon the story told by young Hendershot, the police arrest ed seven young boys, ranging in age from ten to thirteen years, and they will be held for further examination It ie charged that the boys cher ished thelr awful secret In dread of the consequences that they felt would attend a fall confession of the part they had played in the drowning of their playmate. HARRIMAN NEW YORK ble advices H. ,Harriman'’s health was greatly improved and his condition better than for several year Harriman will return about September 10, IMPROVED, Aug. 4.--Private ca in the supreme court, | He swore he had no posl-| enormity of their act, | received stated that By latte HUSBAND CLAIMS HIS WIFE INJECTED BLOOD OF OLD MAN INTO VEINS, | (By United Presa) DENVER, Colo., Aug. 4.—Allega | Hons that his wife, who is several jYears his senior, injected into his veing the blood of an old man, is the startling plea filed by ( Rogers, in answer to his wife's charges of non-support The wife, Mrs. Barbara Rogers, | had five children by a former mar riage when Rogers married her in | Chicago, according to his statement today. He claimed that he married ithe woman when a mere boy forced into a distasteful union by {his designing mother After we had been married a short time,” Rogers averred, “my wife Ured of my youth, and she tried to bring me to the same state of decrepitude to which the had brought her With that end In View, the young husband alleged that his wife caus: ed the injection Into his veins of the blo a diseased old man MOSQUITOES STP WORK ON ANLAOA LOS ANGELE Aug. 4.—Mos quitoes, mud and malaria halted all construction work on the Mexican ine of the Southern Pacific oad south of Maztlan Dr, Walter Vitas, who had charge Jof the hospitals in the construetio: amps, and who has just returned here, says that the swarms of mos quitoes have bec This coupled with culties and iliness jrains, has rendered sible. years ome a plague. transportation cau work impos: See eeeeeenR RRR E BANK CLEARINGS, Seattle. Clearings today . .$1,827,064.12 Balances 51,092.57 ( s today $ $32,142.00 | Portland. ( today $ 2 * * i* * * * + * * * * SEER ERE ER HH POLICE CHIEF RESIGNS, | ef of Pe Hite Georg y resigned ak the head of the police department today Shippy, who isjn til health, is now a vacation In an effort to re cover being | diffi-| od by heavy | * * * * * wy Tacoma. * * * * * * * * MOONALD OWLY DYING POLICE CAPTAIN CANNOT RE- COVER FROM STROKE OF PARALYSIS. That Captain of Police Alexander MacDonald, who has been at Prov- idence hospital for the past two weeks, stricken with partial paraly- jis of the brain, will not recover ts inion of physicians in charge, three weeks ago he sud- left his office and went to his His condition gradually be- came more serious, and he was re moved to Providence hospital RRR RR ke * * SPECULATE ON LIFE \* OF SPANISH RULER, * * LONDON, Aug. 4.—Purely \* peculation, a number of \* policies on * Alfonso, ¢ * bemg taken * nd other * per cent * * * ‘* \* writer Peete eee eee eee eee So ee ee ee ee ‘UNLUCKY JIM FINDS PEARL WORTH S800 (By United Press.) | DAVENPORT, Iowa, Aug, 4— }“Uniucky Jim,” a clam drédger, who bore that name because he had a hildren and had nev- le a good “find,” discovered 000 pearl in a clam he opened nsing Gardner, of LeClare ny, of Camanche, today bought the pearl for $3,000 cash, aid to be the larg er paid for a fresh-water pearl, pear) wolghs 60 grains, ts 1, of fine luster and peck and an almost pers ct sphere, | wife and nine ¢ and I. DYING OF THIRST. TOKIO, Aug. 4.—Refugees from the burned city of Osaka are in dan- ger of dying from thirst. The ipply was destroyed by the Saturday, Seen se eae ese Fe es nares