The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 28, 1909, Page 1

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BN UP TOMORROW CHAMPION ARRIVES IN NEW YORK TO SIGN ARTICLES—SAYS HE IS iT CONDITION, AND ADVISES ALL CE MONEY AND BET ON HIM. ¢ Little, representing Jack Johnson, decided to hold ‘#3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, to be attended by , to arrange articles for the big fight. will be held at the Hotel Albany, where . It is expected that an agreement will be short session, but the articles may not be actual- York law makes it a felony to arrange for a state, for the postponement of the meeting of the two because Sam Berger, manager of Jeffries, ex- until tomorrow afternoon as nothing had been B securing a private place to talk things over. ything to secure a meeting for today, as both he fare anxious to get back to Chicago. ON GREETED BY THOUSANDS. the black heavyweight champion pugilist Arrived at 9:30 o'clock this morning. @ stepped from the train the negro was accorded by about five thousand of his race who fed at the station to meet their idol. here,” said the negro, “to sign final articles with for our fight. tman,” he continued. PROMISES JEFFRIES A THRASHING. of his life when he steps into the squared | only one point that I shall insist upon before sport, I will allow Jeffries to name the per- the winner and loser shall receive. ts = sep Jeff in the ring with me. ition of my life to get this man in the ring, and 1 intly has been said that somewhere in my anatomy streak. it? take it from me, Mr. Jeffries will not be able it, presuming that I have one somewhere. “BET ON ME,” SAYS JOHNSON. Me. It is certain that he is not nearly so clever as James J. has been in retirement for five years. 't a punch: oh well, time will tell. five you this little tip: When Jeff and I get in ftlet anybody’ 8 prejudice against the negro prevent a good-sized bet down on the black man. byou can afford to lose, why bet on Jeffries.” for one hour and St Cooper's this Waiting for him, the white pugilist & rest. aald that Little was (Continued on ae odio Mls OVAL BENEFACTOR f Spillane, tate the! went down the left side of the face. holds aft records for in. The ily he fs in jail P Sstault with a de I Joe Weber ar was almost severed acted by a large crowd, Pa men T. G, Montgomery and W Teast came up on the run » to see Weber stagger and a til holding the razor in his hand, Spillane, defiant and sullen ecove tood off the crowd. As soon as he aw the patrolmen he attempted to ot nk away, but he was captured a efore he could make his escape Taken to Hospital. Weber and his assatlant were d into the police auto and the polte station— Weber the hospital and Spillane 4 cell in the elty jail. Veber is well known among fol racing game on the He was about to leave for la when slashed by they noticea 8 and woe-bexone days off the ct - ire of sordid 1 Od huddled tog is Touched. heart was touched, | Coast Penntless, wa n| Ca F and made Spillane. me The razor wielder is well but un 7 known tg the police. came to Heattie about t months ago from New York wal ested while trying to BE Bt thety expons: Morning aroun {© see Spit ‘ e of a valuable diamond ring geeket of one « Faili o give @ satisfactory ex ¥ indignant wf his possession of the le me Bea a Spillane whe sentenced to da n the chain gang. nonth ago Spillane was with a man known to the cott The patr had session a bottle of and were laying for hen City De be n arrested the m. Weber this m 4 out a raro ' Hke @ witden eT tried to fi 4 lost so t Minted. Wye | | Ee? the howpita) May end \ « Tom Ha entenc E SEATTLE ~ ‘TAF YES THE ONE BIG FIG “Yes, T asked my wife to pose for & certain picture.” This was the admission of Rev Walter G. Du Moulin, Bpise: divoree in the Mre. Du Moulin charges that the rector asked her to pose for a ple ttre--"againet which her | hood revolted Now the Rev. Mr. Du Moulin ad-| self as his assailant mits that he asked for the pleture Rut he says there was nothing im- | shooting proper about it. It wae not for}ralmned his wife neral cireulation—"It was just/court by a confession which rivals j between husband and wife he} ya Oct. 28.—Sam Berger, representing Jeffries, | another meeting can be arranged outside this) It was just a right and proper de s on his part, the rector said, to| ited, she has ‘been sentenced and wish to preserve a against the day when time should/a tense conference bet alter the perfection of her figure that he wanted her to pose before | between love for her and proof] le negro's manager that the meeting of the pugilists| “But T never told seen pletures of any of my pari«h allegations. The inter office of At ‘today th dodging the rep | Seattle and San Fre to be @ good looking, | lered young fe easily win the and women—in his va Then the r | will now see who is the four-flusher, the white or [him to tell about Mra. Du Moulin She tw the cause ¢ ait the row he said. “She w fries signs up and behaves himself properly I will |; to him and at the same time promise him the | hax a very Jealous deposits mits that she married me to spite another girl whom I had been atten | tive to He also totd @ rather seandalous story about his wife, involwin f articles, and that is that there must be both | Francisco physictan who is unmar Toser’s end in the division of the purse. To show | red. Any charges of intir myself and any w are abeolutely unfounded. he con - tinued Opportunity of my life, and I promise to show | +: Tam the best man that ever donned a mitt if| oie and feaiouny cauend the! Mis Tt has always | ve#try of my church in Houghton, | Pr Mich.. to ask for my resignat smen—all of them—as the match to fall through by quibbling over a! to me and told u | re ins on my wife that she was getting the best of me | Pleaded with me to get a divorce als fot strike you funny that no one ever has been) in Fort Morgan, Colorado, and you|the highest mountain in Alawka jhave good grounds for a divo | Why dont Da Moulin claims that was of fered a curacy wi Liwyd, of St. Mark's church, Seat word I can't see how the dopesters can give Jeff | tic, Inst year, and that he was pre vented from accepting ‘ be« been fighting right along and am in the pink of | him, Dr. Liwyd wanted me to work | with him badly, but I was | accept the position for fear my wife Will Teil of Climb. might bring trouble and dixgrace on myselt as well as the chureh. Dr Liwyd, when I had told him my and mutually sorry Mra. Du Moulin is the sister of B. Gay, of San Francisco, one of | present BED |NGRATE NEARLY expired la id | ASKED WIFE TO POSE —THE RECTOR. As a climax to one of the #trang ext of love tragedies, Mrs. May} Smith, a handsome, SEATTLE, WASH., 20-year-old But It Was to Be a Picture} matron, ix paroled on a seven-year for Just Her and Me to! meg sentence, after confessing }that she ambushed and shot her See, Added the Accused) wrrinity. 1. Judge John J. Pol Preacher, lock gave her her freedom she and| ase her husband parted forever in the See court room, The shooting followed a third de. |#ree love text imposed by her hus band, Scott Smith, superintendent of the Belmont coal mines, and pal ree: | the victim was Noble Ault political whose wife is suing him for | dictator here. Califersia eoerte When Ault was found apparently dying from a bullet wound, search of bis pockets disclosed a blood stained note on which he had serib- woman-| bled what he thought were his last j j Words, They branded Smith him Smith was charged with the Before he could be ar | astounded the ° of Dante for ite grisly | tails, On the strength of this con. | jon, which Judge Pollock cred membrance of | paroled. enthralling form of his wife] One night last March there was| " Smith and his wife. The husband, torn} camera as a beauty unadorned. | that she bad beon Ault's affinity, He Denies This Charge. and vengeful toward “the other man,” put hie wife through a re markable third degre He roused her at midnight, bad ¥ dress herself and come with | him. Through the winding | roads about their er that T had ré in that pose,” he said, het in reply to another of his wife country | pme they groped chilly air, the serving as a faint tir footsteps. The « with fear, could husband, who her Hke a ty w took place in the mney George A. Custer ah the Arcade butiding. Re Du] (hele wey te 4 ho had been succesat noon's Hi may ta de o PB) guide to oo, pre aad ahoul- | igomed up besid jly shadow in the darknews . Ahead was an abandoned coal parishes) shaft. Dank odors poured forth ;| from the envetike entrance where no human foot hed trodden for j years. Into this pit went husband who wht n or, who once when h prot into th The Woman the Cause, ¢ in every parish I had. she mn. She Will Be Settled Tonight in an Open Debate Be- tween the Two Men. y between nan parishioners her nag (By United Press) OULA, Mont. Oct. 28.—Dr rick A. Cook, expl and n, | Edwin N. Barrili, guide, are to meet Dozens of my friends have come |in a joint debaté tonight at Ham to tighten up the | fiton Mont Dr Cook ts the They all told me | Brooklyn jorer who, in addition to claiming that he wag e orig Last fall in San Francisco she/tnal discover of the North Pole, declares that he ascended summit of Mount MeKin 1 loved my people nid. That ie all, to I deserted youover a year ago | the ¢ Barrill is one of the guides that accompanied Dr, Cook on the moun | tain climbing expedition and he has made an affidavit in which he says {that the Brooklyn explorer never reached nearer the summit than 14 'miles and that the photographs of Rarrili and the stars and stripes, purporting to be taken on the sum mit, wer taken on a lower level perhaps 20 miles distant from the it in an alr line nu ask for one? Offered Curateship Here, Dr. J. P.. D. ause of caused trouble his wife ha raid to Cook Jeft Missoula early to for Hamilton, where he is to a free lecture tonight ex took the same view as I did, plaining in detail all the hardship we parted the best of friends, he endured while making ord-breaking climb Barrill, who bas promised to” be says that he “will call the high officials of the Southern explorer’s blaff tel! the peo on Peas Bevan)” | Pecttie ple of Hamilton exactly what Dr From the rough and ready shrine of Bacchus, flaring loud on the street corner, to the cloister-like retreat of Billy Sutherland, a far alcoholic ory. fied aloofnes: The boisterous democracy gives way to digni the loud taugh to the polite smile, the reverberating oath to the well modulated curse. It is a difference of taste and degree. One must enter Sutherland's with a reverent air. It is a beaw tiful pla where the eye can treat Itse equally as fally as the palate, and one must be well along on his bibulous way before he can readily raise his voice in profanation, Occasionally some Philistine from leas gentee! haunts finds his way in, vociferously inclined, but bartenders and patrons alike unite in silencing him--courteously, of course, but none the leas effectively From a “dim religious” and well upholstered corner I watched arrange themselves in Hart, Schaffner & 8 group of youngste Marx attitudes in front of the bar. They were slight, padded as to as to the trousers and thelr hats had that he shoulders, reefe low, rakish, devilish look seen about the frat houses. They were holding a little indignation meeting over the defection of a missing member, who “quit” earlier in the evening. Suddenly there was a loud chorus of unrestrained and unex purgated tira for a Harrison Fisher hero, stepped up to the party and artioulated e. Immediately a bartender, who could have posed of wonder and astonishment, horror and in fluffiest hair and Gentlemen,” in tones credulity, An elderly patron with the whitest pinkest cheeks put down his glass and glared helplessly at the of fenders. There was one of those loud, crashing silences, The nolay young men paid and beat a blushing retreat. This wa oft the most exciting event of the evening, and {t took some time for the patrons to recover their equanimity Drinking beer is one of the lost arts here. tution (saloon is so harsh) are reasonably divided as to preference delight in Pat¥ons of this insti Some, in the adolescent stages, It is an achieve for Bourbon or Rye. strange concoctions, many colored as Joseph's coat. ment to “spring a new one.” THE SEATTLE [6hV SITAR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, HUSBAND IN DELIRIUM OF REVENGE FORCED WIFE TO KILL AFFINITY OM EDITION ~ GD» JOSS ONE CENT INTERURBAN PATRON HERE PAY FOUR TIMES The “FRISCO RATES |COMPARISON OF THE PASSENGER CHARGES MADE SHOWS THE UNJUSTNESS OF THE NEW FARES DEMANDED BY THE PUGET SOUND ELECTRIC COMPANY OF PEOPLE WORKING IN SEATTLE. | Interurban fares per mile around San Francisco Interurban fares per mile around Seattle | San Francisco to Alameda Seattle to Tukwila . | San Francisco to Elmhurst . Seattle to Renton .. San Francisco to San Mateo ... ttle to Tukwila comparisons the people of » to pay on their Interurban and what the San Francisco have Duwamish valley will have around San Francisco. books have The figures show that the people of the | SCOTT SMITH, WHO MADE REMARKABLE CONFESSION mutation commutation and wife, in utter darkness Ne atrusing volce served to recall mind of the 10 miles a day sourrg of rate and the pents Blows the mas of rock as well whe stood The tetten thm EXPLORER COOK AND BARRILL TO. CLASH ON THE il PLATFORM = San Question of Who Is Lier| pie ¢ is @ steam road . With power gen- c company claims that { heavy operating expenses, pointe in the ascent e in rates is necessary be power is generated from water, than to operate a steam > power is oll? the Seattle bring with b * sald to ha & part of th jornte hie « between San Francisco and from 10 to 12 miles. Com- to Tukwila. , Oakland and nm books cost $7.5 Cook Full of Fight. Alameda, distance Cook ts full of fight and sa ia anxious to 0 a month from Seattl ANSWER, MR. FURTH? THUGS AND YEGGMEN ARE TARO AT WORK Scores of Bold Crimes Committed during the Last Month—Two More Holdups Reported Today— None of the Thugs Are Caught. AgOK With exeite his promise n his affide vit he and Dr ascent and that Barrill maintain miles of the PREACHER LIKES = EIGHT HOUR LAW Nome Man For Cook. LOS - ANG Frederick A was aroused of his entire roll, a each hold up. eased vigilance during the expo- Police Chief Ward be- morning to be manager of Zbinden and BY T. J. DILLON, partenders know RRR Re WEATHER FORECAST. It ig not alone for convivial bibbling that many of the best men . of Seattle are to be found at Sutherland's. action of busine deais which have been begun under the “the office” have their consummation in Sutherland's. Rain tonight As a place for the trans Get Five Hundred Dollars. Daily, business in a refreshing manner it is ideal more austere auspices in And in the little front office is a small burglartight safety-deposit vault. * eee eee eee es North Yakim m is deposited here for the night with as much security as if the Bank of England were behind it RRR RRR RH RR KE * intoxication FIVE DOLLARS FOR Reported Today SOMEBODY TOMORROW. unced that it entered with gold piece on the bar and called The bartender opened it noiselessly. and in 20 minutes the trio 100 glasses of beer, A réal estate man, glorying in a big day's business, two friends, He slid a five-dollar for a bottie of champagne. bottle was drank and a second followed, a Picked at Ran. dom from the the price of DOLLARS in cash register, There were never more than a half a dozen persons at the bar at one time. There was no rush; nobody was in TOMORROW'S vere served leisurely An air of good breeding brooded over the scene. The exquisite glassware, piled in , the soft lights, polished wood surrounding and added esthetic to the purely gastronomical pleasure afforded by cheering liquor made drinking a pleasure, demon rum \ George Mack aOR RR OR Ok PARRAAAARARARAAAARAAA READER

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