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HE SEATTLE Mo. 12, NO. 118 WOBLYNGHES SPOTTER QSHOT SALOON MAN y Stirs Ohio Village and Troops Are Sent For Had Been Raiding Blind Pigs. (By United Press.) (ARK, Ohio, July 9.—Sheriff Linkheim and his deputies are new . for the ring leaders of the mob which lynched Eth marching 9 y The lynchers were not masked and a number of arres A special grand jury will be called. fevulsion of f ait danger of further trouble ht and Col. here before daylight, but after canvassing ting has set In today as a result of the out seems past. Adjutant Barber, of the Fourth Ohio regiment, the situation the order for troops. General Welbrecht is open in Linkheim, whom he holds personally of the his condemnation responsible for in a densely populated state like Ohio, with troops ever it at short interval: gald Weybrecht, “but in this instance it w spirit showed itself early, Dut it was lacking in i inexcusable under any circum: particularly - shown by the fact that the mob surrounded the jail a before acting. Had the sheriff shown a particie of or had he issued a cal! for troops, the mere knowledge on ‘the mod that he was going to ri d to check them. ARK, ©., aly 9 wt them would have Carl Etherington, a 22-year-old employed by the State Anti-Saloon league, was lynch- night after a day of wild rioting a blind pig here ington was arrested, Etherington ke and shot William Howard, the pro Howard died last night was a former chief of police and popular in New mews that he had been shot stirred the town, and & friends tried their best to get Etherington it was announced that Howard was dead, the anger | mity was quickly turned to ungovernable rage about the jail with ropes and firearms, their Last se outs plainly borne to the ears of Etherington inside ae 3488 lost his nerve completely, and writhed in i while the hooting mob outside demanded his f piteously, and begged the jailers to save his ¢ helpless against the fury of the maddened s tified the jail as; most of the time he screamed lke} for « trial and a vindicath Wt took an hour's a terrified child ‘the mob before the A large battering i erected, and every [4oor, could not —Sttuck against wed Etherington seemed to get terror, will mother say what / ler say! 1 didn’t mean to mean to do it’ able to say, and) 3 — Gets His Nerve Back. When the deputies told him the last much longer some ®| control over his nerves, and, after praying, asked for writing ma jterials. As he signed his name the }erowd burst into the jail corridors was) and snatched him from his cell Etherington begged with his cap aareeee | tore with the intensity and fervor BJ. July 9- ‘8 any hunting expedt-| Met I suppose if a deer crosves DERBILT L WILL take a shot at it.” Taaghing reply to re- and without he meant “deer” it Roosevelt board “liner Paris, z going | He will be the gnest| Dawson, the United | over an hour until the weight broke |" ondent who accompa the Roosevelt party throngh| women and children included, vis | American for Mah Bast Africa and Uganda HY thing today, follow: he IOURISTS LOST ‘IN AVALANCHE : 9. K “too silly to and Fifth ay. are Mt that Kermit today Despite that the | son's engagement to| tered Rutherford, daugh ‘iMiam Vanderbilt, |to leave, is for a summer's stay |The Anti-Saloon |of deuwpair, but they paid no atten. tion to him. Once he was carried outside the jail, the waiting mob attempted.to wreak its fury on him. |He was shot, beaten, kicked and | dragged through the street. When the victim reached the spot where the mob had decided to bang him some one set up the cry of |“Speech!" The idea took with the | mob, and fur a couple of minutes |there was a dead silence, while | Etherington, bruised and torn, but | resigned to his fate, faltered a few | hopeleas words, | “t want to warn all you young | fellows.not to do as | have done— trying to make a living by strike- breaking and detective work. | | would have been better off if I h: | never tried it. | want to say——" He never finished the sentence The men who held the rope jerked him from the block, fastening the |rope as he twisted and kicked in he agony of strangulation. Left Body Hanging. The body was left hanging for ex-| tne rope. Everybody in Newark, | ited the gruesome scene. After the lhanging the crowd disappeared quietly and there was no further disorder. When the jail down, eight Another prisoner although he could ” | walked away unnoticed. Licking county, of which Newark is the county seat, is a “dry” county, but blind pigs are comme league claim doors were bat prisoners @8 refused have caped to} | that the officers were not enforcing that the young man's|the law, and yesterday morning the ‘the purpose of brushing | league sent in a raiding party, Modies so that he may | headed by Etherington, who was next fall with the Tench capital Ker. time to study any-| crowd the eyes of the beau-| Ho heiress, beliey ‘aduate. The — Rutherford also is Paris with her moth ent that on 1 rate | he occasion of his| prietor was bea |recently a strike-breaker Baltimore & Ohio. At the first place raided the pro- n over the head young | with braes knuckles and left uncon causes | yolv however, that by Will have lost a popu Then Etherington led his to Howard's restaurant ard saw Etherington with a re r, and put his arms around bim, asking him not to shoot. Bth erington jerked away and shot | Howard in the head scious. (By United Press.) LWALD, Switzeriand, July 9--Five of a party of Al- are missing following an avalanche which yesterday two parties near the Berglihut. were rescued a dey Seeking the five missing. Bent the five are said to be women. guid Seven members, in- Other by rching parties, Two men in the party were attempting to cross the dungfraw glacier @Valanche carried them away. on the) — SEAT BUSSELL Id ~ INSANE, SAY THE EXPERTS Slayer of Joseph Bonner Declared Mentally Un-, Sound by Medical Com- mission, | This afternoon the attorneys for | Wallace A. Bussell and the prose |cuting attorney's office are holding la conference to what institution [the boy should be committed. The | prosecuting attorney's office wants }Bussel! contined in some insane asylum in thie state, Bussell’s parents want him sent to a private insane asylum in Cali |fornia, If Bussell is taken out of the state it will facilitate hie speedy discharge from the institution. if }confined in this state the authori ties would have a better chance to | protest against Bussell’s liberation. Busse! Buswell Wallace A 24 years old json of C. B the millionaire | Ude land owner, has been dec! insane by a medical commission in Judge rs court. The finding | that U is insane will save him from trial for the killing of |Joseph Bonner tn the Monte Carlo jsaloon on the morning of May 12 | Baseell killed Bonner because j}gambling hall was being publicly conducted tn the saloon of which |Bonner was manager and part owne The | Bussell MAN HIT BY BILLIARD: GUE IS INSANE? Damages Linck Drew in Court May Never Help Him. commission that declared insane was composed of 'Dre. D. A. Nicholson and H. M |Read. The commission found that | Bussell was sane on all subjects ex cept that of municipal vice and | are Bussell during the hearing pro- tested against being declared in ane. He contended that he wished at the bands of a jury. Bussell told the |commission that he wished. to be released #0 as to continue bis per sonal crusade against the wide jopen town. Bussell’s parents wish hav }him sent to the Longmont san tariam in California, Dr. John W | Robertson, who conducted the sani tarium, has been present at the | hearing wajting to have young Bus sell turned over to his custody ed G. Linck, who was a few ago awa a verdict for $10,000 against Matheson & Deady as compensation for the beating he reeelved in their saloon in Mareh 1900, was arrested this morning upon a charge of insanity The insanity complaint sworn out by Robert Welch, the at The prosecuting attorney's offic for Linck in the personal lobjects to dussell being taken out |!njary ‘suit. It is the contention of the state while a murder charge | of Linck’s attorneys that he ts in lis lodged against him. Judge Fra-}#ane, and that the beating that he ter hag not yet passed upon this| received in the saloon was respc phase of the subject sible for it AFINTY’ trial of the damage suit that result- ed in the verdict in his faver, Linck acted queerly in the court room, and was locked up during the trial by order of Judge Gay Will Be Examined, A medical commission will ex amine Linck at 1:20 on Monday aft ernoon. Linck sued Matheson & Deady as owners ot the Victor par alleging that he Lad heen beaten into insensibility in thelr saloon ae because he disputed the payment of # bill for a of pool He |finity has broken charged that one of the employes |Grace Maloney in a divorce of the place had struck him on the plaint filed this morning against | head with a billiard cue. her husband, Patrick J. Maloney, a At the first trial of the case Linek saloon owner, that she does | Was given a verdict for M0. The vt with the woman's name made unless it is ne sary. Maloney owns the Office 218 First av. 8. | The wife in her di atates t | Mount Vernon Married life jhusband met wife tions band ferred charges that an af me up her hore com states owners of the saloon # red a ne trial. At the last triai the jury gave Linck judgement for $16,000, This verdict Judge Gay reduced to $6,000. IN AIR 4 HOURS AND 50 MINUTES July The continuous public yeoiutely rr) Bar jat ore jaint in 8, 1889 until he to whom his affec she was haps wor gave on was the he 1 an RHEIMS, France 9 |Farman record for flight was broken this La Bouchere, in an Antoinette aero. plane, La Bouchere stayed aloft four hours and 50 minutes. He also broke the long distance speed rec ord by tr ng 214 miles in four [hours and 37 minutes wife charges that her hus- told her that he had trane hie affections a few days ago er to pack her things and of the hotel artments occupying & division of month alt- | | move for 7 « Th | the mony. =o ewes woman asks property 1 Hardly had Insurgent Poindexter bowed himself away from Saga more Hill with the best wishes of his host than Col announced that he would go to Indiana this fall to deliver a speech | advocating the re-election of Senator Beveridge. Of all the insurgent’ who have worried Aldrich and Cannot He is and has always been we include the Indiana senator. tariff bill, which had the sanction of President by than Senator was squarely and openly oppo and Taft tariff policy. President Taft's known approval of the Payne bill, his statement that it was the best tariff bill ever had no effect on Senator Beveridge's opposition, except possib! tate it the more. As an insurgent Beveridge went to Indiana this summer to fight The republican convention of the state of Indi an insurgent, and now Col, Roosevelt is insurgency, a con Any reference to {dge has been the most active. pioneer sistent insurgent insurgency The Aldrich Payne ‘Taft, was confronted Beveridge. Beveridge king at it opponent 4 to the standpat Aldrich drawn, to ag no more persistent for renomination. ana renominated him # going to Indiana to help elect him as an insurgent. Not only was Beveridge insurgent on the tariff bill It was due to Beveridge, La Follette and but he was insurgent on the railroad bill. the rest that the people were at all considered in the measure. That Quiet Talk at Sagamo afternoon by | Roosevelt publicly | To! THE SEATTLE LE, WASH., SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1910. re Hill ~~) —From the TURN 10,000 INDIANA VOTES (My United Press.) enough to «wing Indiana INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. July 9—| That Roosevelt's influence is One speech by Theodore Roosevelt enough e make that difference ja the total vote of the state is the is eqatvalent to 10,000 votes. That 'tirn belief of the Beveridge sup is the “official forecast” of the po-| porters. They point to the fact jlities) tnanagers of Senator Bever idge, who are today predicting that John W. Kern, democratic candt date for the senate, will be swamp jed through the colonel’s life saving luvasion of Indiana. Tea thousand brought into line for the republi jean senator, the forecasters say, ‘through the colonel’s influence, j and 16,000 doubtful votes is always POINDEXTER IS STRONG IN SOUTHERN DISTRICT Spokane Spokesman-Review four years later Taft had enough margin to secure the Indi ana electors. The difference, the politicians declare, was purely a matter of personal following man with so much following ought to be able to swing a large part of it, they declare, case he takes up votes will be Capt. A, W. Lewis, of Tacoma,|King county candidates haven't wan a caller at Poindexter head-|¢Ven got a look in. quarters in the New York block,| Capt. Lewis recently made a tour Sater kak vevected woos jot the Southern district and says public sentiment a through the tary Murfine that the only two can-|Gistrict Is for. Poindexter” Poin didates for United States senator | dexter will get votes and support who were receiving any considera-|!n places wh: the insurgent con tion in Tacoma are Poindexter and [ Aegpenents fiends, least expect it he common people, most affected Ashton, Ashton ts a Tacoma law-| py the control of congress by the yer of considerable local popularity, | ests, are naturally for Polr but with no following throughout exter, but in addition there are lthe state, and is not considered in|™any who, by reason of their busi lany way @ contender. The Poin.|2¢% interests, might be expected | dexter sentiment even outruns the to be shy of Insurgency, who are declaring themselves out and out |local sentiment in Tacoma, accord jing to Capt. Lewis, and th two | for the man who helped to dehorn Czar Cannon. \FIFTEEN MILLION alee saeeme CIGARS IN CARGO (By United Press) ——I TACOMA, July 9—All rec ords for importation of Manila cigars were broken last night, when the Blue Bellerophon arrived port from Liverpool and the Orient with 15,000,000 Philippine smokes. There are 300 cases, each containing 60,000 cigare— one smoke for every sixth man, woman and child in the United States. z RHEIMS, France, July 9. — In apite of frightful injuries sustained | in her 250-foot drop from an aero plane at Bethany Plains yesterday | Baroness de La Roche's chances for |reeovery are favorable today, ac | cording to Dr. Russell. The baroness was much stronger and although unable to move ing to the fracture of her legs and arma and serious internal injuries, she fetained consciousness It ia now believed that yer skull was not fractured | Funnel liner in ow ROOSEVELT’S DECLARATION OF INSURGENCY achieve this B oppose them and did it successfully And now Col elt himself, tions or possibilities of denial Beveridgo's cause. Does this look like Col. Roosevelt was In any manner inclined to the standpat principle? ls there any suggestion about this announcement that would Indicate that the reactionary element of the party might reasonably expect ald and consolation from him? When the Indiana Beveridge it placed It Roosevelt: announe veridge had to oppose Taft and Wickersham. He did Roose perfonally, without any reserva announces his advocacy of Insurgent republican convention renominated When Beveridge's Sena Theodore or seal of approval on insurgenc his intention to aid in re-election’ by personal effort he placed himself on record as favoring the La Follette significance election of sueh men as Beveridge Poindexter and other insurgen To wee any oth than this is to delib ‘This distortion of reason can and will be done | correspondents” will write what paid to write | business. But they will write to no other purpc |ealaries. It will require standpat command to convince the public that Co) than Insurgent His promise to ely maitreat | common sense ecial they are It is than earning than there their their is at Roosevelt is other a deal of cleverness more ak for Beveridge is his declaration of prinely A; to any man whose | WAHITE fl | j | that Roosevelt carried thé state bY| Shove the more than 90,000 in 1904 and that | brioner te barely | | tally injured int Ke MNERE ESSER EERE |his freedom ONE CENT. ‘TAF TRAINS AND HTAND® Be ON NEWS GHTER IS SURE HE CAN WiilP Boilermaker Breaks His Si Too Long—lIs Not Dec ures He Can Win. NEGRO lence-—Thinks He Trained ided to Challenge, But Fig- (By United Pre them carefully a definite ANOTHER — AVIATOR statement very soon (By United Press) NEWBURYPORT, Mass, July 9 ~—While fying in a biplane 75 feet Plum Island river, A. L. 1 from his machine to- he was fa- Those who that the It is feared that rnally declare day saw the accident aeroplane capsized. ee res 96 IN CHICAGO. (By United Press.) CHICAGO, July 9. — With the mercury but two degrees lower than yesterday, which, with its r ation of 96 de grees, was the hottest July 8 in the history of the local weather bureau, Chicago today claimed another heat victim bringing total deaths since the present torrid siege an up to 96 The official thermo top of the government bulld today gistered de. The heat in the streets just as stifling as yester. Scores of prostrations were reported from all parts of the city pr on KX EEE EEE EEE EER ER ORR CHARLTON WILL NOT GO FREE By United Pree JERSEY CITY, N. J., July Despite stories sent broad: Porter Chariton, the confessed wife murderer, might go free be cause of technical hitches between this country and the Italian gov ernment, Prosecutor Garvin de clared emphatically today that the youthful slayer will not be given but that he will cer tainly be tried either by a court or an insanity commission. “The statement that this confessed perpetrator of a fiendish crime, 80 fiendish as to arouse doubts as his sanity, may b turned loose on the community be cause any legal technicality is an insult to an American court,” de clared the Jersey prosecutor today 9 that RRR . * WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE, * * Water will be shut off *® South Park Monday fr * m. until 5 p.m eeeeeeeen * wo tk RICKARD TO FILE SUIT NEXT WEEK (By Unit Press.) SAN FRANCISCO, July Rickard, chief promoter Joffries-Johnson fight, expects file his sult for damages against Gov. Gillett for he alleged resulted from moving the battle to Nevada ly next week. Tam just waiting for from two Easterners who heard Gillett promise me there would bi no Interference with my plans California,” said Rickard. “I pect them Monday or Tuesday arrive the suit will be 9--Tex the ex oon as the filed affidavits | in As| hnson again, James J. Jeffries today. , and I ta ght be ret ay prepared to make At his Cypress ax after a Bef ger of the home, Jeffries, long conferene admitted a / United Press and broke the jlong silence that followed his de- | feat by Jack Johnson at Reno. | “Until today,” the former cham- pion said, “I have had no heart to talk of my plans for the future. But I would be foolish to deny that I have not considered another meet- ing with Johnson or to deny that I | Would Itke a chance to redeem my- | “I may fight Johnson again. I | will admit that I have discussed another match with Berger, my brother Jack ~and Jack Kipper. | While another fight is more of a possibility than a probability, you ean say that I am thinking hard and may have something to say very soon.” On Berger's Advice. Berger then relieved Jeffries of the conversational burden, reiterat- far big fellow’s statement and added Jeffries and I tigree that had he entered the ring three months be. fore July 4 he would have had a better chance to win. The long training grind and the mental strain proved too much for him. Person- ally, I can't admit Johnson's super- fority, and there is only one way to justify my personal opinion—an- other fight.” Jeffries’ habitual reticence peared to lift as he listened Berger. From the depths of a great chair he rumbled back into the talk. “Every man makes mistakes and fe know now that I made mine in working too long and too hard, | Sam has just said. No one knows the mental strain of the final three months at Rowardennan and Reno. : never knew what worry was be- ‘ore. Jeff and Berger returned today from an overnight trip to the for- mer champion’s ranch at Burbank. | Jeffries stated that he would di- | vide his time between the ranch and his city home until next week jand after that may journey into | Inyo inty for a month with his |} guns and fishing rods. ap- to Rickard Not Surprised. SAN FRANCISCO, July 9.-—"T am not at all surprised, and I do not think the public will be,” said Tex Rickard when shown Jeffries’ state- ment to the United Press today that he desired another meeting with Johnson. “Everyone in touch with actual conditions at Reno knows that Jeffries did not fight the fight that his training stants show- ed him capable of putting up a few days earlier, Everyone knows that it was not a laydown or a quit on the big fellow's part, and I'm jsure that the public generally be. lieves that Jeffries was out of shape on July 4 I learned today that Jeffries, for | several days before the battle, was troubled with summer complaint |1 believe that this in itself was sufficient to weaken Jeffries, and it was apparent to everyone who saw the fight that he lost because Jof weakness more than for any other son. I believe that had jthe fight been six days earlier, or jpossibly six days later, the result | would have been entirely diffe I believe that a second mi between Jeffries and Johnsor |be almost as great a drawing card and I do not think for a moment that it would necessarily |be a walkaway RRR ERE RR EH THE SPIDER fly more er them, A the bird goes after ional many May get the bird because aft Star ad represents not the spider. It business, and it gets it. When doubt, advertise in The Phone your ads to Main Ind, 441 an will it goe in 9400 oF AK AAA AERA EK EK K * aR RR