The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 16, 1912, Page 1

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is to fly with : then she'll have a ae . show we all have a “funny pew subject to talk about. ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE bone.” VOL. 14. NO. 65, SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1912, ONE om ox Teas aye HOME EDITION WS STANDS Be ) SIVES REFUSE Cops Guard Tatt Convention Hall WHAT SEATTLE GIRL WANTS ANARCHIST TELLS “70 COMPROMISE---TWO |—toKeep Out All Except Stand TO FLY WITH THIS BIRDMAN?] STORY OF ALLEGED Wanted—A young lady of Be CONVENTIONS HELD) js By Seba esos ra Se, TORTURE ON DESERT ’ 5 ing a of the big aviation € y Both Factions—Taft Men _ 4 4 ing ” Hay Made an Outcast by t “King if Hoboes” CJaims He Was Maltreated by “T: Dried Pro ‘ : boes : a ‘ a by “Tarring and Through Cut-and-Dried Program Afver Roosevelt attle Star flight, will be made. le Feathering” Party—Newspaper Men Cast Some Doubt on > heir Peace Offer. . The young tad it — : BRAVE. She must” not. be ee Story. s : | — afraid to look down an alti v Roceavelt was indorsed |stacoment expressing the feeling of Sta | @ WeAE. 1000 feet and ek : : (hy United Prewe Leased Wie nm. the delegates generally that Colner . ry LOS ANGELES, May 16,—Ex ‘ republican co! ’ . \ must not get “cold fi it th pu it " . . me ’ h d wday as 2d the t delegates deliberately 2 ; % last minute. iausted by his at Aberdeen yesterday attempted to “Job” them rit ia + Reitman, self-styled king of hoboes for president, and Quarded te Geen . i |} Patmaiee has carried scores of é and avowed anarchist, who was tar-| headed! Coiner's object, the preareaatves . s ' re with him in bis aerial red and feathered by a party of vig- Miles assert, was to have the progress. . ' " Hot “The Btar giri,”. who ilantes in San Diego, is recovering . fter he had. held t : i te at inf "4 . ‘when they are to vote pn bie poem Acad Aas é Z a ee honor f fl Reitman arrived from Escondido La Folette or some other v4: the second convention was a& bes be deo Parmalee will appear . i - age NE ein tay « oad as The progressives point out * ‘urpin and Morton, both " se railway station by more tha , 100 Ye Convention at Onliner nana ietsheine: bats on , ‘ will ald in the two-day Industrial Workers of the World = ed reag 4 ; i at_The Meadows. Mor | and chists and escorted to his Voge convention. ca jer any wrongful impression, for io, dark t lodgin: ns, following the Pythias ball, where the pro- ing the meet she: will es Ste obtain a com: gressives met, was mot guarded by ‘ ; p from an altitude of 1,000 feet Burned Letters on His Back. Metin the progressives on A uniformed offic as the Grand & @arachute, the first time this According to Reitman Roosevelt | theatre was when the Taft cony t ONE be attempted in the comprised the party th delegates for Roose ve ate a m thy onven ; prt went. | f I , Jegates in-| tion was being hel . rom @ San Diego hotel and cos for Taft, 14 ane ~ »\ ton wa ng by ow ThE Riiators who will visit the bim with tar and fe ag He for Taft were Progressives’ Claim . ; prt at defore making a tour ef 4 allexes that he was subjected to Piatform he call for the state convention bate just finished their various indignities, and that the aa particularly and did not specify any particular place ah work in’ Low Angeles, : letters “I. W. W were branded | policies in general we in Ab em f holding the meet : vias: in Vancouver, then on his back with a lighted pevonce He Taft convention The ing. The progressives took the po | thy Lodi country a distance of 60 Reitman told « sensational story} Follette conve that a majority of the uncon 5; | niles ( Bellingham. } of his treatment by the San Diego went down the sted delegates to the convention = F ( The twoday meet bh will open Hlantes | ¥ ft vigilan He said Se the most progressive Nat supreme authority] . | May 29 and close May S€. Decora Taken From Hotel. eer v4 te this state arty so far as temporary or-| : ’ ‘ ho day The Star Might will be “The men who me in the wala te platfo jon wes concerned, and that] § - | cea big feature of the first day PHIL PARMALEE hotel were ren we J. A. Falconer, net state central committee had no és A ht = = = ~ : a They looked like business that T. R. is our first Dower to annul this authority i 2 | Whe . |When I refused to go with In addition, the holding of the ‘ f ‘ they clapped revolvers to my b | Progressive Platform. progressixg convention was forti : || MOTHER OF “TITANIC ORPHANS” jand placed their hands over my! declared them. fied by the further argument that : ; j ARRIVES IN NEW YORK. mouth, and dragged me to the auto. ’ ts as uncontested delegates, includin ‘ . mouth, (end drag he auto-| : ital priviegen, for 2 Wtepreacutative Loyd) Gandy ot ae REW YORK, May 16.—Madame Marcelli Navratil, an |}llce cleared the way for them.” law, as in Spokane, were denied admission i Ieatian beauty, 24 years of age, arrived h today on the || “While they were taking me to a . a som ghhery ee cher een tae ‘oe ¢ . steamer Oceanic, rushed at or the r Y Chil te an thes 3 preci 3 jection of dentiale at the door. They were If dren's society, and claimed t rr i. ak Bigeaaine ta cp seonrtipcons on “a Stiles of the tariff|told that they had to have cards quarsins phetoaraph, taken at sont: eggs tery ng, Ub gaa ndlare — Mothon, who were rescued from ani Lhave since || They stufied fith rereyptemay for conservation of nat-| issued by EB, B. Bena. | vention was held. The standpatte rs did not want to take oy all been kept in care of Miss Marguerite Hays, hose lap and struck me with their fists and! a oeeene the Lively Conventions of having a Roosevelt demonstration occur to disturb them, so they |p they were thrown when the big liner was sinking Mental ory a — ie ter. names I ever have long tramp, Ben le” from judicial) In entire contrast with the Taft! parred everybod ) ybody, even spectators, from the building. J en ef the Sherman anti-| convention, the progressives had| The progressive converfiion, which was ettended by a majority of === = = |e calor and for other amend nt ly lively session. When-|the uncontested delegates of the stat open to the pu Had Fire Built. uilt. the income tax, home iness of the convention eo 2 4 for the benefits re while waiting for com 7 " a. aa another party iting Tn er te bene ras ie “eating fr com jfound another party waiting. In _ |the su t of a fire they bad burning tocerb the sale of stock terspersed music, or else speeches | P . peec ipped me and then began| BEN REITMAN corporations, for the called for, Once a big line} : jeoey flenshes - E! % ‘ot public service races ormek aah Wk tees ak ‘ IN | PATH F F AME such flendis band inbuman torture |A snapshot of the “hobo king” taken basis ofa reasonable pby® versity serpentine dance was pulled ‘i " a are not fit to be pub-| during his fast visit to Seattle. uation of the operating prop-| irr While the band played “Every 2 Sa lished. I begged them to kill me} foe currency legislation | bo4y5 Doing it,” the delegate . ; eh Nee (By United Press Leased Wire) jand end the pain, but they replied! tos Angeles.” decentralize control of the po ced @ ring and threw thelr ba: . . BURLINGTON, ta, May 16— hier A the forest fires have} which was on fire. More refugees |they wanted me to go away and tell Reitman was asked if he would } Money and commercial rt - i. 6 | Fighting every inch of the way, ad t suffering and hardship and| were taken from there to safety.” |how San Diego treated my kind prosecute his alleged abductors. He* J in it. Permanent irman George | ey Z Pri ¢ lhe [the of homes and means of; The people need ald | They satd if they had Emma Gold-| replied ‘ ome Hay Hever." H. Walker was presented with a ; $ rents of Speaker Clark and Gov.l i Veuneed to hundreds of people is| In Snohomish county the town of |Man there they would give her the! “What can I do?, We have ape Ties the werda |S stick to be used for a gavel <9, | Woodrow Wilson are seeking con |the report of refugees who are fiee- Sultan ix wuffering from the fear} same dose |pealed in vain to the governor im} by Peter.” spoke eloquent'y Thirty-three Counties pe whey ey |trol of the state democratic see with their families and what |of losing its water supply, as the| “My own cane was used, too, as|other matters. There is little hope. fuelled held by the pro-| a.” er eee Se a : |tion which mot hern today, present}tetle they have left to places of pipes supplying the people with |® instrument of torture. Being un- | here re tay, the) oerear? © & Snyder of the state) — 1 s indications being that Clark will getigafety. in the vicinity of Birds | water are made of wood. The fire | Usually strong. I was able (o stand| Reitman was interviewed by two Ee See innch |S commitioe te the Gale + ae ee, 20 delegates and Wilson six. View, Skagit county, families have fighters are making strenuous ef-|Wbathey did, even when my tm} hewspaper men at Escoudido yes! EEE tenveation,| Setter J. A. Falconer of Sao ‘ pee, The Clark following is endeavor | geen made destitute by the fires of forts to thwart the advance of the|‘estines were Iacerated by one of |terday, several hours alter he bad Reies ef Sam 11, |2Ouish wae slected . lemporary : ’ ; ing to pass resolutions instructing |¢ne last two days. flames. A heavy rain has saved |'fir devices been kidnaped, To neither of them, ‘advocate, “the state “Dirman. Committees on creden the convention to pledge the entire} ‘The fire at this point had been several million dollars’ worth of |, 7 oe wing themselves for/so far as known here, did he say F waagiven a passive 2s and platform were appointed delegation to Clark, but the Wilson purning for several Gays, but tt property in Whatcom and Skagit | OS ae hour the men ran about that he had been so badly treated by the designation of members | People ary waging & stubborn fight. lay not until yesterday that the | counties | n @ circle. The whole thing|as he now charges. This fact is + fant . , } Was turned into ie the platform of either rom each county represented. A wottiers realized the danger to! The bodies of the five men who| as turned i wie eh! nee pao taken by opponents of the anarch- roll call showed 565 delegates pres- BIG CHANCE they had exposed them- lost their lives at the English Log-} ists (o support their theory that! bh euyee ent, and 33 ont of 39 counties rep- ‘ A ves reat e cane tes fiames|aing company and Dempsey Log A oponge They beat me with | Rejtman's vivid imagination bad not’ 4 resented. The Taft convention had apread, and before the ranchers | sing company fires near Birdview,| 1) jes as I ran through the lines/heen checked since his arrival in efforts to bring About only 26 counties represented FOR DOC WILEY ‘any time to save thetr house-|Skagit county, have been recov-|" formed Caltfornia between the factions (haries Hall of Vancouver was . hold goods or thelr stock the fire |cred __ Stuck Thorns in His Ears. ———— Galy because he Want-\pincted secretary. GR Vaied Prase Lenses Wise) ay almost. everything Five Victims Identified. Just before they put the hot tar| ire himself from defeat was” i : WASHINGTON, May 16—Dr, jbad eaten away | jon my body, the hen The following are the national " iy * aiue. Around the Dempsey Rodies of five men who lost their ny oily elr torture became | the unanimous opifion delegates-at-large chosen for Roose- Harvey W. Wiley, who recently [Of val! furious flames lives when the camps of the English |terrible. Each man would coi / our e leases - Hlogeing camps @élegates. Ac| yet: Senator Miles Poindexter resigned as chief of the bureau | ORF Logging Co. and the Dempsey Log-|f0FWard and ask me a question. If me < 0 [spread in ali directions, and in a & Co Fae e cach (the anawer did not please him, I y, tee governor was handed | sox Th rphin of chemistry in the jartment ' sing Co, » Birds vi Skagit . S Tail Spokane; homas F. Murphine, Ighort time the whole upper camp irdaview, Skagit | Te. “Strack in the fone ee even ors Mowing package by the pro-| King: 8 A. D. Glasscock, of What pe of agriculture, will now have an he. county, were burned, have been re n com, Robert Moran of San Juan, Care opportunity to demonstrate (Was ® gg borg ery nmoke. lcovered. They were identified ax|¥®* thrown to the ground and! p 4 Holt, Bd Harris, A. Wier, Je the fact that at | Donald MeMaster of Clark, N. P. some of his theories regarding | 1. po nelts of Hamilton, |J0e Rozist, Fred Cleveland, J, C./Smeared with filth. A small Amer-| soiomon, John Mowart, Henry Her the citizens of the state | jy), “heh: C re pure food, particularly as tothe |. © 2 "| Nelson, Ivert Denson and James F.|'c40 flag was stuck down my |, ; a 3 Richards of Chehalis, O. C. Moo Washington, tells how the women t jman and L. Salinger, tailors, ar Seeded championship of spokane and W. L. Johnson of proper feed for infants. A nine | trom de. awson, the latter of Seattle. The | throat until T was almost strangled. | -o.teq yesterday afternoon in front for & direct presiden- Stevens 7 pound son was born to Mrs. [and children were saved from de | podies of Lyle Neil and George Ul-| While some of the men held me, |(r'the 8 & R tailor shop, 71 Co- , so that their voices pirst district—Frank Pendleton of Wiley here today. Both Mrs. |strection at Dempsey's camp Tues rich, known to have lost their lives, Others stuck desert thorns into my Can” caraenaiee an Beard, unstified by the ef- snohomish; J. A. Johnson, Kips. : . Wiley and Harvey, jr, are do- | have not been found. ong. were dismissed this moru- Mebonesiy, official inde- \itnrnates—Herbert Snook, King * 4 ing well. | “The fire had eaten its way to pak | At last they decided that they | » were a With political bossiem 454 3 C. Herdsman, King. 7 - - |ward the roundhouse in Dempsey's| KILLED BY FIRE would pass up for the time the |!& by Justice Gordon, after hear- said Eichholtz, “and the men LL jquestion of depriving me of my|is the evidence submitted. The were combined to rob gecond district-—Thy Craw PPELEEEDA DME ES ¥ BE camp,” that ex , end tain Gee rag * & hurriedly got the trucks out, and| (my Uniter Press iets. Inight n testified that they were em- pression lord, Lewjs, and A. G. Espy, Pa Hh “hao sg a ed and had visible means of Brok, cifle - I Pp * WEATHER FORECAST % the logging engine was coupled.) BELLINGHAM, May 16.—Losses Just before the tar was applied Set, ate. Aleman FE Sere p S< Gonmralip: fair Contnht:.endieaben. geeple. wore. token feom thet! by forest fires in Whateom county |they held me and burned my beck support at the time of the arrests. talled the Taft convention (Clallam . * Friday; light variable winds, & homes, and placed on the trucks, are reported from the camp of the| With red hot cigars. Then, while I This is the most eget pros Morning, in| Third diatrict—L. Roy Slater, # mostly westerly. Temperature # Women and children first, and a| Bolcom-Vanderhoof LogNing Co there, they plastered on the tar|ecution T have as fo. 4 Man agreement t postpone | Spokane, and T. C. Elliott, Walla) [utiaees om # at noon, 59 te | dash was made for safety. The en-|operating in the south fork of the |4nd covered it with cactus and des.| career as an attorney at law Matll after a conference of Wall Aiternates——W. L. Johnson,| “ F ti gineer opened the throttle to the| Nooksack, and from the Knight |ert grass. I was then stoned into |Clared Attorney T. R. Horner, who it each | Steve " i1/i/ Vo he he th tt ete limit, reaching the Hamilton camp, | Bros.’ camp, near Maple Falls the men following me defended the men. committees of each Stevens, and J. A. Lanham, Chelan. i y were tired of it After strike is being conducted by mith Gov. Hay, is now T t ss te ex he electors chosen are a a " ing that under a 3 ‘ , “No May Fever.” That was the lking a long distan I reached certain employes of the B. & R. ™ he did so under S. E. Wharton, Snohomish; W. J y Barendo, naked, and bought the /|tailorshop, following the dismissal that the progre Molte re dwell, Clal |nseription on ribbons worn beth) u [Pel Violated the azrecment ine. ti. C Pigott, Kine, J, L. Du |by Roosevelt and Taft men at Aber-| R TEPS DOWNWAR overalls atl. jutaper I wore, tate of queot thelr Mamben © Week Han: steering committe Whi e Kit. | deen yesterday. It meant that Gov.| ’ «==, « oid in * siemeiaiiead | mas n; Austin Meyers, WOR sai veg hax wine a titas, and G. J es ton. he} ne Nes Beni lat oat even win "some ote | THAT MADE REV. RICHESON A MURDERER cas valine ala Gee ae T 9 * |pertercey. ee 4 The warlike muse is being wooed with ardor » Oday Ss Funniest | — _ | (This is the second chapter johijreh from the pulpit, often by| heart affiars, may be attributed days at 507 New York building, the local G. A. R. “ TEDDY CLAIMS | IT of the biack story of Rev. Clar- |intiendo, He resigned under fire} the strange circumstance that quarters i ence Richeson and the trusting |and went to Boston. Avis believed} Richeson not early tangled Asst. Adjt. Gen. A. W. Hastie warns The Star that it = Leased Wire) f ed joke has appeared in man m ; | for wh rder he goes |he would marry ber in de fall and| in his net of lies and intrigue eared | wises. Mrs. O. L. Niles, y y 16 gir! for whose murder he g gu ust y to pass on scores of persona a e - '¢ . to the electric chair next Mon- |they would take up foreign mission-| It is known positively that the must expect pass upon es of personal wartime nar- ¥ St, who wins today’s prize of $5 for the funni f »y Colonel t I f wef be congratulated on having been able cs auntie i one Theodore Re ooh ggnd wie claim| day. Its moral lesson is terrific. j@ry work together, But he aceept-|Edmands fam! never heard of ratives fror 1 the pen of vete Ta » hope to win the wd heodore Roo alm). —_ditor.) ed @ call to the Immanuel Baptist | Avis Linneli until after the murder. | beautiful flag and staff which The § will present on an cid and familiar dish served in a new and tasty fash a ] eo ted o ° Funny Editor. ’ ow and tasty fash: \that he would be nominated on th chureh in Cambridge, Many stories are told in Cam-|} Memorial day to. the veteran writing the best and most | ‘ NO wi ne a liean national convention, met with | BY MARLEN E. PEW Pe pce Aegon Beston be” eg? u-) bridge and Hyannis of Richeson’s |} dramatic account of an actual experience in war. ONDER HE WAS FRIGHTENED the approval of several thousand Chapter 1. sie, She boarded at the periodic queer spells, which some Ti tan Gavehcinideal tack thanks : ee in : one oe ee who had gathered to| While the tragic romance of|Richeson frequently called and |took to mean insanity. He would i psych ical fact that no two men, no matter ine, living in the north end of the city, had instructed | Pe former president speak Avis Linnell and the Rev. Clarence | Avis told her friends she was en-|complain of illness, talk of death how ob ant, ever saw a battle from the same angle, or #22 in the mysteries of the Bible. She explained to him|"*" carer teagan * |Richeson was yet in the bud, the | waged to him names fand take to his bed for a week. |{ carried in their memories similar impressions. . ‘Therefore @ world, then made man, and called him Adan poem read young pastor of the church at er the marriage had been hese attacks Invariably came upon ervey . ) > vete < eri ; Pegg to sleep and from his side He took a rib and made Bp hs ged otpeg aes lHtvannis, Mass, became known to|twice postponed, Avis talked with|him when he found himself tangled | 9S"™ ay iors 5 wero Se ae oe rap og "2 Pb = as called E eee ei vlorces control the repub-|is parishioners as a liar. He Hed/ him one night about a new date for in intrigues of duplicity their facts before setting pen to paper, are fighting again ivy Ady eadltag) fellow on 80th st. N. W. He bad been | Roosevelt forces cen which met|t0. exaggerate his {mportance and|the wedding. He whined that bis| | Murder was in his heart then the battles of the great war. Was crying oe # etch i side, and the pain frightened |here at noon today, but efforts to|(o gratify bis stupendous vanity, pent nary wet ai he ba bc nd vs Rope os oe monstrous “Antietam,” said Gen. Hastie, “was fought several times ) Frankie,” 1 » bi . save a break in the party may re-|covering each successive lie with|sapport a wife, and finally dramatic | question of how he should rid yesterday right in this office, and no two times the same Tao pas tid. “what is the matter? Te Mecoapromise being effected. |ANOCiSY ally threatened to throw himself] himself of Avis to marry a rich § but T think going to have a wife.” eT 4 Taft and Roosevelt forc This progressive falsity deeply|off the balcony where they were} woman, older than himself. way MRS. O. L. NILES, 314 West 70th St. han pecm in almost constant can-|rent his moral fiber, It caused bis|talking. Avis ran to call her broth-| Mrs, Hallett of Hyannis, a former cus the last 24 hours, and the offers |Chief sorrows and finally wrecked|erin-law. Richeson disappeared. | parishioner, invited: him to spend _ WOULD BE HIS OWN FAULT |crience put forth by the Taft men|bis reputation. He ied to the|Her brotheriniaw, William | Me-/bis vacation at her home. Avis was * shure vis’ | Lean, that night declared he believ-|at home on a vacation. He arrived 0 Washingtor 3 lhave pulled..a&.few. weak-kn deacons of his. church, to Avis ton s I fell into conversation with |aY® P : : ; eee pporiers into the har-|mother and to the choir singer her-|ed Richeson insane |there July 1, but a few days later thing pet to know Seattle thoroughly. While we were eon ow pot ttuncise rues self, The men of bis church were The truth was that he was | Miss Hdmands tel hed, asking ad only > - hageanend u eters —— questions about the | : saalaine anxious to get rid of him The| then planning to marry Violet | why he did not write or come to her “ @ lot, but 1 oe, be anid, and abéed 70,000 FOR T. R. IN CALIFORNIA| Women, probably in pity for Avis,) Edmands! This telegram was exposed, -When ‘ 8 I find he never #0 city of ite size with as many ""E) PRANCISCO, May 16.—|tried to excuse. him When Avis Linnell had been 18)he discovered that others knew its oor oggie neo Irishr t Practically complete returns from| Then Richeson became a thief,|months engaged to marry Richeson, jenaveste, he left for New Hamp: } own fanit.” rishman, “if a man goes to hell from Seattle, 3,663 of the 3,700 precincts In Cali |The church trustees left $50 for|her mother heard that he was be-|shire. Ten days later he returned FRED MENGERT, Sailors’ Union. sn iey confirm the United |him in bis study : .\trothed to Miss Violet Edmands, | to visit Avis Most hi ith SnD DDN'T 7 io estimate that Col. Roosevelt's |celving it, trumped up a story of|the Brookline, Mass., heiress | The girl was distraught in fear of everyone sympathizes with a BELIEVE EVEN THEN | pluratity in the presidential primary |theft, and, displayed a letter that| |The anxiotis ‘mother | wrote to /a shameful exposure, and it was dur lost dog. In Seattle it is customary to eee works 2 4 - » 70,000. |the “thief” had written him, prom- cheson for an explanation »ling this visit, according to the Lin e bi fo an ay hens bg apple nec Ege pene ig yey ey so far obtain-|ising to return the money in instal-| never answered. Four months later/neli family, that Richeson secretly telephone a Lost” ad to The Star the slley, strip yey cet First and Second aves., he saw two! | The exnc) Wi osevelt. vote as|ments, It was postmarked Wollas.|he denied the report as thervapor-| made Avis believe she was his wife when a canine strays from home. In sande a lapepeone, Pao Fg fight: By and by able With Taft polling 67,045 and|ton, Mass. ‘The lie was exposed | ings of “idle gossips.” |It was his desperate bid for more p “y Bren sigs ‘< hla gare ae Sap rede ae tlie soy jee ciictte ALM2, ‘These figures |by a man who saw Richeson jump| “I was sick in bed when your let-|time. He was determined to marry | * about every instance the dog is return- Enough!” But ya” lime to hear the under dog shout: La Foie v's clear majority of|off a train at Wollaston that morn-| ter came, and after that 1 forgot it,”| the other girl. This was impossible ed quickly to its owner. It’s interesting he says ‘Bnough' < top continued to pount commanding sise. ling to post a letter he lied, with accustomed alacrity, | with Avis alive. oe D Be such an went ie don't JOU Gat” ae iene asked. command fe co Avis knew these things and In Cambridge, where Richeson| — Holding her trusting hand in to know just how many dogs do get . bel e him,” sald the victor. ania " " ~~ nel » people kne hi he hi if nounced a” > : po : STON, May 16.—Rev. Clarence| was saddened by them, but | was preaching, some people knew) 8, he himself pronou } lost in Seattle. Read The Star “Lost <tecemetinmessen na one lV. gig 9 i ae is expected to| clung to the man as good jof his engagement to both girlie. It marriage ceremony. | Found” 1 f fi igh AUNTIE 7 be put to death in the electric chair] women ao often do when their ts remarkable that be was not ques-| | Even then he must have been see : and Found” column for a few nights a SHOULD FUMIGATE fe Winariestown prison on Sunday| love is attacked. He was her (tioned. It is certain that Avis knew |ing red. Nowhere in the wildest and you will be sugprised at the num- Tait nephew, Charlie, of San Francisco, 1 wrote a jetter,|night for the murder of bis fiancee,| first love and had baptized her. |Richeson was involved with Miss |Imaginings of the world’s most fa a Dar etles Of Beattic. ‘and concluded: “li te fe Avis Linnell, 1s apparently callous| To cover his lies, Richeson re-|Mdmands, but never discussed the) mous writers, is there a chapter to r. sity not one ee Very, eee. 0. ted to the old trick of talking matter, even with her mother. compare with this incident in the , Destered with fleas, as San Francisco is \to his fate. Richeson read the Bible | sorted 7 Nn oe yee Iam glad you have no fleaw and hope you willjuntil 9:30 o'clock last night, then| desperately to her. He vowed he) “To her. blind love of him and | black romance of Richeson and Avis Over 40,000 Paid Copies Daily. nd hope ¥ y. Ot the Potia | i jcide, He a the disinclination of other | Linnell teh be f “ down In his death cell and slept! would commit saicide le de to je disinctination of MRS. J BRAIDA ope peg quiet until 7:20 this morning. lnounced various members of the| people to inquire too deeply into | (To be continued tomorrow.) ifirst ballot at the Chicago repub

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