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ye — NEW PARTY IWRECK HORROR IS In INDIANA! GROWING; DEATH LIST IS NOW 41 (Ry United Press Lensed Wire) INDIANAPOLIS , July 5.-—Pro ublicans of Indiana to xd the severance of es organization Se Oa gressive re day comp with the party old when Edwin M. Lee, former state cay Gaited Press Leased Wire) , Againat No. 11 and _—* bia gen oa organiaation,| CORNING, N.Y, July 5—With) from the passenger train chairman of the old =e . a bodies remaining unidentified | *top the oncoming train halt a mile and now t BD: ne Te ee ; from the aceident of the new natioval progressive |and with many of the injured in 4!” phe eugineer says the distant ole party, said that he would shortly | gangerous condition, the horror of|nal was at “clear,” and that he saw appoint an executive committee Of | vesterday's rear end collision of the} no flagman. He insists that the 12 to ald him tn the coming C&M |) ycKawanna railroad continues to| fox, which had welled in from the paign ‘he 13 members of the ex grow. Chemung river, was so dense that ecutive committee will represent)” \rany of the bodies will probably | it was almost impossible to see the the 13 congressional districts of Me) never pe identified, so terribly) track a train's length ahead state. |mutilated are they The death list — ae : ltoday was 41. In addition, Nellie|, The police admitted today that handel of Newark, N. J., and Jas dying and the bedies of the dead were robbed as they lay in the open fields beside the track. iffith were declared by doctors to ‘The story of the wreck, like oth s Worst in Road's History. ers which have recently preceded FOR RHEUMATISN. The wreck was the worst in the! it, Was one of ateel care as havens of refuge and wooden cars as death the road, whose boast —READ BOOKLET— history of previously was that o wo pas | traps None of the dead was in the All Draggists fers had been killed on ft eiece| steel cars. ‘The great solid train 1900. ‘The road officials blame En-|cut through the wooden day . — — jgineer Schroeder, He was in the} coaches and Pullmans like a knite eect of train No, 11, which shed | througy cheese. But the steel Puil ALBERT HANSEN through the standing Buffalo lim-| man cars and the steel day coaches ited. The company officials aay the| held fast together, were bent out semaphore a mile distant of shape by the terrific force of the danger. That the bleck in which! blow, but they held intact, and their the limited was stalled was also set occupants at moat only Injured YOUNG MAN SAYS HE WAS STABBED IN BACK BY TWO NEGROES; ARRESTS Animated talk I fon him, Established 1883 PRECIOUS STONES, FINE JEWELRY, STERLING SILVER Corner First and Cherry SEATTLE was FRANK BRIGGS Reliabie Jeweler, te last night by | we ones who Jump 1830 First Ave, small, but angry, crowd of attack anew ‘him down and stabbed him ing William Allen, 21, and Robert/in the back. He was taken to the on anything | Young, 19, negroes accused of stab-| city hospit al, where he was found Will save you money oe . bing Earl Moser, 19, a white man, |« yusly hurt by two outs in the tn the Jewelry line —————Jon the corner of First av. and|chest and nen, The trouble - Marion st was quickly dispelled |» i the Chippewa, Star Want Ads Bring Re-|wnen « dig uniformed policeman was considerable un hove in sight and expressed a de-|necessary nudging for room be sults. sire to take the men to the city /tween the negroes and Moser, it is fail Ps A crowd of about 50 gave The accused men deny any guilt, | chase Moser's assailants. Moser but Mos says he is sure they |lives at the Darrington hotel. THOUGH WORTH $90,000 MARY KEEFE CLINGS TO TIDEFLAT SHACK 3-Room Modern | Bungalow Corner, 50x100, Near Columbia, $1,150 $25 Cash. $10 Per Montb, David P. Eastman 805 Lowman Bidg. Main 2661. SAN DIEGO, Cal. July 4.-—"Mary Keefe has Inherited a fortune. Now she'll build a mansion and live in high style. She's got $90,000, and no one with that much money ever stayed In a cabin on the water. front.” So said the neighbors one foggy morning. But they didn't know Mary Keefe. She is still there, happy and con tented in her little two-room shack close to the waterline. It was enough for her before her rich Philadelphia uncle died the other day, making her a rich woman, and it's good enough for her now. To Mary Keefe the past is a closed book. She came to San Diego from Philadelphia last April Mary Keefe and her shack on the San Diego waterfront. “Where could there be such an to start anew She chose as alother musical conservatory? she shelter the rude little cabin, and|atked, half seriously. “With all my she was happy there money, which is safe in real estate I couldn't find so this, or such de Mary Keefe has cast men out of and collaterals, her life. When she was poor, she{dear a home as and the The | waters gliding by jsome years when her py old sailboats 1 wonder why ago views were | water's edge jchosen this Ii i har |that Mary Keefe had graduated |! wish was here, but that can ne is the new location of lfrom the conservatory of musie at\be. But with the bay, the moun: lthe Univer of Pennsylvania. |tains, the birds, and the sunshino Her whole existence is wrapped up of this glorious spot, I can't b lonely. No not even since jin her playing, and the scenic sur e.'un heiress,” roundings of be r quaint little hot —— TO ANNOUNCE | T. R,.’S PLANS NEXT MONDAY) PORTLAND, OF, uly So (Ry United Press Leased Wier OYSTER BAY, N. Y., July 5.—! | Plans for the new progressive party [Two ARE KILLED Stoelting Where he has put in a complete line of | which were to have been made pub |lic last evening have been withheld {until next Monday. are dead, one seriously if not fatally, Portland or vicinity today as the result of automobile accidents |John Ruedy was killed and Mrs out. avoided the opposite sex, now that|lghtfal environments. rich she will con ve to Sometimes in the evening I sit} them. There was time |for hours and watch the glistening| |But there was a “di ointm lt > can be happy cooped up in| ishe sald, and it pav way to|b on, In big city streets | } that lonely r the! xt think me lonely. I have! of my own free will) | “This is the grandest place onjand | shall remain here the balance) earth,” she murmur And I stilitof my days, Wh will I do with/ have my plano. |my money? I have thought very Against the wall of the little little of that The neighbors here room stood a handsome instrument. ore Sind to me, and | enjoy the Above it hung a diploma. It showed |spirit shown, There is one whom I became | BY AUTOMOBILES Two is dying and one is injured in THE STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1912 OLD MAN IMPRISONED $2 YEARS FINDS W’vawsonvaro 100,000. WATCH GOU, HANEY in WETHERSFIELD, Conn. July 5. ~Early In the morning the heavy-| barred doors of penitentiary swung open and Sta the Connecticut an old whitehaired man walked The door closed and thp old man, John P. Warren, wai For 62 ye meta)-buttoned free. ny) the gray had we uniform of ars he that marked him a life prisondr, When he was 21 he marfled’a young gicl of 17. From the_fipet were old ste suitor. ten, stories that wife's name with that of a The xirbwife W & brook one da held her head under the wa’ death came. HOW TWO GIRLS SOLVED BIG PROBLEM BOLON, in overalls, partme names marrie in the one eit and two hungry hu some clothes Rose and Lenore used to be sales girls in Chicago and Cleveland de pnt are Meyers. A worked at the a tw they are muscular, bronzed, healthy and as happy as larks. 1 never weighed more than 116) store," Now I weigh 132, ten what medicine tastes like.” “The first year on the farm | pitched hay anu helped with the harvesting. wear overalls, for skirts get in wa ing and doing farm Work." secu the marriage was unhappy. There dent, unknown la wi Tn December, 1859, John Warren sentenced to life imprisonment James Buchanan was presi and Abraham Lincoln, yer, riding the cireuit The first ocean cable Iinots had just been dropped into the At | swer. lan tie. ablaze over John Brown's raid on The entire country was arper's Ferry. The first of] well was sunk that year an approaching civil) war loon up in the horizon. As the year 1860 dawned John ‘arren entered the prison The war was fought, and an- other also. Mexico overthrew an emperor and a president. of nations changed. The telephone, wireless, sero giant liners and 60 yhour trains = arrived. Kings and presidents came and went. Millions of people were born, lived and died. And all the while, John Warren lived a living death In prison walis. He petitioned for a pardon 24 times, and then resigned himself to «, He even grew to like those wriex, long since forggt | prison bare, the prison yard and linked hin young the flower garden back of the other warden'’s house. In that he tolled “Mis | an > and | fe e watt | be bridegroom te 0. July 5-—Lenore,| “No, we aren't farmereties; we're Amrican university. It te sald he backed the heavy just farmers, though, I guess some |will be married in Washington Take Eleva’ crusher into the |folke would say ‘farmercsses.’” ‘pc | tor corner of the oat field and up hitched the team. Giving the near horse a slight tap she started him off toward the barn and supper In the baro yard Rose, also in overalls, was driving the cows; into the shed for the evenin's milking } While Rose; milked the cows Lenore pitched down some hay and filled the) feed boxes. Then} they didn’t have anything to do but get supper} for themselves nds at work on the country roads, turn a few hundred eges in the incubator, wash and wipe the dishes, fron and then to bed. stores, Their other} Mrs, Hepner and Mre.| s Lenore and Rose they counter. Then they | © farm boys, and now Mra. Hepner said. and have forgot: | Rose and | y plowing and plant. Wile balck Wen Pavia & ate oe fatally iajures While the nusbands ae ers pay . sdiaad _ hear he nen he machine In| gome “spare money” working for jdecided on by Col. Roosevelt fol-| which they were riding plunged|, road improvement conceff,, fie jlowing the discovery that most of|over an embankment former salesg are runniig the jthe big newspapers of the country) Marion Wilson was killed when|farm in Geauga county, threw milds | Were planning to feature, in their/the car he was driving got beyond] from Solon. Excepting of” Syn jeditions on Saturday afternoon and \Sunday morning, Woodrow Wilson, |his fami } It was his control and toppled over an em bankment Hia wife perhaps fatally, injured. nd plans eed jong the advo-| Jeates of the “bull moose” party |were to be discloset teday, they| | might be overshadowed by the Wil-| Mra. David M. Littlefield on n pul icit So it greed that| ted at Port Townsenn on July 1, x of the plans of Col. Roose-| ¥@8 4 native daughter of Washing nd his associates whould be|to™ Her father, Loren B. Hast revealed until Monday, when they |!088, crossed the continent by ox would have a clear field and be aw team fn 1847 He came to Port sured of the publicity requisite to| Townseal from Poriland in 1851 EC, ETC. was seriously, sides hundre eultl and Lenore and sell about a day; att ad ch who!cubator, ¥ chicks; ket them and do all the ling the churning and washig?| | And their home as any gooa housewife could | gather the eggs and afr days they wear men's clothdd. Be-| vating 40 acres. Rode care for a dozen cows, 50 gallons 4f milk end to the wanta a manage hatte | hickens, watch over the, jittle care for the housework, wardey ; filing is as neat attract the attention of the sup-|Maria Hestings married David M want itt { porters Of tha toventbat Littlefield 47 years ago I never was really happy until | Pesevthing/-tn:the new Ml I eam to oe farm : Mts Hepner r } sale used to get tired in the ore has the E a | store has he quality and Jl 500 LUNCHES FLOWER FIOUSE | Rore; oo ured.s-este ttre cee arantece 0 atisiaction 1 € ‘ed » e ¥ ” g f co A flower and moss house, which|! &¢t tired here, but never so tired which has . characterized Sports, music and refreshments] win be an ¢ t lel of th lub that I cannot keep going. . 1 sleep every ‘article sold by ffl were furciched in abuodanes to al nee ety tee ere e{hard, and my, but I feel good in ver) i 3 ) house of the West Seattle Woman's|the morning! Stoelting for many years Jj|crowd of about 2,000, who took in| «Es | iat Wal asd tablscad: de datat Geile ot the laa | Improvement elub, will be on exhi Frank—he worked in the store} past. are iny he annual picnic of the ladies of! nition at the West Seattle Flower|With me—lived in the country inspect the new store. Re- the Nely Rosary church of Weat we! Sinks and 44, . The show when he was a boy, and as soon member the number jSevte, at the old natatoriam at}. ist Sik inthe Stinwwat ad house, (2%, %C, Were marritd two years ngo : Lat’ The.viin lapensed: wits chs w 0 2 ne jawatha field house,,we decided to quit the city and) sees eagiaages ae jand it will be a flower show, and|we did it, and I tell you, we have 904 Second Hes. bout 6 neies Were) not merely a rose show. All the|/had @ better living and better er “ay gallons of ice ¢ eam and) available space in the auditorium{health and more money than er he ple that a iber of boy | for exhibits has practically been al-|would have if we had stuck to the contestants could eat ready taken up. city | mong the flowers during the last w years. Then, on June 16, the pard set him free. “How does it feel? he ssid. “Why $2.50 Carving Sets $1.25 $3.00 Carving Sets $1.39 $4.00 Carving Sets $1.88 $5.00 Carving Sets $2.38 $6.00 Carving Sets $2.88 $14.00 Carving Sets $6.88 . F. SPANGENBERG a poor! The clouds of | ever since he was 22 years old. | Cutlery at Your Pric FOR | AM THROUGH SE ee PNT 10 (Special to The Star.) (Hy United Pree TACOMA, JEFYERSON one in Mi urade of July 5.—The the Montamara Festo, which took | woudering just place here today, was witnessed by|'™*y ‘and in the ble ‘ result of 100,000 persons, and wax an im y that Re posing spectacte. The military and naval displa : Nonna oF i included regulars from Forta Casey i" «derahip were progrenaly and Worden, 250 men of the 72nd port a ticket of Seaforth Highlanders of British Ce . Th oO ta from th and takes: received with un iin the jon Os is hal lumbia, who were bounded enthusiasm, marines and| Hadley strongly gp by Vhen it ¢ame jackies from the Maryland, Oregon | protest,” in the fing and Cheyenne, and the Washingtor delegation state troops. Floats of and orders completed the parade, which was two miles in length, and in| which 3,000 person took part | The coronation of Tahoma Rex| 1) and Queen Hazel was witnessed | nations fraternal | by 50,000 at the Stadium last night following which the troops were re-| viewed by Governor Hay tree, after & a "prison? was asked of the old man, he! stood inhaling deep breaths of alr and looking fur out over grassy) slopes and dalsied meadows. j For a long time he did not ar He could not, He Just kept) j gazing out and out, “stretching | his eyes, as it were, upon the dix | tance which had been denied him) We no w haves fll ine 2 Fall garments t0 sda Beautiful lored blue serge ‘suits 32-inch jacketa— $19.8 Also a Nice at $22.85 and Then at last he turned | “How does it fee?” he sald. “Why,} }it feels so strange, so unueual, It! | doesn’t feel natural, There ts too }much room out here. I can see too far, It hurte—coming, like this, all at once. | And John Warren, the “lifer,” | the murderer, rapped at the prison doors that he might go back and work a little while in the rose garden in the prison yard, "You see, it may be a prison,” | the stooped old man was saying, a6 he worked among the tangled rowes but it's just about the only home I've had tn 50 yeare—and f am almost—fond of it. They,” and he turned to the barred cells confining the convicts, murderers, robbers,| “they are the only folke I know.”| And « film of tears spread across jhis brown, kindly eyes, at the {thought of being a free man, to go} where and when he wished. FORMER CHINESE PREMIER { TO WED GERMAN WOMAN | TIENTSIN, July 6.—It ie gener. ally believed here today that Tan Shao Yi, former premier of China, will marry a German woman in the near future, going to the ~ aited States for the ceremony. Tar ~ Yi received bis education in an LADIES’ SAMPLE sung 500 Arcade Bldg. 22 YEARS IN SEATTLE 25c Pocket Knives 12c 50c Pocket Knives 36c 75 Pocket Knives 49c $1.00 Pocket Knives 69c $1.50 Pocket Knives 89c $2.00 Pocket Knives $1.19 $1.00 Butcher Knives 49c 75¢ Butcher Knives 39c 50c Butcher Knives 23¢ $2.50 Hunting Knives $1.23 $2.00 Hunting Knives 99c $1.50 Hunting Knives 69c Northeast Corner First and Spring