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VAMPIRE: . and Policeman Followed Seattle by Woman Who Broke Up His Home RE MINE. SHE SAYS ] rs in Seattle Rescue Him 4 and Return Him to His | Wife and Baby ‘ om nd he made his prayer - | vere). a, called bee bis lady fale | So . | Through City Detective Me of Seattle, J. M. Wise, member of the Portiand quad, has been return te the home and family he in the latter city last Ferruary, Wise says he ls a hel. Gince he left Portland he fas been philandering from part of the country to an Cod in company with a wom Swho did not care,” " and he enticed him away from his ‘and baby while she was joe for him a “stool Wise left, he says, he wm under some strange in for whom he dectates he Kael but could not Wife About Her ment to San Francisco it of February 9, after “had told his wife of the woman and had promised Wise to try to break the friendship. The prom made only a few hours “Wise and the woman: left fan Francisco, Wise says, to repent. He — Sretarn home, and one nisht fhe woman of his plan. She foto a rage, he says, and s pear! handled revolver given her at his breast. to kill him and her- — her and‘ went to a ~ where he obtained a ‘om bis watch and gun of size to enable him to ‘* seats Teary at ng Aa lal at the Metro The woman followed met her on to tell} fm bis hand, she burst ‘the door -@ wild rage she tore the into Bits, he says, and) eed, telling him she would) day he went to Osso, and there as a laborer. Then he re) as a plasterer’s helper. @iin't try to hide.” he says, Walked the streets as boldly | ‘My man. Last Saturday night McClelland stepped up and said, ‘Hello, Wise!" Sent Back to Wife “You're mistaken,’ I answered, then admitted my identity. me, the to my wife and beby. T want to? busband’s arms ai. “fool w Legs F atal to Nookechamp’ Prem Our speci Ant +h a | NOOKECHAMP, aWsh.. April ‘or, @ prominent found among @ ly hatched Rhode Island brood a chicken perfectly except that it had four loge. At went weil for nearly a week. Then it was discovered that the two sets of legs were ar fanged for locomotion in oppe- ite directions The result was that the chick | Pulled if and died. at re ES : i { wei See | 4 Ww THE OLD SWING} oom, Pou, GUES~I1%s HIGH _ 5 | = TIME | WAS GET TING) | By Fred L. Boak SHOUGH tt hap as ft Is now after years of telling, ta that the wild man ate rabbits, birds, fish story aa told ts 4 grows | know, for | was I roamed but an ror two on a sultry summer the wild man. most embarrass 0 and bashful & girl named an uncle who liked young Angelica and yack seat in the Wagon and beld hands all the way It was long ago, Angelica later jilted me for a young whippersumpper But no matter pare robbed or mu red | word. He tried to break | VOLUME SEATTLE, First Pictures of Efforts to Raise F-4 jeture of his wife| fet bis wife have him) erigaged = iny to Seattle and found em-| took me to police headquar- and | talked with other mem- of the force. They wanted id, if 1 would | My hair was) gray from thinking of} and I jumped at the chance, | ih fearing my wife would re- down in Portland a family Temnited. Mrs. Wise fell into in a #Woon she saw him. and the baby just as its father and Aad somewhere, the woman | did not care” is looking for) statement of Lieut. Ede, commander of the ili-fat- ed craft which lies at the bot tom of the entrance to Honolu Curious Chicken board, In a letter made public today by Allison Ede, a brother of the dead naval officer. written three days before the last fatal trip of the Agraz, who estab. | |lished a new world’s la ep-sea diving at Honolulu while! | searching the ocean floor for the | lost submarine F-4. ‘WiLL ae TO CLUB ge ne “1 just came back from Peart evious to that tims we had down at a depth of 50 feet. and no bottom below | expect the whole mere handise | | maneger of the Praser-Paterson Co +| OME WALLOP e 7 {You" LL CATCH \"ER HELEN PACK In THEGAME { | THERE p75 To reseh the selected for the ot uncle had fPnic, we had to drive up the rive t wa llow " an we could Ko; then the wagon and pack our ' ots*and traps around a bend We thus reached a potnt where tl was a shelving each on one side of t river and high cliff on the other, We all. exclaimed that the beach wan an ide \ to ptent and uncle bean Hack of the bewch wad a dense wood Unele thought of every thing, We had brought bathing sults Unele — atretehe 4 blan between two # The bath house!” he an nounced You boys change first. When you're in the wa ter, the girls can get into thelr bathing sults When | had taken off m couldn't find my Uncle said Probably you what. You skip right through the woods to the wagdw, body wil nee you So Il ran through th couldn't find the bathing sult und ran back—to discover that in my absence. the boys had changed and entered the wa ter AND THAT THE GIRLS WERE UNDRESSING BE HIND THE BLANKET, | wat RAR AAR AAA AAA AAA Ay The Seattle Star exerted by the Gooding} Ww ASH. FRIDAY, APRIL 9, Diver Jack Agraz, hero of the submarine disaster, photograph ed just surface after his record dive of 215 feet, made in the daring ea to locate the lost F-4. F-4 Called “Leaky Trap” by % ‘Commander in Letter Home LOS ANGELES, Aprii U. 8. submarine F-4 thing to go up In smoke any time.” Descent Into HONOLULU, Aopril 9-—In the desperate efforts to recov- er the ill-fated submarine F-4, which carried 21 men to a wa- tery grave in Honolulu harbor on March 26, the unobtrusive courage of Jack Agra. stands out conspicuously. Agraz descended 215 feet WITH ONLY A into the HELMET ON, and for 18 min utes withstood the tremendous ure of water at that depth pr while he made a survey. No other human being, so far as is recorded, has gone that depth with unprotected body and lived to tell of his exploit. Only 80 feet lower the plates \ WAIT A MINUTE — ( |} NOW WATCH THis ONG — WATCH THE BOALT’S MOST EMBARRASSING MOMENT! WHAT WAS YOURS? They Still Tell of the Naked Wild Man That Ran Through the Woods, and Well, the Wild Man Was Boalt who clerked walked and w know whethe merly of Seattle, in her apartments in the fai hotel, in § performance, middle-aged I hurdied logs sehing in my when and fell LAST EDITION formant disapy nf ‘ pe 1. The po arfield was visiting at the partment Mr. and Mrs, Rot Mitchell, o Refore dyt heard to murmur Mitchell has | left for across the bay No motive, the dispatch adds, Mra. ( ONE CENT Mra, Whiting said she did not they we little be Two Garfield is 27; his wife was "Tea Mrs. W is true. I know of no reason why my daughter should have done this thing. I never heard of Robert Mitchell until now [in-law less then a year ago in Los Angeles. They had, I suppose, the | usual quarrels that married \iar correspondence with them, ceiving happy, chatty letters at their life together, their” social 0? thelr journe activities and about my grandson. Only two weeks ago I had a letter from Cha 1 family M. Hoggett. only member of the F-4’s to escape the disaster that sent the diver to her tragic doom. Hoggett | ¢ at the time of] the accident. ATTORNEY PERRY INVITED TO MAKE |ADDRESS AT FAIR hauled to t Seattle natianal banks come tn International of submarines under the ocean's weight—riv- ets have broken writers of note |vaults to @ greater extent than most other bankers in the country While the law makes national banks keep 18 per cent of the de- posits on reserve, are holding in reserve 34 cent, as compared with 21.50 per cent in°7 Recauss had only the arch of his ribs to oppose that crashing force; who has accepted burden constricted his flesh | the folds of a python roaring to his head pressed him with strange languor, toward the last JITNEY MEN MEET y bus men will hold a meet- ing at the Press club Friday night! to discuss ways and means, WILL TRY TO MAKE WHUGH TOE MARK Legal action against Pat McHugh charged with breaking the ¢ requirement fixing § imum wage for labor. a communication sent by Superintendent of public works a diver, is demanded} ing the supreme court decision on » to the boar The matter has no decision had *, Corporation Up to noon, into effect at clause ts held valid regardiess of mar It is reported that, attle is the big financial center of |® sub-contracts, men have been unable, on the Stone ke more than an 4 lerage of $1.50 a day official bonds Coast Casualty HELEN, 1M GONA ATCH COLD OUT HERE Do You KNow IT! “Tom, Look Were A minure. EATTLE WOMAN DEAD; MYSTERIOUS SUICIDE FOUND DYING OF POISON; POLICE SEEK INFORMANT Mystery surrounds the suicide, Friday, of Mrs. Chase Garfield, for- jonable Buckingham n Francisco Mrs, Garfield was the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. F, B. Whiting, Boylston ave. N. Or. Whiting is one of the most prominent sur geons In Seattle, with offices in the Cobb puilding. A dispatch to The Star states that Mrs. Garfield was found dying at midnight, a victim of poison, and died a few hours later at St Francis’ hospita as revealed by al~ rious wou who rapped at Joor of the apartment of Dr, I HW the Bupkingham, where * Garfield was stopping, and Looking for Informant Dr. Hyde followed the uoknowr nee to Mra. Garf « apart d while he was attending dying woman, the mysterious are looking for bi friends Mrs, Garfield was UNIVERSITY OF CALIFOR- NIA, April 9—Six crews of been found which might im.| brenze-skinned oarsmen are Mrs. Garfield to seek death,| @xiously waiting the starter's was left gun tomorrow for the big tri- Mrs. Whiting were in ig-| @?gular intercollegiate regatta { the tragedy until noti-| between Washington, Stanford ed by The Star Friday. The news| @nd California, on the Oakland is a terrible blow to the dead| estuary. woman's mother Day-before odds fluctua be- tween Washington and Stan- ford, the former on the basis of past performances and a and the lat- ter weight, Their Child in Seattle know her daughter was in Francisco and why she was| at her home in Los Angeles | | with her husband and son. as well as a new sweeping Garfield. the woman's, stfeke that looks omnious. and ss in the automobdile|, C#lforn in view of its long | busin here beforé moving to|'!"¢ Of last places, is not taken Los An being agent for the| ously outside of the Berkeley Overland car, A child was born to | “POs them, Chase, jr. of whom the| ,. Crews t at 10 |xrandperents were so fond that The three shells will when the Garfields removed to Los | *t#Tted_ on two-mile journey Angeles, more than a year ago, 45, the course lying from persuaded to leave the | in one mile below the Webster in Seattle. bridge two miles down the months ago, however, the|¢stuary, to the finish line between was sent to Los Angeles Received Chatty Letters not understand it,” said) ng 1 cannot believe it st, bridge, rowing three miles the finieh une: |day to draw@for positions 1 visited-my daughter and son- the eight that draws the A wide of the channel is pr eople mile pull, while oth ds will gat finish line e. It contained the usu. ewe even superior Washin n. and contin= beat in a seaworthy condition jtime for the start tomorrow ‘You Got Stung? for unenviable notice in the rey Tianna a anes| Saye Judge to made public today at Washington, | Girl’s Old Beau ttle bankers, it appears, have! OREGON CITY. Aprilu 4 hoarding money in their! siias Chri Y, Aprilia 9. Sits in a suit brought by J, S. Ferree, Portland railroad man, to re wattle banks per |before her marriage. oma. tly checked, and |$79 and cash amounting to $600 red away, It is| “You got stung, wever, is vigorously de-| cision, “and now you should this hankers your best to forget it Banks are only too glad to = safe loans,” said President | ® F. Backus, Seattle member of federal reserve bank of this WATER GHUT OFF Water will be shut off on district ha is what the money is for, There is no advant for Jackson st, between First ave, bank to keep money idle. The! | 8: 2nd Second ave. &.. on Sun- Neattio has such a large ts day, April 11, from 9 a. m, to because the lumber 4pm stagnant. As Se. naturally — the attle r the most when busi-| Th alth of this nation per depression ts on leapita is Ls 18.11, Advertising Space in The Star Is Growing More Valuable Every Day he average paid circulation of The Star increased in March, 1915, over March, 1914, 10,891 copies daily, This is more than 22 per cent, ‘That means that the mer nt who had an advertising contract with tl news- paper during the past year has had his investment in- creased more than 22° per cent in value. And The Star will make another good healthy increase in cir culation in the year to come. Mr. Merchant, you couldn't make a better investment at this time than an adver- tising contract with The Star, if you Haven't one al call up Main 9400 and a representative of artment ‘will call at once ready the ad |the ends of the Southern Pacific and the Western Pacific ratiroad The varsity boats will be sent off at 10:10 from the Webster The coaches will meet late to- Much will depend on this, since meda ted from the flood tide, which means lindulge in, but Iam sure they had |Wite an advantage in a three- no serious domestic difficulties “Since then I have been in regu- Conibear Confident re-| Special trains carrying hundreds vat of students will ‘follow the shelis r hun- er on the banks ac and his Northern timistic, declaring this nvinetble crews sent arrived last night and started work at once on the “Mer- SEA LE BANKS rily,” working all night and J ] ving today He states he expects to have the Christofferson, wife of the well known aviator, is victor today over imoney he alleged he spent on her Cireult Judge ampbell dismissed the suit with the declaration that the banks are thore than|it Was a “leg pulling case,” after usually slow in making ordinary | Ferree had testified that he gave loans, business enterprise jh Seat.| Mts. Christofferson a gown costing tle has been gre new ventures Judge Campbell contended told Ferree after rendering his de This, ht nied by