The evening world. Newspaper, October 27, 1911, Page 15

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y . ' band Into It to get out himself. said my husband took an automobile and was in Portland on Aug. 17. tor out They W. Lake Union that very day, but th ‘ouldn’t let me explain that. | They ouldn’t believe anything I sald, “When they arrested him they didn’t let me hear a word about It, and it was more than two days before I could find out ‘¢ the man I fove. was. My mother San Francisco doesn't know of this, and Tam. afraid it will break her heart. My brother knows and #0 does my aunt, Mrs. Mary Brannon, who Was with me yest y when the wed- [ding ceremony was’ pérformed Mrs, Sanborn says she has been if Seattlo since July 5 last, but her home is In San #ranclaco. “I have lost ten pounds ari welsh Tnow only 130 since this terrible thing has happened,” she said, MOTHER LEADS HUNT FOR SON'S REMAINS Young Tuttle Was Lost in Mon- tana Wilds Last November While After Elk. b HEMUST SPEND RIS HONEYMOON. ET PENITENTIARY woman iniiel'en on Being Mar- “tied to Sanborn, Even Though He Was Un- der Sentence. “AS SURE AS | SIT HERE THAT BOY IS INNOCENT.” “The Man Who Turns State’s Ev Gence Is the Guilty One,” - Bride Declares. BOZBMAN, Mont., Oct. 27.—Unwilling to give up the search until the remains jot her son are found, Mrs, A. Tuttle of feast the next six years in the Walla] Whitehall has led a party which has Walla genitentiary, Mrs, Clymena Kol- | sear the mountain fastnesses of Jett of this city obtained a marriage, the upper Madison and Gallatin basins| Ueense and was married to George El-{an summer and fall. Mot, allas George Sanborn, in charge; Nearly a year ago Orville Tuttle was Of @ deputy sheriff. lost tn that region while hunting elk At the conclusion of the ceremony | and all efforts of hundreds of searchers Garoorn grocted his wife with a kiss|at that time to locate him were fruit- and was led away to the county Jail. |less, ‘The ride wept as she left the court) As soon as the snow left the ground | house. tn that section last summer Mra, Tuttle, | Sanborn has been convicted of grand | accompanied by her other son, John larceny and sentenced to from three to | Tuttle, another Whitehall friend of the Gve years, and also convicted of for-|¢amily and a guide from Virginia City, | @ery, for which he was sentenced to! took up the search for the'lost hunter. from three to twenty years. He h ap- | 1 8. Finley of Trident has returned | Pealed both cases to the Supreme Court. | from the vicinity of Hebgen dam, where | Unable to give bonds, he Hew“In the) he talked with the grief-stricken county Jail while his bride spends a|mother. To him she cpnfided her de-| Sorrowful honeymoon in solitude. |termination to find at least the skele- Sanborn ‘# charged with forming an/ton of her lost son. She told him of| {mportant link tn the Hatfleld crowd, | the long days of patient and systematic who are sail to have dealt largely in| search conducted this summer and of bogus warranty deeds and mortgages. | their alternating hope and despondency. He was convicted of purchasing an| It was June when the lithe party took @utomoblle on bogus deeds, and iso! wp its self-appointed task. Proceeding GEATELE, Wam., Oct. 71—Clingins| to the @&n she loves, who must Pass at of forging commercial paper. Hatfleld, to the point where her son was last his principal, 's also under sentence toe te party divided and went in the penitentiary on charces of forgery OPPOstte directions for a distance of And attempted jailbreaking they. went, (Theo) ewinging arcana: Ci Mrs. Roller, now Mrs, Sanborn, has a complete circle hal been blazed with deen an almeet dafly visitor at the the camp as @ central point they county jail. |searche! the area marked off. When “I am going to etan and |} this circle had been thoroughly ex- to the end,” she said. ure as! amined the party proceeded to another I am sitting here that bo; Tam going love my<hi Is Innocent, camp and repeated the method. In this izht for an appeal, for I way they have searched over hundreds Do you think that I of mWes 6f rough and wild mountain would have ried him out of the jail country. 1f 1 didn't? ) Tt was on Nov. “The man who turned State's evidence | failed to show Is the guilty one, and he got my hus- 22, 1910, that Tuttle at the camp where his party was located. . GUIDE'S PSYCHIC about Mis RHE EVENING WORLD, POWERS ANGERED ‘WALTER FERGUSON, Wife Declares She Discussed Graham’s. Spiritualistic Abil- ity With Her Husband. QUARRELED OVER GIRL. Her Allegations of Immorality Are Heard in Private by Judge. BRIDGEPOKS, Conn., Oct. #1.—The cross-examination of Mrs, Emilie Car- stairs Ferguson of New York, who 1s telling in the Sypéflor Court here the story of her life with Walter Ferguson jr, of Stamford, will be concluded ne=: Tuesday. Mrs, Ferguson 1s appearin, both as plaintiff and defendant. Sho took the stand yesterday to rebut the charges on which her, husband asks a di. ree, and in the course of her rebuttal affirmed the charges of cruelty on which she has | based a cross bill. That part of hr testimony aco ing her husband of im- morality was heard by Judge Curtis in chambers. Later, in open court, she declared that she was still “very fond” of George Graham, her psychic guide in the Maine woods. Miss Doroth~ marioer daughter of M. H. Taylor, the Erie, Pa., millionaire, for whom Mr. Ferguson has admitted his love, figured prominently in the wife's testimony. Mrs. Ferguson be came s0 wrought up that once she al- most collapsed Attorney Charles P. Rogers of New|* York, Mrs. Ferguson's counsel, ques- tioned her about her experience tn California in 196, She answered that her husband and Miss Taylor were much together then. QUARRELED ABOUT MI88 TAY- LOR, SHE SAYS. Q. Did you ever talk to your husband jor? A.sAt first I asked him what they talked about, th together and hort to love her. she had no I laughed, and said: and he ex- plained that only her father cared for her. Finally we ad quite @ quarrel Taylor.” Q. What was your feeling toward Mr. Ferguson at this time? A. I loved him Qa bia your husband's attitude toward you change after you got backg A. At er our return We went to the Webster, is New York, and Mr. Ferguson lett me absoliitely alone. He had always been attentive before. Mr, Rogera shifted to Camp Frances, ‘on. Mqoschead Lake, Me.,’ where Graham | was in charge during the summers of 1008, 100 and 1910, Mr. Ferguson had testified iat Graham was “Mrs, Fergu- son's’ gufte.” Q. Wheat dia Graham do for you? A. He looked after me and all my ‘ings; »my tent, .ny bath, and my canoe. He was @ wonderful canoeman. Mrs. Ferguson declared with empha- sis that when Graham came to Stam- ford for the winters of 198 and 1909 t> work and study, that her husband was as much interested in the plan as she ‘was. | FERGUSON ANGRY OVER PS8Y- CHIC POWERS. .Q. Did_you ever talk to your husband about Graham's psychic powers A. Y t time I told him about apiritualistic powers I thought 4, Mr. Ferguson grew eo irri- ery that when I mentioned the matter after that, it was more to tease him than anything el Q. You took a hunting trl of 1909 with Graham? A. Yes. I was very much interested in a buck that had been coming down to the stream above our camp. Q. Do you remember the talk Mr. Fer- had with you and your mother in fall of 1909, after you had returned |from this trip, in which he told you that he wouldn't live with you any more? A. |Very well. I had been sick and was! ‘very nervous, but he did a great deal of |stamping up and down; the camp and my extr: sald he didn't want to liv more. he didn't want to live with me any more was because he wanted Miss Taylor. Mra, Fergusgn was thep asked whether vagance and with me any the allegations of infidelity made by jher husband were true, The places | WOMAN IS THE BETTER—BETTER HALF. | fs the lord of crea 8 the puppet crown. | pulls the Man only thinks h tion, His, in reality, The power behind the throne @. Woman rules by wit, sovereign, therefore, as thelr w rror, To prevail, your figure ption T necessary, or hold {1 can do ao by taki meal and at bedtim quirement. No ei Aleting need be don ising is necessary, no The tabiet, unaided, will take off pound « day, and, best of all, firet of all, where it e! ‘@ the most, a8 on chin, abdomen, Ripe, etc, Anticipate no ill effects, only advantage and @ strengthening of your bonda: over some man, The tedleta are inexpensive, one large case (obtainable of the Marmoin Co., 184 Farmer Bidg., Detroit, Mich., or any good Gruggist), costing only seventy- five cents, and they re also nol Jurious, being made exactly in ‘accordance with the famous fashionable formula, % os. Marmola, % os, Fid. Ex. Cascara Aro- matic, 8% o8. Peppermint Water, talked wabout | Then I told him that the reason | specified were Boston, Portland, Mount Kineo, New York and a steamer plying between New York and Portland. She denied all the charges. Under cross-examination Homer §. Cummings questioned her as to the win- ter! of 1909, when Graham was In Now once, time? A York. Mrs. Ferguson was asked if she had ever gone to the theatr “Yes, she did. Once Frances Q. Dia Re Spec FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1911. Q. You gave him funds from time to Tt wa I owed him a great deal. walt a long time for money that was due for work at the camp, and I gave with him.| him what { could from time to tina, 1 _und Neer Hfth Avenue New York Extra oir nay Bee the ial SALE of Reversible COATS INTHE LATEST double faced materials, mixtures ‘end solid colors — twenty stunning models “12° IS” 16” 17°" 19” 25° 29” lone more than| him? A. Yes, 1 Tam. 8 my pleasure to do so. He had to HAMBURG, Oct jerstand you to say @ 232 Street. West 7 is 3 ry SALE ew eversible ouring COAT Of contrasting solid cokr materials,.in all the smartest combinations Cook arrived here to: een te a oe pare ie ‘ and I and the governess went with him,| while ago that you were very fond of | and I went with him did say that Q. Are you fond of him now? to Mla I A. Yes, < ll! 1a iil tht ‘gas a4 SPECIAL GOLD MEDAL FLOUR is so lectly made that than Sehnel iae . it mixes Hence it easier and quicker. testing. We know GOLD MEDAL FLOUR. not only bake shop—kee; And we Guarantee it. ALL GROCERS SELLING—BUY NOW p testing, test makes better bread, but makes it We know this because wien ee wee Wp bake bread every day in g. master this art. Sold Everywhere, KOPS BROS., Sfve., HY. ROBINSON’S The Only Infant Food Reducing Corvet No 523 i a example of that fa@. No fabric except Lastikops Webbing can possibly. be used for the Bandlet which makes thip' the greatedt reducing corset eter constructed for women wha need perfect ab- dominal support.fram undemeath. No. 522 is a similar model with a slightly higher bust. , Nemo Corsets never stretch and lose their shape, That is because the seams aré sewed in tuch a way that there is no "give" to them. This is done by machinery of our own invention, which is built in our on machine shops. Now you can under- stand why other manufacturers can't make corsets that won't stretch—we invented and now own the only machines in existence that can do the work that way. Again: Every Nemo Corset must pass the keen eyes of a dozen skilled inspectors before it resents at leaf twice as much value, in material and making, es any other conets sold at the same prices. We can afford to give you double value because we make more high-priced corsets ($3.00 and wpwerd) than all other American. manufacturers combined, As for comfort, that is simply the result of skillful designing along correct physiolagical and hygienic lines, whereby the corset is made to fit the figure so that no dee! or seam can press upon nerve, bone or artery, It takes years to There t no substitute for Nemo Corsets. PATENT BARLEY All Grecere and Dreagtets.

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