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Bahtrday, Aug. 17,1912.
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WHERE
Somewhere in ■America is Mrs.
Ethel Keating Boggess. • -
But she probably doesn't know
even her . own name, nor her,
' father's nor her husband's noi
the name of the city from wind
she came.
Here is her description sent to
the Times together with a father's
plea to aid him In finding his
daughter. :
WILL YOU HKLP ME FIND MY DAUGHTER?
To the Readers of the Times:
I am asking this newspaper to publish a picture of my
daughter, Mrs. Ethel Keating Boggess, who disappeared from
Kansas City August 2, together with a description of her, so
that if anybody should see her or learn of her whereabouts
In any manner, he or she will communicate with me at once.
Please show this picture and her description to your neigh
bors and friends in the hope that perhaps one of them may give
us some information about our loved daughter, whom we are
distractedly seeking.
For any aid in this search you may be able to give the
heart-broken parents of our daughter bestow thousands of
thanks. THOMAS J. KEATING.
Address: 1200 Eight East Broad St., Columbus, O.
- HAVE YOU SEEN THIS , I
WOMAN? i
NAME —Mrs. Ethel Keat- !
ing Hoggets. .-
. AGE—3O.
HEIGHT—S ft., 7 in. r
: WEIGHT—I 26 pounds. ]
CO M LEXION — Fair; i
eyes, blue gray; hair, black.
■ DRESSED when last : seen
—Blue linen suit, white
shirtwaist, white panama
. bat, long white , gloves; , no
| Jewelry except ;;; plain' _ gold
* wedding ring. , ; ..' |
Mrs. Hoggess, a comely youni
matron, disappeared from Kansas
City, where she lived temporarily
with her husband,. Dr. John S. I
Boggess, a government surgeon |
on the afternoon of August 2, after ,
having started out on a shopping
tour. * ;
Since then .a nation wide '
search has been made at the in '
stance of her husband and father, '
Thomas J. Keating, a prominent '
lawyer of Columbus, 0.,' where '
Mrs. Boggess,'; In her maidenhood I
days, was a society • leader and '
skilled musician. ■ :■--..;•■.
-Mrs.* Boggess j was a sufferer '
from organic heart disease. .It is J
feared that ,' a blood . clot on the
■brain has caused! her |to wander '
'.■.■.. , , ' —•
I THE PRIZE
'.'.."•■'. °.> •■•;■" "<■■• •■■i.'::". .:'*.' "^.i" T " -.' • ■■-..• .: <
V i ,._ _ .,,.,,...-,,,. '. . "-
I 1-" .For * the i best two ; kodak 1, <
j earner* . pictures of I vacation <
pleasures ... submitted ■, each 1
week the Tacoma Times will
.give a box at either the Em
press or Pantages theater.
! For the bent series of pic- '
, tures ■ (submitted up to Bep- |
j tember 18, an "Eastman : j
■ j Hawk-eye ■ four-by-flve ' fold- j
. Ing camera will be awarded
| by the S Shaw .. Supply j Co., '
, ",Inc.,; 910 Pacific aye. i!This' j
1 has 'a ' rapid ! rectilinear i lense, j
: and automatic ;, shutter and ';
is as good or better than any ] :
camera on '.. the '' market. It J
uses ' Eastman's /-" noncur 1 Ing • I'!
Him* and can be "loaded" I
•' In daylight.; -'.-;."i '•-; -: 'I
#—.----—; c———•;" m
**&7iSj::«——;—""" ' ""' « .'/'■» '-''■'■- ' ', -\
Spoka nd Papers
£; Praise Mellinger
1,- ■.7i..^"-'-. If -■ ■.■*~**?-sr--!Jp«»^*i^».-^.^*^'^: anils'
■. -, Lauded in ; Spokane newspapers
for \ his , utterance, "I ) believe | that
an undertaker who will pay com
missions *to anyone who » solicits
business for him at a deathbed or
at a house of mourning Is, if any
thing can ! be, worse than a ghoul,
and • one :of ' the lowest perosns of
all humanity, not excepting the so
licitor who :. does . his bidding," L.
S. Mellinger, retiring % president
and S newly * elected vice . president
of the £, Washington : Funeral -Dl
rectors' association, has 'returned
to Tacoma. L. M. Qaffney has
also returned.;>-',v^-.;:':,iv!' < :;-, :^
iiii Boys ; wanted / to • carry :i Times
routes. Phone : Main ! 12, Circula
tion j Dept. •*•
Olympia Boat
? V The ' .New Hleaiuer ■-
NISCUALLY
I t**ve« Municipal' Dock I Dally tt
Sa^s«sß a. m. tnd I\ p. nu^jik'sS
Tbo 1:00 ; p. m. Trip t Conoecu
* s'ixmm for Bwum.-teamqm
O returning I Leaves ! Oly tn . :
11:16 p. m. and «;00 p.
MAGNOLIA —I-e»v<» OlyiauU
(or ' T»con»s ! and Baa til* ! 7:10 x
•n Phone Malaiftl«t^^Mßrai
MRS. ETHEL K. BOGGESS
away, possibly to a city far dis
tant from her home, having lost
her own identity completely.
Instances of similar lost iden
tity cases show that often tho
Individual assumes another name
and begins another life under
new surroundings, remaining un
conscious of the past.
Times Political News of
Tacoma and Pierce Co.
Otto Case is still clinging to
the republican ballot under which
he filed for governor, but is mak
ing a campaign aa a progressive.
He has suggested that instead of
the straw primary to be held by
the progressives September 7,
which he cites will not have bind
ing force, that the Roosevelt Ab-.
erdeen conventiou be called to
gether for September 10. He,
Hodge and Lawrence each be
given an hour to talk and then
let the delegates pick the candi
date for governor from the three.
This plan is not likely to be taken
seriously and Case will probably
pull off the republican ticket to
day.
The prohibitionists have "call
ed" Eugene France, the Aberdeen
millionaire who says he has $1 ,
-000,000 to put Into a new party
to do something for the common
people.
Mrs. Nettie Hallenbeck, Pierc<
county chairman of the prohibi
tion party, has written Prance an
open letter, Inviting him and his
WHITE HOUSE CHILDREN ON A LARK.
Robert and Helen Tuft «re having a lot of fun In a camping party
in i filmier National Park. s\l Kobert in: ahown ! above powwowing with
I«g' Top, fhl«?r of die (Mmtkm Park In<Uaßa. j Beluw Helen on bo»»»
--iback,*J«it;«»tc»lnifthe lp<Mrk.f«., -. ' - '• l Z3g®&B&
THE TAGOMA TIMES.
YOUNGSTERS OFF
TO SEE WORLD
Leaving their home Thursday
night to begin life for them
selves, Joe Ragen, 13 years old,
and lils brother Steve, aged 9.
fond their way to the Commercial
Truck company's stables, where
they were discovered at 4 o'clock
this morning lying side by side
asleep in an express wagon.
They were turned over to the
police and given a bed for the
remainder of the night at the sta
tion. Their father, who lives In
East P street, appeared this
morning and took the wanderers
home to a distracted mother.
Steve, the youngest boy, was
barefooted and hattess, and
neither of the brothers had a
coat. Although they admitted
they we-re glad to see their par
ents after the night in the wide,
wide world, they were weeping
slightly as thy left the station.
Must Build
In 3 Months
Securing 800 acres of land upon
which to erect a plant for steel
making the Lewis & Clarke Steel
company are now under contract
to begin building within three
months or forfeit the tract. Half
the required amount of land was
given by the Tacoma Land com
pany several weeks ago and Henry
Hewitt, Jr., signed a contract for
the remaining part Thursday.
| STATE NEWS]
The Ten Block shingle mill at
Everett re-opened today.
Bessie Williamson, 12, leaped
into a mill pond and saved Geonge
Elkins and Earl Johnson from
drowning at Mayfield.
Clay Keaton, Centralia, threw
a biscuit at a horse, hit it in the
head, caused a runaway ana
smashed the rig and then got fined
$20 in police court.
F. A. Williams, Spokane, ran
hig Ford automobile from Seattle
to Spokane in 23 hours, 15 min
utes.
i ■
Kelso is to have a cheese fac
tory.
Kittitas will have a county fair.
$1,000,000 to come into the fold,
help nominate the candidate for
governor September 10 and then
they will proceed to utilize those
dollars to not only carry Wash
ington, but the rest of the countrj
for Chafin and Watkins and the
entire ticket. Mrs. Hallenbeck
recites that the party stands fot
prohibition, woman suffrage, uni
form marriage and divorce laws,
extermination of polygamy, pro
tection to labor, Justice to capital,
suppression of white slave tarffic,
arbitration instead of war, direct
election of senators, one six-year
term for president, omni-partisan
tarif commission; income and in
heritance taxes, conservation, re<
clamation, oue day of rest a week,
no child labor In mines or fac
tones, economy and efficiency.
It is up to France.
A. V. Fawcett says he will not
withdraw his name from the re
publican ticket, now that he has
filed it. He will make the race
for lieutenant governor on his per
sonallty and his record he declares
without regard to the party name
* THEATERS *
■ No. —Miss Helen Primrose,
the Girl With the Gowns, Em*
press.
No. 2.—Mr. G. Lester Paul, one
of the favorites with the Princess
Stock company.
No. B.—-Charles Roue, of nose
and Kills, Pantagcs.
TACOMA -Dark. Coming "Pinafore.
1 PRINCESS--"The Man of the Hour, begin
# - ning Sunday matinee, every night weekly, with
.-- matinees Saturday, j
- EMPRESS— daily, afternoon mati- ]
| nee and two shows nightly. s New bill Mon-
t |j» w day. r'JGBBas& • ' .■■-.■".
* f PANT AGES—Vaudeville; daily, afternoon mat
[• inee and two shows nightly, i New bill Mon- |
""■' **Aay.
MJss Hillic Iturlie with a company of forty-two men and
vomen —nearly half of them coming from Knglanri—lm-kiiii
ii-lini-sals of the newest IMnero play, "The 'Mind the Paint'
Girl," al tlio Lyceum theater, New York, on August 12. Twen
ty of Miss llurke's comiutny are s i only in the second act.
"The 'Mind the I'aint' (>irl," as n production, is ho large and
would he so difficult to handle on tour, that the piece will onljr
be seen in the larger riiirs ilii- year. /
TACOMA |
The good ship "Pinafore" will
drop anchor in this port soon
when the jolly crew will hold forth
at the Taeoma theater, singing
the delightful strains of this most
likable and loveable of all the
Gilbert & Sullivan comic operas.
And in the vernacuar it should be
said that "Pinafore" has "some"
crew.
Included In the cast are De Wolf
Hopper as Dick Deadeye, Eugene
Cowles, who Bings that rattling
sons, For He Is an Englishman,"
and Arthur Aldrlge, a capital
tenor. Other Important members
Of the cerw are Blanche Duffield,
a newly discovered prlma donna,
who will sing "Josephine"; Kate
Condon, Viola Gillette, Arthur
Cunningham, George J. MacFar
lane, and Louise Barthel and 50
chorus girls and boys.
• a •
A most engaging series of Inci
dents sustained by a love interest
that appeals because of its sin
cerity, a proper tangle of plot
■which is ingeniously raveled and
then as artfully undone, a num
ber of sharp dramatic climaxes
and real thrills, and above all a
■ustalned, wholesome and refresh-
Ing quality of fun combine to
make "Officer 666," which Cohan
A Harris will present here the
coming season, the best farce In
many year*.
• • •
\V. Tammany Young, a protege
of Paul Armstrong, the play
wright, Is being seen In the role
qf "Slippery" Jake in Armstrong's
latest hit. "A Romance of the
Underworld," now In lta third
month In Chicago. Mr. Young has
made successful appearances it
five other Armstrong dramas,
•'TJte Renegade," "Alias Jimmy
Valentine," "The Greyhound,"
<lßatomy Jane," and "The Deep
Purple."
7 PRINCESS T
i Another big play Is in store for
nations of the Princess theater,
f«iy jwginnlng with the matinee
F. J. Stotler
Deputy County Treasurer.
Candidate for
.. COUNTY TREASURER
Subject to Republican primaries, Sept., 1912.
Resident of Taeoma 38 Years.
_ , _—__*
i tomorrow afternoon the Princess
players will present "The Man of
the Hour." So much has been
written regarding this play in the
past few seasons that It is scarce
ly necessary to make lengthy com
ment. • . '■ - x ■„■•■ ; ;v ■ -•■■
"The Man of the Hour" came
as the first of the plays dealing
with political corruption and it
swept the country by storm with
its dramatic power and the daring
of Its theme. New York theater
goers imagined they could see cer
tain famous politicians in the
characters of the play and it is
said that the greater part of the
story was founded on fact.
"The Man of the Hour" deals
with the attempt of crooked poli
ticians to elect a young mayor
whom they expect to control. He
is elected, lives up to his ideas of
right and wrong, and finds him
self in the midst of a warm fight
against powerful enemies.
Verne Layton will make his
first appearance with the Princess
company as Alwyn Bennett, the
young mayor. Miss Bell will play
Dallas Wainwlrght. Others prom
inently cast of Guy Hltner, Leo
Lindhard, William Brewer, James
Norton, Lester Paul, Laura Helm
lich, Effie Ober, Florence Spencer,
and Arthur Elton,
THE EMPRESS ?
After having a French panto
mime and an extraordinary seal
as the feature acts at the Empress
for the past two weeks. Manager
Dana Hayes announces another
musical comedy number as the
main attraction of the bill begin
ning Monday afternoon. The tune
ful strains of catchy music and the
flash of dancing feet are "always
popular with vaudeville audiences
and "The House Boat Party,"
which opens at the Empress Mon
day afternoon Is said to fill all re
quirements.
Mysticism is as old as the world,
but Onalp has an act which has
many wondering.
In Lee Tung Foo, patrons of
the Empress will have an oppor
tunity of hearing one of the few
Chlnese actors on the American
bitige. He does a Ringing act.
Helen Primrose is a clever
young woman with some gowns
which will tease a comment from
the feminine patrons. Grante and
World's Standard of Vaude- TONKJHT AND
vilI« ' TOMORROW AUK
KMI'KKHM . • ,-.- ,;- <m
Taooma's Finest Theater. The I^aiit Chancca to Beo V'
■ . .. ■,-, - Via PKTITK GOSBH" . ■■■■.•■. ■ ■ ••> :■'
s—Other big Acts —5 s—Other nig Acts— sy-■-,•&»
princess THEATER I
f ... , . ••■ 1.-'.'' PHONE MAIN 7700. •■:'■> "}. :■■ >.'., •'.•;. Xil $>
„' ■■■■--• ' - , ( 0
1 Beginning Sunday Bargain Matinee, Aug. 18 |
THE PRINCESS STOCK COMPANY IN '>% §
'.'.-' Broadhurst's Great Play • ■ ;
The Man of the Hour'
Prices 20c, 30c, 50c
Bargain Matinees Sunday, Wednesday and -. :'.\
' Saturday. Prices, 10c and 25c. , S//% i
, Curtain: .Night, 8:15. Matinee, 2:30 g
;> ?i Known in Every Land as the Biggest. I
COMING TO TACOMA, One Day Only. I %
FRIDAY,AUG.23|
NEW IN EVERY PARTICULAR THIS YEAR
myj£M&&& AND RA 11 ■'' F^fey^fetgwrl
fBARNUM
««!BAILEY7jf/Jr
GREATEST <fMxw
/^a^ SHOW on EARTH gSg^/S*?
And the Newly Added Superb, Glorlom,
Bntrmneln* WordleM l»Uy p'Xjf^F
CLEOPATRA
-•■••"i?, •■■■•; ■ ■.■■7;'.i-' < A THBIUINO WORLD STORT t ">/". ■■-"^-"ii
The Opnlenee of Brypt and Grandenr of Bom* in All Their Bu-barle Bpl—dog
.:- ,x H -;. ■ Acatn Pulsating Before the Kmhanted VUlon of the rwmt kSfcfi****
1250 ACTORS - CHORUS OF 400 VOICES 300 DANCING GIRLS
;>».M",;r,yi.»:--:".800O COSTUMES COSTIHO,SBOOJM>O^v-»*^TO!««d«Wi«sH
THE WORLD NEVER SAW A SPECTACLE LIKE THIS BEfORE
BIGGEST CIRCUS EVER SEEN
:-i^—'.'-1— "-im'iUV P«rform«r»-TBO Hor»««-110. CUM m<Cm *40 MfUTOfjffip
i»5S8B» wiPm, W-Ai*•: J:*i M Aery aWntwJWrtjT>»l» '^Pl**«* *™^SJ^^^|
jitou txtmrt* New Bcfera S«a it^^^ Vg fjU%
ni mD i*^Tim et ( CMdag Thrills at Amaxemmt fln
ELEPHANTS S >Wen4«rti>< i Ey»»? •l"th«) Sp«cte» Ji^S»'g
PI AY RASF RAf I )tore Not* tt« leBWlM*lO "••
Jilt LAI vA«J l< If ALiLi V tatint l>«»tfctitl §aM,isliK ■ Pi
I'-'.-? mm irmMmiTt ntii t itiidim. mmm ■pkh ok mm ■
; IMMENSE NEW FREE STR CET PA RAD E ; AT* tOl*/WIJ*
■-.: Admission.to Kverytbing sOo—Chlldrcu mider.l2, tie
i^DQwntown^TickekOffoce^BoimeyiEhannacjral
I Downtown Ticket Office; Ronuey Phamui . I
PAGE THREE.
Maud have an extraordinary wire
walking act. Jack Manley and
Charles Walsh are Ringing and
talking roiuoillanH.
PANTAOLS
» — ■- ■mpi
When it comes to producing ,a i.
vaudeville act I for ... a % bunch |oC {|
pretty girls, it la Qua Schlke who
1b known I throughout tho vaude- "
ville world as "the goods." First jj
of the big Schlke acts will make
an appearance on I the , now bill
opening at the Pantage Monday ='..:
afternoon; is known aR Sihtko's
"Summertime QlrlB." ■•.■••■ , --, '{JtJ&SSm
■ "Chums," proaented by } Henry.'
Margrave and company.'* is a; tab- i
loid play that baa the reputation'!
of being one of the best sketches £
seen un I'autuges time; ' vS r's £■•.
, I'arts Green, dangerous only in
name, Ik returning after an ab
sguco of threo season. ''..,:■'..^'■>'{!:i
Catee Brothers, featuring' Mas
ter Lew Gates, the world's greAt-'l
est dancing midget, • will" alto be
a novel foaturo of the new l>]U«t§is!§
Sunshine and laughter 'in;. an
act that Is a "corker" will bo 'Us
pentad by Ilerxog and liwlu, f
"those minstrel boyn." «i <"*;:«:
Wonderful In a unique acrobat
1c exhibition i»re Rose an 1 Kllla,
barrel jumpers. The act possesses,'
novelty anil provides plenty .of;
thrills. '■ ■"■'.■-. «: " " \
"TST "~~ ~~ATTKNTION! ). '-^m^A
■ Painters' liocal No. 84. i f There |
will he a special meeting M v lay,
August in, to hear Got nor Teats
on the first aid clause of compen- <,
Ration net. nuslness of Import
ance. ■ ■ ■■: ; ;■ F.^Mti .r>M'44
— 1
Merchants Delivei V,!
Moving and Hlorajjr * - ". 1
. ■ • &ialn UIH. i. :' ■' v
: . .■ ■ - -'/-■ .■■-,-■ -■ -■ "■ "■ ' ■
PANTAGES THEATER
. "World's Best Vnuapvlllo" ♦) '; '[
Wolgast-Rivers Picture? : .
Four'Caix«crs anil Five 'Oilier lllg ;
■ ■-, ,-ir. .■ Vaudeville Ails. • ~^,i&,t'i