15he PRIMROSE PATH NAN PATTERSON HAS FOLLOWED IT TO THE PRISON BARS. Whether Innocent or Gviilty of Murder She Is Paying the PervoJty of a Life of So-Ccvlled Plesxsvire. Attracted by the Glare of the Footlights She Forsakes Family and Friends for the Tinsel of the Stev-ge—A Moral in Her Tragedy. 1 "fynnSi h, <\P ''t. . , NAN PATTERSON. ! J New York.—"From the Glare of the Footlights to the Gloom of a Cell in the Tombs," would be a fitting title to a story of the life of Nan Patterson, the former Bhow girl, charged with the murder of Caesar Young, the well-known horse man and bookmaker. Only a short step and a few brief mo mentsfromthe stage with the plaudits of hundreds still ringing in her ears as she gaily danced in the famous "Floradora" eextettein theglareof the calcium, to the dismal depths of the prison, to be brand ed as a murderer by thousands and to hear the bitter and cutting words of the stern prosecutor as he laid bare the se crets of her past life. Such, in brief, has been the experience of Nan Patterson, and it has turned her from a beautiful and care-free girl to a prematurely aged woman. There are those who declare her inno cent of the crime charged to her; say the is only an unfortunate victim of cir- DEATH OK CAESAR YOUNG. cumstances who is reaping the reward of a life generally and generously known e« "fast." Whether she is guilty or innocent of themurder of Young will probably never he positively known to any but her and her Maker. She has been brought be fore the earthly bar of Justice, where crafty and skillful lawyers have tried to fasten the crime on her while others have tried to free her, and the 12 men have been unable to agree. Adopts Life of Stage. Nan Randolph Patterson was quite well known along Broadway among the atrical people for several years before ahe so suddenly took the center of the •tage. Among the profession though it was simply Nan Randolph. She was born in Washington, D. C.. (the daughter of a minister, and was raised amid the religious surroundings ef a Christian home. Always of a wild and wilful dispose the simple life did not appeal to her. j | She was an uncommonly beautiful child, | and the praise called forth by her good | looks, as she grew older, turned her thoughts in directions wholly opposed to that intended for her bv her parents, and before she was many years in her teens she went to New York and ob tained a place in the chorus. Stage life caused her to forget the re [ ligious training she had received. The | glitter of the spangles and the gay life : of the actor folk appealed to her, and she \ decided to become a great actress. Surely there was nothing harmful | behind the footlights, she thought. Fine clothes and a "good time" were to her liking. She was handsome in face and form and it was not long before young scions : of wealthy families and elderly men of I means who haunt the "bald head" row began to haunt the stage door and make her acquaintance. The flowers and champagne, suppers : they furnished were also not- amiss. Jewels and gems were showered on her and more than one, smitten with her beauty, laid their hearts at her feet I and begged her hand in marriage. But she refused them all. and finally married a young man in the profession named Martin. Her Meeting with Young. The confining bonds of matrimony were evidently not to her liking, and when "Floradora.' a musical comedy which had gained great, popularity in London mainly through the famous sextette, was imported, she applied for and obtained a position in the front row. The company was organized to tour the country, and was to extend to the Pacific coast. This gave her an oppor tunity to visit California, something she had always longed for. it was on this trip that she met Young, whose tragic death has caused her so much misery and sorrow. Young was a prominent and success ful horseman and bookmaker. He had horses running on nearly all of the prom inent tracks of the country, and was re puted to be worth half a million dollars. Although a married man, he immedi ately fell a victim to the charms of the beautiful and vivacious show girl. On their arrival in San Francisco he In stalled her in a handsome flat in Oak land, across the bay, and for some months led a dual existence. Anything she wished for was at her command. During the trial it was shown that dur ing their acquaintance he had given her thousands of dollars. Leaves Stage for Y'oung. While on the coast she sued for a di vorce from her husband at his sugges tion, and also deserted the stas-e. With all bis faults, Young maintained an outward show of respectability, liv ing in a pretentious home. In an exclu sive section of San Francisco. He had a certain respect for his wife, and when she discovered the double existence he had been leading, he was driven almost crazy by the exposure. With the reck lessness of a man insane, he entered up on a long debauch, and lost a fortune on the block before he recovered himself. According to his racing partner, he re peatedly tried to sever his unholy rela tions with the chorus girl, but his infatu- CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1905. ation was too strong or his will power too weak, for he never succeeded, and she was his friend and companion to-the day of his death. Young began his career on the Pacific coast as a foot racer, and was said to have been one of the fastest runners that the world "has ever known. From the cinder path he drifted to the race track, and his luck from the beginning was phenominal. Her Fatal Beauty. Nati Patterson's beauty has been the cause of other troubles in which lives have been forfeited. An actor in another who had proposed to her became insane over her refusal and committed suicldv in her presence. Another admirer of hers killed himself on the coast Nan Patterson remained in the west with Young until last spring. They vis ited the tracks at Los Angeles, Oakland and other prominent racing centers on the coast, and returned east in March for the first time since fheir meeting. Young returned to the coast the fol lowing month, and it was but a few days j before she was speeding westward in re sponse to a telegram from him. All this was brought out in the testi mony at the celebrated trial. Seldom were they separated by a very great dis tance, and then only when it was un avoidable. During all this time he tried to hide; his relations with the Patterson girl from his wife. His friends and relatives pleaded with him to give up the show girl, and finally induced him to agree to take a trip to Europe, where they hoped she could or would not follow, and where he might forget her. The Fatal Shooting. It was on the morning that he was about to leave, on Saturday, June 4. that the tragedy occurred. He had seen her the evening previous, told her of his proposed trip and, according to her story, had asked her to follow and meet him in London. She had given him a:i indefinite answer, but had agreed to meet him the next morning and see him off ; T|I(; j,j JT %I j., ,< r. PATH. They had sent a night of carousal and drinking, and Young was considerably tinder the influence of the liquor when he finally left her at her sister's home and returned to his. It was early next morning when they met again. After Young had several more drinks they entered a cab and started for the pier, where Young's wife was awaiting him. It was at an hour when the streets were not very crowded There was a pistol shot, and Young fell FINDS HER. HUSBAND'S BODY ON A COLLEGE DISSECTING TABLE. Had Been Lying in Yale Medical Cold Storage Room for Two Months. New Haven, Conn.—Mrs. George Klea, of New York, took her husband's body I back to that city, after rescuing it from the cold storage room of the Yale med- j leal school. Mrs. Klea made a sorrowful i tour of the undertaking shops of the town, looking for the body of her hus band, whose death two months ago she had only learned of. On learning thai the body had been sent to the medical school, she hurried thence, to find the body embalmed ready for dissection. She secured a permit to remove it to New York. Klea was a shoemaker here, and, be ing ill last June, was taken to the Spring side home, where he stayed until his death early in October. The officials there for the first lime learned of his wife, whose address was found in hi.s pocket. Kfforts were made to locate her by letter and telegram, but, receiv ing no reply, the officials finally turned the body over to the medical school, ac cording to the law of this state. In speaking of the matter Prof. Fer ris, of the anatomical department of the medical school, said: forward, his head in the girl's lap. He was dead, and a bullet had fulfilled its mission. For some days an absolute silence pre vailed. Then a flood of alleged eyewit nesses turned up. Their stories, how ever, could not stand investigation, and one after another they were cast aside as sensation seekers. Hut there was one exception; an old man, Martin Hazleton, of Oneonta, X. Y. lie saw the man and woman, their hands clasped and held face high, then a flash, a puff of smoke and the report of a revolver broke the stillness of the morning. Hazleton was the most Important wit ness placed on the s'and by the defense, and the efforts of the prosecutor to shake his brief but vital testimony ended In failure. Then the defendant herself went to the witness chair and told the whole story of her relations with Young. It was a trying ordeal —before the curious crowd in the courtroom—as she repeat ! Ed the history of her life from the day she met the man who was to turn her life in tragedy's path to the fatal moment in the cab. Finally the trial was completed, and the jury, after deliberating for 24 hours, declared they were unable to agree as to her guilt or innocence. Story with a Moral. This, in brief, is the story of the lifo of Nan Patterson, or that part of it that had an ultimate bearing on the death of Caesar Voting, and the trial that haa been a three times nine-days', talk in New York and probably throughout the country. Little did she suspect when she em barked upon her theatrical career and her life of pleasure and gaiety of the trag ic ending and the accompanying sorrow and pain in store for her, or she would have undoubtedly reconsidered the mat ter. Although one young and wayward girl has dearly paid the price of her folly, tho case has served to point a moral tooth ers that the snares and pitfalls of the innocent maiden behind the footlights are many, and more than one, unable to stand the temptations offered, has partaken of the fatal apple. To the uninitiated, the Primrose Path means a life of pleasure, of ease and gaiety, strewn with roses red, but to Nan Patterson the glamour has been removed, and it is streaked with the life blood of Caesar Young. "When the bodies are turned over to us we are instructed to hold them awhile to see if relatives or claimants appear. In this instance we held the body abo' two months." Suffers Excess of Mother-in-Law. Detroit.—"Too much mother-in-law" is Alfred J. Ashton's claim in answering the second bill for divorce filed by Julia B. Ashton. He denies his wife's as sertion that. September G he deserted her, but explains he left the house for a few days to prevent Julia Pfannenschmidt, his mother-in-law, from "inflicting great bodily injury" on hint, "as she did on and before that day." On another occa sion when his mother-in-law "was abus ing him" with a broomstick, Ashton says his wife "upheld her mother and declared she would get a divorc9." Truly Wild and Woolly Portland, Ore —Visitors to the Lewi3 and Clark exposition in Portland next year will not "take in the Midway" nor "go down the pike." They will "hit the trail." For a Bible, $8,250. London.—Robert Burns' family Bible, containing interesting family entries', was sold at auction here for $8,250. The' purchaser was a London <2e&ler. HE DID THE TALKING. And His Self - Importance Blinded Him to the Possibility of a Mistake. A livelv-looking porter stood on tho rear platform of a sleeping car in the Pennsylvania station, says the Cleveland i'lain Dealer, when a fussy and choleric old man ijambered up the steps. Ho stopped at the door, pult'ed for a moment and then turned to the young mania uniform. "l'orter," lie said, "I'm going to St. Louis, to the lair. 1 want to lie Well taken care of. I pay for it. l)o you un derstand '!" "Yes, sir, but—" "Never mind any 'buts.' You listen to what I say. Keep the train boys away from me. Dust nie off whenever 1 want you to. Give me an extra blanket, and if there is anyone in the berth over me, elide hiin into another. 1 want you to— "But, say, boss, I —" "Young man, when I'm giving instruc tions I prefer to do the talking myself. You do as I say. Here is a two-ilollar bill. 1 want to get the good of it. Not a Word, sir." The train was starting. The porter pocketed the t ill with a grin mil swung himself to the ground. "All right, boss!" he shouted. "You can do the talking if you want to. I'm powerful sorrv you wouldn't let me tell you—but 1 ain't going out on that train." Fine Politeness. Newrich—llow'd you gel along at the dinner? Mrs. Xewrich—Kino. When they eat pic with a fork. I done it. too, so as not to let 'em sie their break. X. Y. Sun. Shouting Their Praises, Kirkland, 111., .lan. 2nd. I Special)—■ Cured of the terrible Rheumatic pains that made liim a cripple for years, Mr. Kicluird R. Green hon. an old and respect ed resident of this place, is shouting the praises of tin. l remedy that cured him, Dodd's Kidney Pills! "1 had the rheumatism in my left limb so that 1 could not walk over ten to fif teen rods at a time, and that by the use of t'i'o lanes," Mr. 'ireenhon says."l would have to sit or lie down on the ground when I was out trying to walk, and the sweat would run down my face, with so much pain. 1 could not sleep at night for about five or six weeks. 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No matter where it is, Shi loh's Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic.will reach the seat of the trouble and cure you. Your money back, if it doesn't. 4orc 25c., 50c. and Si.oo Relies on Court's Protection. The Louisiana (Mo.) Press-Journal tells of a negro bootblack who was being "joshed" in a barber shop the. other day. i "if the grand jury had got at you," said j a man,"it would have made you tell all ' about your crap shooting." "No dey 1 wouldn't," replied tlie bootblack. " ; de court done held dat a man doan' hab 1 to tell nothin' dat cremates hisself." — ; Kansas City Journal. It is interesting to learn that the United ■States navy cost last year a little mora than one dollar apiece for every man, woman and child m the country. This information comes from the secretary of the navy and it is calculated to stir up considerable pride in the patriotic fa thers of large families.—Cleveland l'la.a Dealer. 7