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About The advocate. (Portland, Or.) 19??-19?? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1929)
True Storie» f f Achievement \ Storie« W \ P o riland Advocate S 5 ? r e a ture* | The A TRUK M ystery of the Lost Beauty UNSOLVED NEGRO MURDER CASE 1% / l i I u I «irli» CW» S l»f • I bui M Hi . < bit AitrMi'lhj Nrp>MfMl«lhti ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION By J. P MOORE wihlerment. M ar ira ret Kuyati rould not o r « u . M H SIVKLY |irov<>n to I h - n murder, have h o «utidenly. -so com neveri hole*« th»*re i* pletely disappeared. Yet she justification Tin ¡iu'oi'|Mir«tiiiKj did! And the case has with- in tlii.s scries of mysteries th«* ntood solvinp for fifteen «•xtranriliiiitr.v ili «up pen mure yearn. of MitrKNiet Fiijfitn. No rane, < hronolotrieally, this is the in the m t h '- «o ri* lily 1 ’hal- story : Margaret ( ■ Imlys Kabuli Ictiifes the imaKination, >o] was horn in Norfolk. Vir completely liafiles lojfic amt ginia. on February li. IK'.Mt. reason ami leaves the reader She attended the city schools, with a feeliiiK of irritatiiiK ho-1 icrew to be a fine looking N T lir holier wItrre Mlw E t o n lived. D........ r 21, 1»21» . *pt!Oil«l. ......... V e s t u r e I . h young woman and was con sidered to lie quite a "catch” when s h e was sixteen. Margaret was five feet tall and weighed around 120 pounds. Iter hair was black and abundant, her eyes black and steady, her color was light brown, her figure fairish in its ample proportions, and her health excellent. In I MW »lie n M.n K a r r i wu.-. right- r n i yrara old. her fat her Richard T Kagan. died leaving Mrs Kagan alth one hundred dollars from an m-iiranc policy and tlu- full respon sibility for lheir one ehlld’i lull. - who had already shown slims of be ing a little wild anent her ctiolee i f coinimnlotu In the latter giail of the same yea' M i- Kagan opened what wu< known then as a "cook «1 p a filth rale eating place Peculiar as II ina.. seem, she chose s.de atrvei in th- most unde,liable section o! the city. In hrt new Incutlo.: she was sur rounded by vice of al< kuuL- However the woman was after making a living She was hrrsrll an upright, elean Itvlnv r nil so she went ubout introducing her llv- er-and-ontons. hogshead «n o home- unde pies with a clear cona.-tcnrr She did a go, d business Margaret w I hi h.iu letl scliool two years previously came Into ti e tilth' shop to assi.-t her mother bustne * picked up some mn.e and Mrs Ka gan began to on*ld, r herself a very fortunate woman Indeed. In thia new envh.nment M.irg - ret came to know number ot chrr- ariers of th ■ underworld Among them were a nan u. d woman whs were known to the police only os Jack and Tessie respectively. ve tellow Jack seems t< have taken n particular liking to Mari arch for he began dropping Into the little shop with nit the woman Tessie In spile o f the fact that her mother advised against i: Margaret retumeu this man's attention and was several times seen walking with him on Queen street. In the meantime, r. was aired about that the woman Tes- sie was "mad." On March 4 1909 Tessie approach ed Margaret on Ch reh street and Vfrs. Itrant ills - Kagan's last Urani was then M altir Hendrickson known friend Mrs last her severely running only v lie n * with olden Smith, . ho was a long- someone shouted the approach o l ; shoremen and had long been a suit the police. or for her hand. This Incident aeeir.a to have taught Margaret a lesson lor therealter she sept strictly within her owt. spher< ol It lends helping her mother in the -hop with apparently no further n i t o n in Its patrons Shortly after this unfortunate met re.h Margaret mar.'ed a man by the name of Harry Thomas who ha t been one of her cla it ales at school To tins union there was I in o child, which died in its Infancy. In 1910 she divorced Thomas al leging non - support and infidelity, and went back to helping her mother In the shop. She remained with her mother from then until Mrs a gan , death In 1911 Without a doubt this loss wrtgl a hravtly on Margare' She tried to, run the shop alik e for a few months, tired o f ' l l . and dc'. deii to embars on another matiimhivitn enterprise The Stormy Career of Jaek Johnson - - No. S I Mill K Ml lull ,* Her second on rnage lasted exact- 1\ -ix months At the end of that time Smith [lacked his livings and left Margaret one night after they had retired. It was later said oy him thal his wile had repeatedly shown sign- t being demented. He is said to have told inends tha Sh u-on ki olten gi t ;ip In the middle of the night and ira.v fervently for the heavenly safety of her dead baby and her dea I mother It was also said ol her that she la, sed Into crying spells, and that at such times she ignored the ordinary duties of a housewife. ; rch as cocking, cleaning and laundering. lor days at the time. This Information may or may not bo accurate Certain m .here Is noth« ing in Margaret's su — urnt life to point out that she was losing her mind She rented a room !.i a re« II II ICH K H g ICK H X 11 II K ICH « « H II II 4 IVVI MiKiHUPM It X >< X X X X X X X K X X X X X II H'M It X X II X X X II X X X X X X X X X X II X X X X H X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X !l I t X X M K X X M X X X X M X X 'H ir It X * X M l* 1* X X X X X g Text by ROLFE DELLON Drawn by FRED B. WATSON MIX II X X X X X < II X K'M X X X II X K X H K.IOM X.H X X X X X X ICII X X II X II X x I d ! X II K X X X lew X It 1. KIM 11 X II X X X X X K X H'X II -I W X X II X X X X n X X X X X X X M X II X X X X X It X X II X X n i t m u n i X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X XI .Inch next if if >1 located litui hi Deliver, Colo II*-« In I» • »im’ .1 member ol .1 hoxniR slmu » unsi m u ; ol several n iit it flf of (In- IM ic N flfib t . I liis oi-Ruiii/.allon win» inanaRcd and *• introM« il U> l oin Sharkey, one ol Ih r riiiR's < rentes! hglilrts Il io 1 *• *x• hr show (hen travelled ahold Colo rado intertainliiR various communities. A hut tir Mas inani; til hefwrrti Jack »ml one. .Mexican IVte, win» had Rallied fame fItrottRli knocking out lo in Sharkey, .lark vtoh this in !0 I minds. The boxiiu, show, however. soon failed (1 n.itteially. consequently a ft rout share of the hardship fell upon Jack. Jack was delegated as rook t o prepar« food f o r the e n t i r e » R f r e - Kuttou. .Moreover, lie had the burden of en RinreritiR I he (loanees. Moreover, (lie first of .! • k\ ma*\i ,]- » t«llle i arose whfle In this enterpi< first wife, to whom lie w as c\i » « d«u.;l » »p . voted left him. T ill tn>Iortu|ic ilTet t«-*i .fm k considerably and his unhupptnc-• became manifest in liis work.