The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1903, Page 1

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ONE CENT WEATHER FORGOAST—Tonight and tc "row, Geeasiona t showers, light to fresh south te w wine. to weet } 8 IF YOU LIKE THRILLING STORIES, DO NOT FAIL TO READ THE NEW GERARD SERIES---THEY BEGIN SOOW 2ND EXTRA E DITION IDESPERATE BATTLE WITH THREE MAGKED THUGo The Seattle Star CATTLE, WASHINGTON, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1905 "THE Only Paper tn Seattle That Dares to Print the News, «. PER MONTH VOL, 5. No. 113 a5 CENT POPE MAY DIE ANY MOMENT New Complications in Patient's Ailment Patrolman Newman Fought With Three Armed Desperadoes Who Choked and Robbed an Old Woman--Two of the Robbers. Arrested, the Third Escaped---One Man Shot lock this morning and looked down the barrel held at my face. He told me to teil aid 1 1 looked around n standing (here, One of them had on Three armed thugs, after choking an aged woman nearly te the Palace Lodging house on Weiler street, near First avenue south, at 3 clclock this morning, shot and fatally wounded Thomas Cunning ham troiman Newman captured James Garton, one of the thugs, after a desperate encounter, and tanded him in the city jail rr > Richard Conners, supposed to have been ene of the men implicat I A nn He oH be In the job, was arrested later by Patroimen Ryan and McClurg, The | time the unmasked nan had Jett the man whe did the shooting and who, if arrested, will be charged with After I told them that all the money I had was in @ purse on the murder, made geod his escape during the fight in the lodging house. j dresser, they choked me again, but took the §@ in the purse. I don The aftair ia the most desperate that has occurred since the begin w haw much Cif @ sbert time J maw & paltcers ning of the recent carnival of crime, Neither of the men who were ar- come in and draw m Jamged honing a Geer to death | “Lwoke up about #0" of @ revolver (hat a maxked m where my money was, I room and saw two other n ik, the other didn't me untit I was nearty y money was By this wore a mask choke 4 me to tell where a revel fasted ove dawn te the goles... Phas are beth decperate lookin Just then someone beh hbed hie revolve There g men “ ys wan 4 fight and « shot Sred. That 14 about all I can remember meee’ bir ag pense de J od recognized at the police station th When the first highwaymen arrived at the police station he stil morning when he was brought therein the patrol wagon, Me was cov- [wore hin miank It hae reeking with blood, tie revalver, a heap, ered with biced from head to foot and Sie fece wae raw and bieed- ing from a dozen wounds. Patrolman Newman hed literally beat him to pieces with his handeuffe during the fight in the hall of the lodging houne. Disarmed, and with three men as his antagonists, knowing he would have to fight or die, Patrolman Newman did net waver. Me closed in om the three men in the dark little apartment single-handed, and Captured one of the thugs. At 3 eelock this morning George Rich! one of the roomers in the Palace hours, went to his room and found » burglar there, Rieh- | ter rushed out of the house, down the stairs and called Patrolman New- | man from First avenue south. ‘The officer hurtied up the stairs of the lodging house. The burglar wie in the hall when the patroiman went into the house. “What are you doing here?” asked the officer, “Juat waiting for my partner,” replied the thief, coolly, Just at this minute the faint sereams of @ woman were heard from room nearby. The patrolman rushed in the direction of the scream and broke inte the room ecoupied by Mrs. E.” Robinson, an old woman 75 years of age. Two masked thugs, armed with revelvers, were in the room when the patrolman entered. The woman was nearly unconscious in a chair, One of the thugs had her by the throat and had been choking her to where she had hid her money. A purse containing only HH in he. ponsension, arres ted by Patrotmen Ryan and MeClure this morning, was seen with a tough crowd of men lo the lower part of the city He answers the de tio nh of the man who met Patrolman | Newman Im the hall of the lodging house Patrolman Newman weat off du ty at 4 o'clock thie morsing he goes to work am tonight i will Bot be known whether O4 the right man. —— ematl ealiter affair, w Richard Conners, whe wai ners le humor over yesterday's humillatiog defeat at the hands of the Everett team by a score of 6 to 4 Sle will ~ RAPPED races Ewo Council Makes Pool Rooms) SATURDAY and Bucket Shops - oy Rye eR eco es ee i TA BY volver trom pocket when the man he had met in the hall grabbed f Lreetors it ft owt of his hand from behind. At the seme time the outside man The city council last might pawerd | has been decided to close the meet the ordinance prohibiting the operation westheed. Cuouaa caught the officer by the wrist, Newman wrenched away frem thie | ing Saturdey thug and grapped with Barton, the thug whe was arrested. g St penteeeine nd Sect. seep ih Be | Young wanted to lease the track and The only weapon the patrolman new had was his handouts. He | fit, The oMiinance makes i union |race at The Meadows during the drow these just as Tom Cunningham, one af the lodgers of the hévse, | anywise be mmnected with, any eetabe | fame That the postyoned | mess at came te his assistance: Cunningham tek the situation in et a glance | lishment. where poole are sold on | ut't, Susld have been beld. but it and made a rush for the man who was fighting with the policeman. | hore races, or where wagers GS iv odes ae ae Cunningham had taken but one step in the direction of the blusco, | om the rise and fail of prices of » Imueh of it . Oe when thers was @ revolver shot and he dropped to the Heer with s bul. |b 4 grainm oF other commoditie®, | Long ehote won a majority of thel fot in bie brain except where the sales of such COME races Feoterday. Rewulta Mewman hel to the man with whom he was grappling, but the | ™xlitire bb bons fide FIRST RACE-Six furlongs; seil- ether two managed to get out of the room and escape, Marton te a be The punishiment to jing; é-year-olds and wy | ordinance te « fine not } Nar € to Milderbrand up, S was forcing Newman towerd the head of the stairs jeadin ‘of the lodging house. All the while the pdewt ts. Roth were bleeding profusely man a Up fo the first ‘Was pound lor ® days tm Jatt and imprisonment. er both such fine! first officer Redwaid, second At the head of the made a Gempernte effort to we Th ie now up to Mayor Humes (6) nt) Crime third. away trom the police offic @ to him amd both wont roil- |#t@ or veto the measure If It le ap) ‘Time—t:17 ing down the stairs t Luckily Newman, who was |pfoved by the mayor it will then be) SECOND RACK—Four furlongs mare active than the thief, landed on The fall stunmed the thug | fer the Chief af police to put the two | selting b-pear-old colte and | and for a minute he was out. Newman took advantage of the curcum- | ¢xleting pootroome and © f bucket | getding= the handeuffs about bis writ abops im the city out of business. | Allesandro, 1, Henderson up, stances and locke ‘The patrot — | fir | was called and Harton, wae taken to Jail where j unwashed, cut and bieeding he was thrown into the binek hole | Tom Reilly, necond. Patrolman Newman then turted his attention to the man who had | } Jack Little, third, eome to his rescue and in doing so had been shot. On the floor of the | } Time . | THIRD RACK—Five and « halt room in which the desperate encounter had started the wounded man } lay outstretched. It waa thought at the time that he wae dead, but , turiongs; selling; dyeer-olds and | there was ye | Me wae « he Wayside Mission hospital nearby, where atherine Kneis, § te i, b Powell | i t. Dr. Jobnson atten | ‘The bullet had entered hie skull = tittle to up, the rear of and above the ieft ear. Pieces of hone had been driven into bee Hilary, second. the brain. skull was trepanned and the flattened bullet taken out, ‘ | Benutitel Giri, ¢ ; With several p tone 32% by at rete ee Sa, easy tevegten to be peatthe aattiy, bot 's Infants Want ““Hom- Pei hace hie sal 00} with only the faintest chance of recovery To Police Sergeant Stuart, Cunningham a the Ways xte Mission hospital, this morning. I beliewe it was the screams of Mre. Robinson that woke me,” he said. “1 jumped into my trousers. Then I felt for my money, but it Honest John McCloskey arrived in had been stolen. I had $48. I rushed inte the room where I had heard | the city last night with hie “Frisco FIFTH RACE en turlongs; the screams, and saw a policeman fighting with a masked man. Another | ball pimyers ready for the opening | selling. t-year-olde and u / man with 9 mask was in the roo there was & ian on ihe out- |@ame this afternoon of the second) Rim Rock, 3 to 1, Dugan up, first, | a with Beattie at Athletic sark.| George Dewey, second tet? | yards. selling: Jyear-olds and up st John's” Scalp Foul? toi, pugen up nets | Kitty Kelly, second. i | Sree, third | Thine | id his story of the fight, | | Side who did not have one. “ET rushed in to help the policeman, but fust as T got to him there will have » Babes don Fondo, third wae 4 shot and that at 1 remember ‘The fellow with the mask ning but discordant clothes) i - a1. ‘ Se ‘ 3. fs + RACK and a halt It was not the one who Was Nehting WRN the policeman, | they wore & y * |teok Chartey y down couple | furlongs jot pegs Captain Hulen says he te | Up not superstitious, but that be would) Milseful, § to § that uniform for any- | fret wortd. Oncar Tolle, second. ie not in Arthur May, third. Time—1 99% SHRINERS AT _ SARATOGA, BARATOGA, N. ¥, July 7.The 2th annual seasion of the Imperial on shot me. DUt the one In the other part of the room. Cunningham has been a freman on the steamer North Pacific. He bat been rooming at the Palace lodging house for sev@eal montha, Mrs. Robinson, the aged woman who was the victims of the thugs | mat cl brutadity, was up and about the house this morning, notwithetand! ing bn ber tertble cxperience She said MeClowk: olds and! Hilderbrand up, selling council of the Ancient Order of Nobles of the Mystic Bhrine opened rdance with ‘stom tittle e being tot tion of the arrived on every train Bouth and West are particularly well rep- remented at the present meeting yorrow there will be a monster of the uniforn ves and | late? in the day of the officers for the ensuing year will be chosen, The | entertainment program i one of the bent ever arranged for a meeting of the Imperial counett In addition to th day whe usual balls, ban n there will be quets and recepth i to Mt MoGregor, Lake | piace EDUCATORS IN CONVENTION BOSTON, Mane, July Boston | has today with sates 20,000 or} more delegates t National Ka- | ucational Ansociation convention, | | the ndance breaking all records. | The meetings today included be- | rides the qeneral seasions interesting conferences of the variour vart jments, William T. Harris, United | Stat commissioner 0 uoation, | ling of Pe and Bishop | akers before the nn: | song the # Other meetings of interest were sessions of the Indian department and the department of high: 1 cation | LONDON A large numbe of prominent Americans resident. in om atten Lon the wedding of | Willian FiteBugh rk 1 Haror of Mr. and Mre Whitehouse of New Constantine Ita mma y Heanela which , took place — toc in @t | | Peter's. Eaton Square Immediately after the wedding breakfast aid reception and. bridal, couple departed for Tussin where they are to make their future home the baron being a gentioman-of-the ghamber to the onan SURED AGAIN BY THE SIREN'S SONG eae hulled’, Hit" |his Holiness’ faver is a change In the right side of ') "7°" ren | wouMl carefully Set in and the Aged Pontiff Suffers a Relapse druge to induce « come and he wae réady to appear bey me tribunal with full nd resorting PARIS, July 7.--An official felegram from the (0 ie eee mS |i ea Ginn meer vatican at {1 o'clock today states that the Pope's) 000° "sc owns aos ss wane Mimines taining me end Is very near. It adds that the Pope's condition 500° fu 0 Sas i oe ete ering tn wax done and that he was to rest after hin leng Rarly this morning there wus con- exeltement around the Vate humerous persons are golng coming from the pope's ted- is most serious and he is almost in last extremity. °°) we pernape ROME, July 7. Bulletin. )--It is officially s The pope now fully realiges that the | d end le near, and that but a few bi Perhaps, reparat him from the great cow [here this morning, that the Pope's condition has..." Tnat nompotin and Pope Low's private that b secretary rema in the reeeiving members of the @!plomatie become somewhat worse inasmuch as cyanosis Of = is i | the rest, God's will be done ere who have called to inquire regand= his throat, the middle lobe of which was blocked. 255 occ. joo: cine ove ponee, Ete Peek ations NE | new pope The first official bulletin insued thpe J it wan Ae operation of Puncturing the Pope's tation yringe to drain off the water collected i" rs: - - «tig unetion she morning mays the dlition of the pepe , Was to have taken place at noon today, but it im eta eee teas ness was too great WILL JESUIT CARDINAL BE THE NEXT POPE? of St. Peter : Leo XIIL.'s bodily feebleness « consequent necessity of having ROME, July 7.--An official bulletin posted at the at 9:30 this morning, states that pneu- . from which his Holiness is suffering, is now by pleurisy and paralysis of the fingers Pontiff passed a restless and sleepless night. | z | energetic coadjutor has proved Cart ROME, July 7.—Dr. Maxson! Wa |istered to the patient, and the room inal Rampotia’s opportunity. - Prive wee impregnated with revivifying | lege after priylege has sitpped freag the weakened hands of the mi into thowe of nt, until now the power ind the episcopal throne t# that which for the part sha the policy of the vat! thie morning at the vatican and con Both en- gas. On severai occasions the pa fient wank into a deep sieep, but it was one of ehaustion rather than | pope |rest, and he generally awoke with | perspiration flowing freely from his silted with Dr. Lappont tered the sick room. The miniied benevolently at Dr, Masson pores. © bat stemmed not to have sufficient |PO™ 1s ipont tated early thie} Perhaps Cardinal Rampolia’s cone strength to tal b respor Oo @ anes. at stantly improving position has em Ul ” mn nope |merning that he could greeting from Dr, Maazonl the pope | PmUning vom oe continues to take paid 4 ALUBION Np | nourishment and retains a wonder am Hane ILLUSION AND | Di" inental lucidity. He was given | The pontitt raised soup at 7 o'clock this morning and | cited envy, any way, there are man: who condemn his cou: ont They charge him with making t interests of the holy see subservie to his personal ends whenever his eye, evi er " eeemed meehat benefited by it.) dently Wo Dreyer coned a desite to| The nourishment, however, is not of | Regaiton. Lae Sit, taaeeathies wry , the amount the doctors would desire dit trading sileas, has been sere rounded by counsellors friendly tq hie secretary of state, mort of theme men of comparatively mean tntele lects—while the best minds in th® read two of the leading papers and what they were aaying about his Hiewe. The special edi we wont him. him to take, but they fear to give) him more a» his physical condition Ye such that he could not stand it. “ardinal Oregtia begins to be the ie i “wn f. ce ree etiam as it ta| WASHINGTON. D.C. July T=] CARDINAL RAMPOLLA, | NalivleYrom' ue pontltt, and even he papa on received the fol- 6 from the pontiff, and eves believed the time ts short before he | TX ter Cablegram from Cardinal) ROME, July 7.—Will Cardinal /away from Rome when it can Be Will asrume surreme power, Al-| Pi jpotia, at Rome, this morning: | Rampolla achieve his ambition and | managed. 1¢ ls alleged. too. that the feady the engineers who will wall up | become pope pope never hears of many questions ne hol ther is no worse to- am Satine be only should be able to de- Eecoek te chest, Nae ve wee” hava] day. Me continues tobe in © very), The question te one which t¢ be. | walk ons tate without, however |ing discussed more and more gravely | cide reported to Oregila making oe every hope.” throughout Italy a# Leo XUL neare| The shrewd ecclestaatic whore few ag the end of his long pontificate ture if arousing so much specula~ ROME, July 7.—Telegrame —con- a oe : ts : x ee és ROME. Juty TThe watehers at the| ‘That the pope's secretary of state | tion, not to say anxiety, is now on. finwe to pour into the vatican asking Hn hy Sey means to be hie euccemor has been|He wax born at Poltazi, in Sicily, for the pope's condition. Many, | Pelaeile Ot Survive another day, per-| evident for some time to all ob-/and holds the family titie of mare In the chureh he te He got hin edu~ vertom of Tindaro. servers of what goer on at the vati- | a pepeciatiy these from the little, and with the | Cardinal Mariano. bape several pulers, are xhown hie holiness who " PR bg Fy has cpressed great sutinfaction with | last might was ous ot Us dition of | magaclty of the Jeault that he is, the |cation at the Jesuit” college at Rome the interest taken in bis condition. cardinal has t strengthening bis|and entered the papal service im the aged patient wave Uttle hope that During lest night every moans ‘ personal position wnttl now he, as | 1868, He was papal nuncio at Made or nin rowld find him aliee. onal 5p par uw Weienice could mugavet wae weed to} the morte Te “a pea. | well ss many othérs, considers him-|rid before becoming secretary of fan the fast expiring spark of life. | Br. Laypont remated at ihe nto the chair |etate administering | Self sure of succensl ‘an admin. side the entire night, ‘Time and again oxymen ' WHO WILL SUCCEED |=. THE PRESENT POPE? All kinds of speculation are al-/ di Pietro, who also has the prerequisite of old ag id, All theme candidates tt but a strong party od many Our Great Expansion Sale hundreds who are feady in ciroulation am to the prob- able successor to the throne of St | years in Rome ight Include a @ which |] Is increasing every day owing no doubt to the Peter's Opthions dre much divided, owing to the many interests which | cardinals, adv ‘ex the election of |] dally taking advantage of this sale, and telling their friends of the @ilt be affected according to the/a cardinal who i# not a member of 4 ghoter m hy. the sacred collece./the curia, such a# Cardinal Sato,|| great BARGAINS we are offering, ‘This kind of advertising t the The first question the cardinal# will | patriarch of Venice; Cardinal Fer oad * « feve. to solve will be whether the rari, archbishop of Milan, both in-|f Most efte and brings the best results. clave shall be held in Kome or|transigeant, or Cardinal Capeceiaire a few ofthe many Haruéisecenonie omieiew archbishop of Capua, who ts pe the most learned member of the eae outside of Italy. 1 elieved that the supporters of the Idea of aban EXPANSION SALE OF 8ILKS.. | EXPANSION SALE OF WHITE doning Rome wil be even fev red college and has conciliato beeen § in the conclave held after the death | ideas $1.00 Heautiful Waist Silke in Gf Phus IX. when thirty-two out of| It in believed the first vote wil wold colors, with heavy cord iO yp is thirty-seven cardinals voted in favor ‘merely a test, in which nobody effect; Expansion Sale Price raagy Mich a Cashmer of Rome will be elected, but tt will be used! 496 Jon Sale Price red Taffetas from; Exp 8 shades to fen. wale Be Albatross ¢ which way the wind blows 8Be Col whether the next pope must be anit is considered certain that if Car select Baltan or a foreigner. It is general-|dinal Ramfotia sees the impossibil Price ty believed that he will be an Ital-|ity of gucceeding to the pontifical inn Becaune, in view of the struggle | throne he will throw all his strength | = stween the church and state sine /in favor of an outsider, with a view the fall of temporal power and the|to proserying hin lidacy for the The second question will be/to Expan- A190 LARGEST STOVE HOUSE IN THE NORTHWEST, af He ven foreigners think that an|Oregiia, dean of the sacred college 4 nd Italian pope can protect better than | will be chosen, as he is 76 years old g stranger the advance of the religl-/and lately had a serious attack ous and political interests of the | pneumonia ehureh. | All th © plana, espe The candidate chiefly spoken of /drawn up by the cardinals Che name describes these Stoves perfectly. They are Westdes Cardinal Rampotla is Car-|curta, may be 4 hed by the 1 dinal Serafino Vannutelll, They are|tude of the cardin ng from both representatives of the conser | outside Rome, princtpall Giyreig vative policy, but are bitter an-| Things might be pushed (o such f'each other. Cardinal] point as t fuce a tin of the} reliable” in every sense of the word—Safe, Clean, Efficient in Action; they are the ideal Cooking immer Use One of the economica In many sizes and styles, and always at always Odor! Device for most Stoves-ms Rampotin te a very warm Franco-|Italians from. the provinces to ally pile while Cardinal Vannutelll is| with the foreign cardinals, in which low prices mS Aoneme ty the eu v tnanu@urated by yee there miteht be pows!. | lov as retary of | bility Wheral| He . forelan pope. r, no French or Spanish} | PG MesePiren the college think that the wld obtain the pre is Cardinal Git ihe present atifieal state." most probable candidates are Cardi Bishop | cardin Agiiarli and Cardinal Priest fatolli, |of the whone breadth of views and love of | ver fern ideas have been strength-| a ned during hie stay in Amertea, — [et The most probable religious eandt- | be dates are Cariinal Priest Gott!, who | only avold mixing up In scribed nd Cardinal Priest Angele bona itreer Main Store First Avenne and Spri ctrical—Iraist Ay. % WN. W.Fixttire Annex —Everything majority wolition:

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