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ONE CENT ‘Tonight and Sunday sorth winds NIGHT EDITION Fairy warmer; Sunday, light PRESIDENT GARFIELD ONCE CAES BY HIS OWN HAND WAS IN LOVE WITH AN ACTRESS YORK, June 4—Caesar broker's clerk ts England, but for & well-known bookmaker,|sook his desk for the cinder path. | dd Killed himself in a cabjin his younger days he was known | as one of the best middle-distance oung. shot an morning while proceeding SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, JUNE 4, AR YOUNG DIES “WOULD RATHER HANG THAN WELL KNOWN HORSEMAN COMMITS SUICIDE IN NEW YORK—| S80 SAYS MOTHER CORNELIA C OLMAN WHEN THE GIRL'S BE- The Seattle Sta 1904 THESE LADS WILL SOME DAY BE AMONG SEATTLE’S CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY BAID HE WAS SAID THAT HE ALWAYS FELT LIKE TIPPING HIS HAT WHENEVER HE MPT A NOWSROY ON THE STREET, BECAUSE HE OT SURE BUT THA THE UNITED STATES. iT 16 A FACT WELL. KNOWN THAT SOME OF THE REPRESENTATIVE BUSINESS MEN OF THIS CITY AND OF EVERY BIG CITY IN THE UNITED BTATES, ACQUIMUOD THEIR EARLINST LEB VERANCE WHILE STANDING ON THE STRE YRNERS DAY AFTER DAY IN RAIN OR SHINE, CRYING THEIR PAPERS AND LAYING AWAY A FEW PIENNIOS EVERY WEEK UNTIL THEY HAI NESS MORE LUCRATIVE AND RESPONSIBLE IT MATTERED NOT TO THEM NOR THEIR DAILY CUSTOMERS WHETHER THEIR PACKS WERE A TRIFLE DIRTY, THEI HAIN ALL TOWSLED UP AN HONEST HEARTS BEATING UNDER THEIR JACKETS, AND A WORLD OF PLUCK STORED UP UNDER THEIR AIMLESS HATS OR TATTERED CAPR. AND A GOOD HPART AND A I OF PLUCK THE LADS WHOSE PICTURES ARE SHOWN ABOVE ARE NING OF SEATTLE'S LITTLE STREPT MERCHANTS. EVERY DAY THEY MAY BE FOCND AT THE CORNER OF SOME OF THE BU BY TH TOWN AND MANY OF THEM HAVE REGULAR CUSTOMERS WHO GO BLOCKS OUT OF THEIR WAY TO BUY A PAPER FROM THIOM BACH DAY “JUST TO HELY THEM ALONG THESE ARE STAR NEWSIES AND THE STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER'S CAMERA SNAPPED THEM WHEN THEY WERE IN THEIR HAPPIPST MOOD DURING AN EXCURSION GIVEN THEM BY THIS ET HIM SEE MY DAUGHTER | ip TRAYER SENDS FOR HER WAY HTT dia LALLA George Joye, the steamboat man You would be perfectly Just ‘ Ni { \\Y who was shot and desperately| fied in doing so,” hé aneweted. “Abd \ \ wounded Thursday evening by Mra| tf ever I Go you have my peamtsaion Gertrude Robb, whose i¢-year-old| to Kill rie I would deserts it, or x daughter he had ruined. Broadway with Mrs Nan Patter | runners in the world and came to! vening| any man would who would hann |New York at the request of the|sent to the mother to ask permis-| her ts being| Manhattan Athletic club. aio nto be allowed to talk with the} "It was only ‘Thursday that | After a few years Young became | girt he had betrayed |tearned of my girl's shame The Mra. Young was at the pier walt-| interested in horse racing and fol- Joye told me to tell you,” the) idea Mashed across nw m 4 minute husband, whom she| lowed the sport with great success,| messenger informed Mra Robb. when « lghbor dropped a chance accompany abroad, when the/ amassing a fortune estimated at| “that he loves your daughter and) remark, and I went to her room ews came that he was dead. Mrs. not less than $200,000 a few months| wants her to come to see him, If) where she lay on her bed. that/ago. He often boasted that he| you will allow her to visit him at Little I qaked her, ‘ln there kept $190,000 im gold in his bank| the hospitel he has promised not to| anything between you and George vaults prosecute you stiould he by any) that you have not told mamat Young's home was at Berkeley, | chance live.” Bhe hesitated a minute, and then! @ Cal, where he had an elegant coun Tell that man that I will hang| she threw her ar around try place valued at $40,000. He| before I will ever allow him te look| neck and with her head on my also had « fine breeding farm and om my little girl's face again,” was| shoulder told me everything MRS. ROBB. CORNELIA COLMAN GRO. JOYE. | ble horses at Secra-;the anewer Mra. Robb sent back.| “I locked her im her room and The above group shows the principal figures In the shooting af- mento. He bad a handsome youn: 4 she intends to abide by her de-| went str where I] fair om the waterfront Thuredi vening. On the right is Geo. wife, but no children. | Centon. unew Joy ene im, with sur Joye, the betrayer; tn the center {1s 16-year-old Cornelia Colman, the me The wounded man ie calling for der in my heart. The paper betrayed, and on the left is Mra. Gertrude Robb, Cornelia’s mother Young had a book at the Mead ows last year and was well known in this city, Among the horses he brought here at that time were Grail, EM. Brattain and Metla kabtla. love with Mra. & member of jm at the Los An- last April and New York when Four vessels are to be operated in the off trade between Seattle and California ports. The veasels jon Otl company of Los Angeles, . to be under the management of the! shot him in the back. That is « enie- take. I shot him when we were face to face, but when the bullet entered! t the force of it caused him toswing! ‘TELEGRAPH BRIEFS around.” Mra. Robb has pot yet retained) have an attorney, although several of the girl whom he insists he intended to make his wife, but the girl is « prisoner by her mother’s order in theh House of Good Shepherd Mra. Robb is now in the county jail. She ts a fine looking woman with Diack hair and ta biack yea, now swollen with weeping. not tor sorrow at her deed, but because of the ruin of the Gaughter she loved. The girl an it is said, have alw sisters. | the avenger of her,wrongs. any Roesian movement WALLA WALLA, June ¢ Near Athens, Thureday, Mre Alex Me-~- Kenale, an aged woman, was fright- ened to death ae the result of the| runaway of « behind which she and her husband were riding.| Mr. MeKenale wae thrown out but! Mra, McKensle retained her seat and managed to bring the horses t servic free | BUCHANAN, W. Va, June +- Baltimore @ Oblo passenger train No. 18, while running at a high erday. Another bullet was re-| mate of speed, plunged over & trestle moved from the small af the back |@t Newton, thirteen miles east of team Joye was again operated on by surgeons at the Providence hospital her mother, ich has long been associated with the of] trade on the Pacific Coast. hie fan, | The vessels to be used in the traffic are the steamers Argyle, Whittier, Santa Paula, and the barkentine Fullerton. Two days ago the company opened @ branch office in the Globe block, a enone eee tnae to] where its business in this city wili and followers of the races | be carried on. of the country, espe- 7, Francisco, Which had| At Recreation park tomenree for the past five| afternoon the Seattle lacrosse team where he was the owner| will play « return match with the of stock in the California! Tacoma team. This will be th Club, the largest racing or-| third game the loc boys have Sanization in the west. [played in their scherdule of the Young commenced as «| Northwest Lacrosse League. INSANE FROM DRINK MRS. MARTIN ENGWALL, WHO COMMITTED SUICIDE, RESORT. ED TO FLOWING BOWL BECAUSE SHE COULD NOT COME TO SEATTLE WITH HER HUSBAND collapse \ast -_ of the trouble in No sporting man in the country ‘was better known than Caesar life A ladder had ‘The body of Mrs. Martin Eng-;the windows open. i, who committed suicide near|been placed against the window her home at Taylor, mall town} ledge. He entered the window, but at the Denny Clay Company’s|found nobody in the house. mines, Thursday night, was brought! He gave the alarm and everybody to tnis city last evening by Deputy |in the neighborhood, including all Coroner Cunningham. The dead /the employes of the Denny Clay was 37 years of age and was | Company's mines at that place, re Se aeees wife of Martin Engwall. | sponded They searched all that ‘The latter was divorced from his day and the following night. Fri first wife, who later went back to|day they resumed the search, but ay. did not find the body until late in The Engwalis ran a smal! saioon,|the morning. It was discovered by with a lodging house in connection, | Charles Bruce. at Taylor. Kngwall came to Seat The woman's mind had evidently tle a few weeks ago to serve as &| been affected by drink, and labor Juror in the superior court. Mrs.|ing under temporary insanity she Engwall wanted to come with him/ determined to take her life Sev- at the time. Engwall thought the eral razors were found in the house, expense would be too great andjout of their cases. She had evi told her she must remain at home.| dently meditated for some time as ato dati. When Mr. M The w the ¢ that caused) here, this mornin The structure reached the buggy he found his wife paralysis, it having lodged close (o| gave way beneath the train as it “There is not much left for me to say,” Mra. Robb said this morning | “Decause I told the whole story at| the spinal cord. The attending #ur-| was crossing in a state of collapse. She died in | the time of my arrest, I have not] meon ie of the opint that Joye) Hagiueer Handall and Baggage- « few minutes | the slightest remorse for will ultimately recover, but stated to} man Jeffries were fatally injured; DES MOINES, Ia, June 4—C. W | have done, and only wish jmy heart that I hed killed Joye, as I intended to do « Btar man this morning thet it aed pearly a score of passengers would be fully six months and that were hurt in a minor degree. The even then Joye would never use his! trata ie a total wreck. Graves, who was recently convicted of murder in the first degree for killing his wife, and who obtained | He theally killed my daugh-| lower limbs in. | BERLIN, Jone 4-—At Riga, tn « new trial, today pleaded guilty to ter, Her life is nothing to her now Joye was formerty « porter tm */ the Russian province of Livoma,' manslaughter. The maximum pen- land the Bible says ‘A life for @ life’ | barber shop in Lewiston, I4aho,| womimen and students recently or- ality is eight years. The conviction where his parents live at 64 Klev~ | gaalsed « revolutionary movement enth street. A prese dispatch *ay8iand made a demonstration against he left home about five years ag°lthe government. Cossacks were but has been writing to his mother! summoned and riots ensued. Five frequently since and sent her) Cossacks and twenty-three rioters money. Mrs. Joye recently recelved| were killed and 127 arrests were @ letter from her son in which he | made I know he did mean to marry her He asked me for her some time ago, |but I told him she was too young to be married. And, besides, he was only varning $2 a month. He could| not support a wife on that. ‘Bave up your money,’ I told him ‘and in two detective an ac- is due to the personal work of his stepdaughter tress named Reader 8T. PETERSBURG, June 4—Gen Sakharoff reports that the Cossacks attacked a strong Japanese position at Fen-Chun-Lang pass near Sima | old her of his approaching marriage iF 190 : years come to me again and we) told her of his appr « GAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. June 4 "1 will talk it over.’ to Mra, Robb's daughter, They w Ih the presence of his young bride, |‘i#* S!xty miles north of Feng Several days after that, as I was| to have been married in June Seler Waneca of Miurma, Cal. | Wane Cheng. They drove the Jap anese from the heights. The Ri walking along the hall in my ledging| Cornelia Colman, it is said, *9y*] shot and killed himself in his room house, I saw him standing at the| she still loves Joye and would mar-lat the Grand hotel at 7 o'clock *#0 loss was six killed and twenty door of my daughter's room wateh-| ry him if she were allowed to. this morni He left @ note saying be —— : ray ge” 4 ing her as she combed her hair. oe —. r THE GUE, June 4.—Dute S.what do you mean by even| WASHINGTON, D. C., June 4-~ — See ak rahio tol. |treege have stormed and eagtared! stepping your foot inaide my daugh. | Secretary of War Taft yesterday ap | gram reports that another force of & native fort in the Dutch East tere room? I asked him, | Proved of the following allotments |: of) Japanese and sixty guna | Indies, losing one officer killed and “Not any barm,' he replied of funds for the improvement Of have been landed at Lakishan. The two officers and thirty men wound- “Then I talked straight out to| army poste on the Pacific Coast Japanese now hold the entire line |ed. The natives lost 176 men kiled him. ‘George Joye’ I said, I know! Fort Worden, Washington, $190 | tom Beng Huang Cheng to Kai LAWTON, Okla. June 4—A cy what kind of a man you are. And 1/100; Fort Casey, Washington, $53,- bi Beenty-five uiles south clone struck Lawton lest night just want to tell you that if you) 000; Fort Benicia, California, $227 Pamch wa a One hundred and killing Mrs. Thomas Payne and! ever do my daughter any harm I wil) | 150; Fort Rosecrans, California, $8,-| fifty thousand troops are epread *ly injuring three other per kill you." 1000. along Pils line, prepared to oppose| sons, Thirty houses were demol-} — —— = ished. The wind swept a clear path ten miles long f J | PARIS, June 4.—A report was re- leelved today of a battle on the st of French Guinea, between a government column and 4,000 na- tives with flint guns. The natives were beaten back with the loss of thelr chief and 300 men killed. A] French lieutenant was killed. Twenty soldiers were wounded. LONDON, June 4.—Lioyd’s Tien- | Tin correspondent says the exist- ence of floating mines in the viel INHUMAN PARENT ALLOWED HER NEWBORN BABE TO BLEED TO DEATH—THE POLICE ARE INVESTIGATING THE MYS&- hy. #ome person, who either feare to acknowledge the paternity of the eblid, or did not wish to do so. In 't¥ Of Liao Yang and Sha Tung is TERY either case the crime was the same. | £enerally believed amers have It would have been almost impos ernst ordered to avoid the zone at e for t othe e carried | "6 sible for the mother to have carried | "#0 oven po. June 4 the child to the park #0 soon after its birth, and it is thought by the 2titish Columbia cannerymen have Employes of the city, while mow- three blocks t of the Capitol Mill again petitioned the government at After Engwall left home his wife|to the method she would pursue. began drinking heavily. A few) About 200 yards from her home she days before her death she asked|had knocked a strong root from an some of her friends mld you|old stump with a pick that was come to my funeral?” They an-| found lying near the body. With @wered laughingly that they would) this she had twisted » cloth around attend in @ special car. To which|her neek so tightly that its folds @ replied: “You will have &|were burled under the flesh. To chance soon.” jkeep the stick from slipping she J. Isaackson, a farm band in the) had placed one end of It under her employ of the Engwalls, wes the| chin first to discover that the woman! There war no evidence of a was missing. This was Thursday! struggle. morning at 10 o'clock, when he ugwall is prostrated over the| 4 up to the house for breakfast is wife. She will be bur The door was locked. He went|ied in this city. The body is at the round the house and found one of % Watson morgue. authorities that she probably con nived at its taking off. No marks of violence were found on the body. The child was well ing the grass in Volunteer park yes- (car line and a like distance west of the Broadway car track € Ottawa for action prohibiting the export of fresh salmon while the! season if open. An order issued | terday evening, discovered the body ot a boy baby wrapped roner Hoy: held a post mortem in an ©X-| examination of the omaing this pensive white knit shawl and partly | morning, and found that the child| formed and beautiful, weighing Poe lad ae goad nag el hidden behind a large boulder, They | had lived and breathed, but had not| about ten pounds. What the motive | cought in traps. The British Con notified Coroner Hoye and the po- | received proper surgical attention | for the cowardly deed was, may! iumbia cannerymen want the order lice station of thetr discovery. Dep- | after birth, and had been allowed to| never be known . |to apply to net-caught fish as well. | uty Coroner Arnold and Special Ot-| bleed slowly to death. The crime} The white shaw!, a plece of blue | 1, Lea June 4-8. Be ficer Clarke were sont out to inves-|lies at the door of the unknown] calico cloth and the gunny sack are | qwiiis of Clinton, lowa, was elected | tigate. mother, }all that the dead infant can bé6| third aasistant grand chief engit The body was found lying in a do- The child was probably brought identified by, and are slim clews to|of the Brotherhood of Locomotive pression which runs through the|to the place where It was found| the identity of its guilty parent, or|tengineers at the meeting of that} center of the park and which is|soon after its birth, ted up in a/ parents organization yesterday. C. H. Sal-| partly overgrown with brush and|gunny sack, and dumped on the| Chief of Po'lce Delaney is invostl- mons waa unanimously re-elected young trees, The spot is about | ground ind the rock in the brush | gating the case, ~ * second assistant engineer, | 99 SWEPT BY WIND Qi eeseees seneenswens comeseseetenssteceereneete comme : THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE ; THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS r VOL 25 CENTS PER MONTH 6. NO. go T HE MIGHT BE SALUTING A FUTURE PRESIDENT OF sON or THRIFT INDUB TRY INTEGRITY AND PERSH- ENOL nH oT TRIKE OUT FOR THEMSELVES IN BUSI- D THEIR COATS PATCHED AND FRAYED. THERE WERE EVER FAILED OF BUCC RS YRT OROUGHFARES IN THE BUBIN HBS DISTRICT DOWN- PAPER A FEW DAYS AGO. servers." 2 ero | p FAST PASSENGER TRAINS COLLIDE HEAD-ON NEAR KANSAS CITY ON MISSOURI PACIFIC RAIL- ROAD—ONE KILLED AND SCORE HURT (By Scripps News An KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 4 August Bloom of Clear Lake, 8. D. about by the impact, but strangely, were fatally hurt Bloom was riding on the bitin was killed and nin n people in- baggage. The injured were brough® jured in a head-on collision be- | bere this morning tween two Missouri Pacific passen The flyer was to meet the ae ee trains sear Mastin, fifteen |commodation at Mastin and it ap- miles south of bere, last night. The parently overlooked its orders. colliding trains were the west Among the injured were Irené/ bound Colorado tryer and tne east- and Louis Palmer of Los Angeles;— bound accommodat train. Both |their heads were ised. Mra. were behind tt and running fast. Mary Burnside of Portland, Ore, The engines and three cars were had her knee bruised, and William / demolished and both trains de- Nichols of Fort Douglas, Utah, railed. The passengers were hurled | was slightly burt FLEET ORDERED TO BREMERTON ADMIRAL GLASS WILL BRING PACIFIC SQUADRON TO PUGET! SOUND NAVY YARD BY JUL Y 1—MEANS LOTS OF WORK THERE In spite of the oft-repeated and) as it is the intention of the departe unfounded knocks that a certain) ment to overhaul the warships local paper has been publishing here. If also means that hundreds against the Bremerton navy yard | of thousands of dollars will be put and the alleged boycott of the| into circulation at Bremerton. yards by the navy department, it] In addition to this fleet the is now assured that one of the| armored cruiser Albany is now off largest fleets of warships that has|her way to Bremerton and more ever been at the Puget sound navy extensive repairs will be made om yard will be there within the next|/her than on any vessel in Pacifi¢ two monthe | waters. This morning a special dispatch| Considerable work will also be was received by The Star from) done at Bremerton on the gunboat Washington stating that the navy| Wheeling and a number of otheg department has ordered Admiral) smaller vessels. Glass, in command of the Pacific| All this work will keep the mem squadron now stationed at Hono-jemployed at the navy yard Le lulu, to proceed to Bremerton. The|for many months and indicat dispatch adds that the fleet may be| clearly that the policy of the navy expected at the Puget sound navy| department is far from anything yard not later than July 1 | ke discrimination against the los Admiral Glass’ fleet consists of | cal yard. the first-class cruiser New York The aggregate tonnage of th flagship of the squadron, the| vessels which will be overhaw! cruiser Marblehead and the gun-|and repaired at Bremerton thi be Concord and Bennington.| summer is 18,478, divided as fol« With these big sea-fighters will be | lows Flagship New York, 8,200; the collier Nero. \cruiser Marblehead, 2,089; gunboat This order means that there will| Concord, 1,710; gunboat Bennt: be work for a big force of men at|ton, 1,710; cruiser Albany, 3,769; the navy yard for many months, gunboat Wheeling, 1,000. AND BY FLOODS © | GREAT DAMAGE DONE IN NOR THERN TEXAS AND OKLAHO- * MA—SEVERAL PERSONS KILLED FORT WORTH, Tex., June 4 KANSAS North Texas was damaged severely | Southern Kansas by a cyclone last night. At Aber-| siding today, leaving the farmers foyle the Baptist church was blown/in a ruined condition, It is the to pieces and George Davis and his| unanimous opinion that the wheap CITY, Mo, June 4—< floods are sud- two children fatally injured and corn crops in the richest farm Several mil of the Pacific! districts are totally ruined. The tracks were washed out by the; Chanute and oil territory is unden floods caused by the heavy rain|ten to twenty feet of water. The floods are the most disase trous known in the history of the state and it is feared several lives were lost The crop outlook prior to thé heavy rains was never brighter im accompanying the windstorm. At Mineral Welle many houses were inundated. Mrs, Bell and her) six children were badly hurt at Chillicothe. DENISON x., June 4.—Indian | the Mooded district and the farms Territory has been swept by terrific ers were banking on a prosperous, rainstorm Thousands of acres of! year, With their crops ruined now, farm lands are submerged, with the farmers are placed in a seriot enormous damage to cro The | condition, It is too late to repli Meteor and Texay. fast trains .on the grain and but little can Frisco line, are tied ut!done to save any of the grow! ancis, crops covered by water,