The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 16, 1904, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE WITH MANY | &8"re%* Exea Benaiger and SESSA WAY AROUND STAR—TU ESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1904 7 ty Wngl n youtorday presented ¢ " | uhe's ome ea to blow a bit and | qoing to pieces, though the forems folder of three sheets containing re- | kind of hance did we hav : | productions of the finest photo | [short-handed and dismasted, run Take charge, Mr. Johnson, I'm | raphe of Cedar lake and the upper| THE TRUTHFUL TALE OF HOW THE CAPTAIN OF THE GMO, | ®!ne for @ port on & on 1 OMag aeeere on the walt BOUNDARY SURVEYING PAR: | and lower falls on Cedar river yet gale and gen like that and expecting With thet he leaped on tm ‘ in Seattle H, BRANDT WENT CRAZY AND LOST HIS VESSEL to make the channel? We were so | #4 on over, They never even found) 2 > exhibited x ee r dumb with wet and cold by thin | bis body : ; RESS - — time, though, and so astounded that | I don't like to prolong this par NV. we wore etill alive thet we didn't! ing there for hours,| BLACK 6€A NOW USELESS TO RUSSIA IN WAR—MAY BUIL® | ay anything or do anything yt NOTHING a be om tus tw tena ee eae w ISS SS e whe r wind and t the bit + and drenched | CANAL THROUGH EUROPE woof win a wie tt on & boat of any kind for a quarter | shoots were cased and she stood in the foremast rigging, io water every other minute. | »m: ad Itles are being of a century,” sald Bera Bensinger,|a@ bit better for awhile and went dina the 60 a Mrs, Guataveon,| The crowd on shore, #0 close that | meena ce : a ee: DOING the Chicago satimaker, coming up| seudding along for Menominee. !t\ ‘Tho gid man kept her at that|W¢ could almost hear what they jon the steamer Manitou the other) was blowing @ gale by this time, | through the rest of the night. He| sald, kept growing but didn’t seem) 4 PETERSBURG, Aug. 16. (although for part of the way deepe catia ait same ciiinet ae jmight, “though | made my living|we all agr and with the canvas|had his course all right, for when |to be doing anything, Finally On! wosiang, by raising the question of|ening would be requisite —_—--- | fOr years ax & sailor on the lakes.”|abe had on, | wonder to thin day | daylight came there was the yellow [of the aa ning @ big Kntle| the Dardanelles at thin time, | This is 841 miles from the Bindi ming the new ational bowsé The th Fox island light was|that she kept on her keel at all wt with black lantern that he bad, began slashing Hie 18> | paired tb of Kussia’s best | sea, and here there is, as has been BILLBOARD ORDINANCE SEEMS fant pping astern when I ne-| Then a sudden gust came along 494 | peyond ¢ bows, White | Jing and said 2 thet te sare tm whe " ¢ of routes, each with wry WW tween Alaska and Can « tting with a ¢ of ow | took th the square sai tay 1 4 tid | if they won't come out to us. tt ' t f HAVE FALLEN Yr - A trance all ehipshape and tidy f result has bring to the front | advantages its own. The Bere- To FLAT | hay ver refugees, wi hin easy | eaile, we used to call ‘em, though | only remained to shoot through the| ‘om, I'm going in to them rey 4 proj matt another | #ine, am ated so strongly with the ee a ee oe ae j walking distance of the buffet in|they weren't hung any stays hannel, which now looked like a| Give me that knife before YOU) ong ¢ to the Black sea by a great) fame of Marshal Ney, is shallow, " ayer, to, le char the smoking room, began his story, |out of the boltropes with a rip 404/ hare possibility with th d an | Go, mate,’ said another h but safe. Dredging would searcely 7 ices the Un BS i Yea,” he resumed, “most of my|@ snort, and they went ba Q6\ she wa In spite of all that Johnson or I ng th ng peace which fol- | of much w to dam and to em tes as 1 geoditic survey, | ~ friends don't ka but when I) away to leeward like kites. The But when we got in closer it|any of us could say, they 1 eed 4 the congress of Vienna many | cavate a new be its fewer ob-~ f Bald toda : The agitation for the abotition of | V2, 70Uns & from hay|canvas must have been rotten. soked like the old man wasn't|that kalfe around and five men) 4.» . olved for ting | sta and in r. The alterna. re nt-Morse party, com euthennan ts the ee, eae hes ve and n't have afforded We were tier pleased than not, | peading her dead for the entrance lropped into the sea. Poor fellow “ k with the tie, Of} tive te mak ae of the river : ifteen men, Ia now work : ' « wan | such a luxery, anyway, | sailed thin! as the emed to feel re | till closer and it was plain that he| they were so far @ with the we' of these the easential principle | Lutscheza, which is a confluent of fing in the Stikeen tiv ecti with such promising prospects two | shore as a forecastle hand on tum- | lieved 1 acted more wouldn't make it by hundreds of|and cold that they weren't @97/ way the deepening of the Dwina,| the Dwina, and joins it at Witebsk, which is estimated » the worst | months ago, has been stifled. The | ber vessels until | knew every light | |yarde, Johnson bailed him to ask | #aner than the old man which runs into the latter at Riga,| 61 miles fr Ulla, the latter town on the route. A ort fr last time it was heard of the fire dsland, and harbor from the] 1JK® A SANE THING. Low wt it | After that all I know is what| ong of the Dnieper, which practic being 411 5 from fuga. A short arty states that contiaus! rain and water committee had referre raits to South Chicago, | knocked | We're going in by the old chan- | I've been told. It seome the people | iy may b id to enter the Buxine| canal of 1 en in length (abeo~ 1 weather have added ¢ the matter to ( Engineer Thom-| off going sailing pretty suddenly | She was still carrying far more than | not the game as we did before the |ashore had wired to Pentwater for! at Kherson. The total distance to| lutely the only new piece of water= Aisce and the unde son, asking him to draw up an or | 40d with no regrets. the had any license to, but the a government interfered,’ the | the life saver t it took hours te od is 1,410 miles, but the| way that would have to be made ie $s eo thick that days are sour dinance covering th tter Mr About midway of this east shore| wouldn't hear to reefs, and all W@/ 414 man shouted back, swearing | get the apparatus on a train, | sctual length between the inner ends| the entire @istance from the Blac - seer) a a halt mile Thomson stated yesterday that he|l# White lake~as fine and pretty a| could do was to ease off the sheets | rrventiy, though it wasn't his cus |it to Montague, put it on the J0°/ of these two well known rivers in| sea to the Baltic) is needed to Mal . Fies whe bs in Gaanee et framed the much need-| har aa there is on all the lakes, | surreptit y in the dark. The), And I'll thank you to remem-| Heald, get it down to the mouth) onty miles, and, indeed, there are| the Lutechesa with the Orschisa an@ Ca party of 0 men Werbing : The lake ts six miles long and lined | wind veered some, but in the 10 | ber that I'm | and out on the beach | alternative presenting. more three locks intght be required tm the Chilkat tien, segerts ob tions outlined to Mr with summer cottages, Old Dowle,|held as she was, and maybe the! vitain of the George H. Brandt On the second shot the whipline lene t problems of ma 7% m th connection, * " x great aities. Her frame an ordi-|the Elijah, had a fine place th Brandt would have gone to Menomt Now all the old channel there! fell within Johnson's reach and he| rine eng ng—Dbut 74 miles apart.| as contrasted with 47 miles of the be the ‘aaciiens unias os of which | several years when he first| neo as safo asa train if she badn't|,.0 «sort of a creek where the|had strength ugh left to haul! tt w that by the f ataracts, The depth of preg ts eosetbertty Gee but metal and ord Lay ans - os I don't kn 4 been Nght fishermen had their fish houses, but! away and make the hawser fast err ade route the linking the Dwina from Witebel = ne tape oer ncn a be allowe eo}. nether * : here etl, and By this time the sea was a8! i) giant have any entrance hel when he got it y came it in ! be of about similar| to Riga averages 18 feet at present, country Hundreds of mountain |"! h “fe strict. U m'teare a hang But when | war| much as I'd ever seen, and the! | ier end had | filled in to make! (he life car, cut us loose and took th to that at Suez, and by the | and t hannel is net dangerous to . der th mulus s to the a sailor man, there were no cottages | schooner was pitching like a row , b . atler to over half that di th ho kr . The 4 Gain eae the werk O28 ui . . the current keep the new channel | us ashore a " . . none 10 know ne project, = = i Pee ies wil an « ton the on the shores Wh ake; noth-| boat. After one roll that surely! jo, And it n't have been Johnson ar they brought To enable veaneln of deep draught | therefore, reduced to a mere a ree ey a a far and was|ing but sawn It was & great) looked like her Inst she recovered stone te © niet der | back to life Gustavson was|or warships to pass along this ton of dredging tn addition te ol and with pg & then some re f A In | lumber t and steamers and tugs | just in time to get a whiff that took ditions, even if it had beer ood was the second ma so y f Jepth of 28 feet onstruction of a new length of four rt is working in he he the ines . 2 al billboard wing sailing vessels in and out| the mainmast out of her, the stich os %t over @ we eo two seamen wh ft be + The cost in es of canal the perfecting Pass district. This was a oliats a ’ snapping off close to the deck. It) )iant any of us thinking of They buried them In|t t $100,000.00, or consider. | of rather longer canals al- t h to work ently they @ wat Re te jome smart chopping to Ket! oo ining h “ xcept of bite r ome me by andl ably leew th what the Panama| ready made. z he firet they av h e the wreck clear, but we did tt and * 4 o'd get before she | Jone 1 struck owt for Chi nal has cost already With such a canal built, the Dare that n * _ feared @ the eb still od; in fact owe , t go at that ~ ub we had lots of | u he Dn os danelles question would cease te be ¥ of the boundary h the might the bett t We k fair off where! offers to go acrons the lake. I got! itt . teing Ka-| of any account in Buropean polities, five years ar t Rea station didn't follow We would have close-reefed her] eng old had been, whick * ft with my ¢| chovka and Nicopot _ possible t ate then, cap'n or no caps, b w “ t " . ow an wan t * the estimated time giver at | otherw was sailing om, was a boat euch as | as she was; it would have od tly be werk eae Denes y seo on the lakes nowa- death to go outboard on the t “ | hen the w e degua. ry see te Aben * MRS. MAYBRICK ‘ Wi ill Not Take “ ht oe 3 ue they « t ded, from / . 1 7 ta nk t of the lab and This brings WAS NG’ . ay 4—C Shere tea sre being waneiectured the Money ot o paint 318) _ ise of lemigiation Mn | y ne dietinct | missioner of Immigration Sargent ©. H. Tittmann, who was ed by the internat Seccla! te The Stan) | ewe ACTOR WAS LEFT WITHOUT CLOTHING IN A BATHROOM “Tenuta and Character BY HIS CREDITOR, THE HARD HEARTED TA\LOR SAY THEY WERE son Roy, who capt THROWN FROM TRAIN Mrs. Botkin Has Louls Bondle and Fern Bar clay, two men who dlaim to have Small Chance | BY CYNTHIA GREY. Character ls what you know you are. Reputation is what others t the atter think you ar or captured The girl w er or later come to the point where she will distinguish between the e actor, and w his bath the t venes, At pants |for 4 | alee, & ang Bs 5 ‘3 © goes out into the world to earn her living will soon- oxs actor and a revengeful tailor been forcibly ejected from a North Mosca | afb owned ern Po ight train at jh - are playing the leading parte In @) 4. there were mo barrels in the} meaning of character and reputation. At this point wis independ- in November of last y af (By Scripee » Ass'n) |} farce comedy here, which is am hroom the actor missed his per ent wage earner is likely to feel that no matter what her reputation | eevee he may be she is good and pure If her character is good, and that she, a wardrobe of| ater” has sued the actor the | herself, knows bow good she is and it is nobody else's business. od falled to| actor bas sued the tailor i The gir! bas many points in favor of her argument. It is no one clothing. | else's business what she does. It is her own business. She is re- sponsible to no one. She says this and it ig almost pitifully true A — ae | girl is responsible to no one on earth except to herself. Ne one, sot © mother, can be responsible for the girl after she leaves the home literesting match by the score of| | 6-8, 6-1 | root ‘ Sam Russell defeated Clay Allen/ Because of this responsibility to herself and because of this lack jw the score of 6-1, 6-4. of responsibility to others, the girl who spends many years in the Ni ‘ k-a-day world, will find out the value of a good reputation. The Joe Tyler defeated Nat Pasc | we the that night, N ing paid money, which was ac nae Ghee, dam tol es fare by men in charge of the | g-iston on the mot pig train, this morning filed separate Bh ef Coréstia: Bothta, convicted suits for damage against the North- | o¢ murder, ceneste® Satan, tal ern Pacific Railway company Judge Cook announced that he| Barclay asks $20,000 damages for | would not make it until Monday. | his alleged injuries, and Bondie | The betief ix that it will be adverse gues for $13,100. Both claim © to the prisoner, Judge Cook stated) have been rendered insensible by | that he had recelved many anony the fall from the moving train | mous communicstions on the sub he the pay for them, The tailor lay in wait| The tailor has ju | 4 to be coerced to have suffered permanent a | arg toa be vetuess ¢ ame b 3. 6-2. | girl who by & hundred and one indiscretions throws away ber repu Bondie says he is « ae er : (ty Boripps News Aseny Jack Ballinger beat Karl Lewts,| tation is stripped of the protection which @ good reputation always years of age, ae on ay a Co | HUGENE, Ore, Aug. 16—The| 61, 6-4 | affords her, And it ts the little things, absolutely harmless in them- od aS Guar See Oe B. Held Ee nee ae sn na|. Fhe matches were continued until} selves that by degrees eac up the good reputation, which is to any aap they were throws from oOys e scnore, checked. A telephone |@ iste hour this evening. girl @ coat of finest mal train at midnight, while it was TAKE CHARGE, MR. JONSON, I'M GOING ASHORE | meres of acen ange Ge tne Geen! } Svery cirt mest lara by experience, Mother may tail: will aie traveling at a high rate of speed 1: . = |S cutficleet to protect further is blind and father may threaten until he is hoarse, but « girl sel- aot (Special to The Stor.) GSR gE NINN FE ng through the|vener inte valuable timber NEWSBO) REWARDED | dom appreciates the value of « good repetation until she bas spemt h five or six years brushing elbows with the hustling world. « fire is p wh river tow The old man was| Another big for wing along be pugh | ceedings along Mot some at every pose, she'd be te CHARTING TISKA LAGRANDE, Ore, Aug. 16 al So. this much to you girls who are just now glorying in the free- : FOR HIS HONESTY dom and indepentomes of cavetag ond spentiog your own money: Be boys who nearly wrecked the fre some smutty old freighter with |at the wheel all this time. ISLAND WATERS train on the Steel Spur, Sunday, by le and no masts and no crew | Johnson had tried to get him to let | Wer a. where there are big tue | San ae cna Prenees pour’ vanaianetie ave yes aa piling stuff on the track, were toda weak of A trim, big three-|go. He didn't seem to sense any-|ber mille, A small army of men | for the cireult court in October high as & house when she was light | our course, Then the mates for ft | careful of reputation as of character, even if you are called ms retiminary to the oo igh as a how q tte! or once ie ae % hnewsboy, was rewarded for his hon or “silly It is very easy for you to be good when everyone believes ‘The work pr - and carrying her 350,000 of lumber,|talked with us men, and we ali| ‘There ts still another fire above - tablishment of a coating station by luding the 4 | 2 tor tying to bend 6 4| Wildwood, which t# destroying an | og " H , you good and is trying to help you be good. It ts just as easy to the government on Tiska island, tn jmeeaas com mye ~ ad PI gh Seuns of Gude enty yesterday je was selling P& | bad when everyone thinks you bad and ts trying to pull you down. the Aleutian group, is now AS SAFE AND EASY ee ee eS ee cal ofl Gia 00 the ctsuer of With eve Character of course is the real thing, especially to yourself, but 5 : perl Pike etroct at noon “He R| Teputation should be quite as carefully guarded if character ts to re- carried on by the geodetical surve steamers MacArthur, Capt. Homer & freight train verir se he wouldn't They : | him sand arver, a Seattle Blectric raitway| ™a#in sweet and clean P. Ritter, and the Patterson, p= Bhe carried twelve ; 4, jetow him be but he leonductor, purchased a Star of him ~ 1 Pratt. The MacArthur ts engaged which was a big r r my revolver and, taking what he thought to be ¥ and in surveying the A of the ietnai vensel, but she needed us all whe Stand off or I'll kill ye,’ he hob several pennies from his pock for the purpose of lo me the) lit came to has halyarda. | lered, ‘and remember, I'm captain o' gave the boy one and hastened nels and marking the dangerous | They didn’t have a donkey engine the George H. Brandt y. Later young Reid saw that ree that ae wale py Pony Fy = LOCAL CIGARMAKERS’ UNION | every few feet in those times, The We could all hear him above the Py actor a pee him a $5 ae te comets Oe were nid was Jim Malone gale and every man of us knew the GES Heese instens ef So peeRy fe said, the work of erecting the| WILL HOLD INTERESTING |g, ever eit ame out =o hed gone stark ‘ | Reid spent some time in hunting coaling station will be mw ove 5 her t os t conducto: a fin f sean MEETING TONIGHT poomlg ns ordi : PO ce pe 2 eh | (ty Beripos News Ass'n) se cencuas tne at auld — . mn ming out oF 0 | the wheel, an je returned the plece The steamer Gedney, Capt. B. 6 or, on Ow tak wele of tas Ge lier aay tne the EI i“ he |remerking that the cor r had © Dickens, te now surveying the wane - sund for Menominee, to load from him. So he ke ‘ fently made a mistake. Mr. Bar coast of P # islan the bo: n « fF a | The big om given um the |® lot of timber that was wanted tn the andt, or rath the Russian gov we os pleased at oe boy . . being tried bet the lunacy co al 188 ace at Ranke haii/®24 we walked along under em that otrat and an old him rt . y wee mission this « “ He is tonight urpose of the meet-|°@"ves. the big main and m the spokes spur Premier Balfour tn pop hlyptne we apd a om bins Of the stock of M. Lettes, et 1006 6 ean, Cn gane on religion and last nig ng is to n and advocate the | **l* wing and and the sq We hoped . mone regarding of the most pro J Sy oe ‘ iu. Leltes a nu hich was took possession of the gospel tent | advantages of home sails hanging as full of wind as a ¢ 1 man down t sinking of Kaight Commander ed sold by the . and preached all night long particularly as applied to pillow full re—the Brandt, Three men nt SPER PE PEEP EPO ECP RODRS - s ——=| cigar shope arried yarde er fore and main the spokes, heading the by union he I wae, ow the y leclter for @ “ ng an aceordeon forward and all J tried to ge oe eee | is wer F h ' 1 1 t bd |than those shipped here from Enst-| hands we soli, thinks ithe behind him to felt him with «ca eee a a ern cities by firma in the tobsa wages coming to em & eo ony an bar, but he saw us and ordered By Berio News Assn) e trip and the winter ashore. | us forwar rippe a m int wh ye 4 trust Se Oe ae Oe Ste see me eee dcileues detanenia, ware ier bar aie ee ee sow in full swing and the ridiculously low prices are the Alfred Jones, Pacifh ast orga he . sy A a m. Bi. . ‘ Ko pwing she'd fous ler any min ‘ ge ty . ee vn S ts Mable be anche & Ott te toe a f the town. High grade clothing, hats, shoes and gen’ zer of the Cigarmake terna. oe ee Panag sane ie Oe ee ee = < sar caiman die Ganiinaninad r : nishings are going at wha’ you want to pay for them. Of different ing tional union, who was the leading |®* ihe © yacht when I wow hatches and anything ; | expe © witness god Ee Pee AT y jay Monarch shirts were knocked down for 35¢, Cluett uu 2 spirit in the calling of tonight's v6 aw ae a A at, when # y ne we ' y @, Dav ~ wpe shane at nem Graene th & Peabody colla each, $7.50 suit cases at $2.25, $15 and blended renders a beverage de-| meeting 3. W. Harmon, of the Ww ~~ 1 was haule t, along saw the cap'n tting his helm to| Davis party A a) $18 sults went hammer at $5 and $6. Lion hats were lightful and s ng. To get|Cigarmakers’ unio OB 60 Ph ncoar weap honnelcdag ode gee <e perl, madernene. Wen, hers See . we whe. te * pate bid In at $1.00 each, Buckincham & Hehect’s $5.00 shoes were the best results the material tae retary of the Western Centra sd mm Se ; oll ¢ sand we m +. up ow am Ghee - for ber husband he calls footish arried away for $1.65. Dr. Jaeger’s health underwear went , . abor union, and Gordon A. Rice preee the time had come. It seemed / 0 oy n ho rett 4 for T5¢ other well kno cles were must be wholesome and nutri-|of the Typographical. union, are ke a church roof, it/as if the old man had some crazy | place on the veranda jo Bag Aeoige tates ype sondage. away ae Hee CPR Se ee tious among those who will make speech high as she was, the notion of jibing, but of mtrai hetet \* ry cs wae yor r Sy og ay : r ° ry es. Members of the local Actors’ | '** pers were awash. We were sheets hadn't been touched we mua There ts & great variety of goods to be given away at and the Musicians’ un will fur. | about off Racine then and the wind | weren't surprised when the main ote Ba A nag your own price, Everything must be sold, fixtures included, nish entertainment, at the concli-|¥&# more westerly i mast crumpled and went down in'a| MANY TENNIS nt Cums WT aes wee ee by the last day of the present month. Two fine show cases, sion of which free cig and re It seomed the old man had taken tangle. Two of us went w ta t ane in A: oy nickel fixtures, 140 feet of fine shelving. Store for rent, with freah ments will be passed around.” |S fancy to stand « night watch and ouple of Scandinavians out of Mun MATCHES PLAVED| ree’ voctk ‘ccrconsersne "es Tense for 18 months by recelver.- Sale from 1:80 to 8.20 p. my } ; wan at the wheel bimse having kegon they were. We cleared away yy, Ms | sent both the mates below. What the best we could and marveled that ‘eae ? MATE oN I " Ww re ay Talk Politic he Id have been doing | don’t the foremast, with the foresall Some interesting matches were | _ 7 . a he hadn't seen anyth ne tood. The old man med t ment ich is t played ¢ . ess er, Re eceiver Divine the MRS, WINSLOW'S t the best of ntain c ' . eae hadn't ordered any sho r running now, and though things | Summit avenue co a »~ u good t oe the time of toda abine g | overloaded a 4 Mon’s $1:25 and $1.50 Underwear | played betw Mra. Langdon and 10 ‘ n finad f T h Hank and the other mate| wow sT%o at KE Seout Hunte Mrs. Ds ton Parker " ‘ half pints d i for 906 ‘ etter of © ¢, | ar and begged, the old manlissi 94 Avenue. and Mr. Benham. The former couple f Phone Ex. 26. ptem make for Racine Mo was all for HPRALD, tallor, 1820 2d Ay. *** A trong defeated Bleeker in an

Other pages from this issue: