The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 6, 1905, 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)

Tne. DAUGHTER T BOARDER WITH KN I gal ‘and daughter ne ‘qmaiiants «= W nder farmer, fa of Mra.) and Frank O! A sweet of Mra Owen's daughter gege was raised by City De dame and Patrgman Me eho were summoned by) telephone calls from the Wilson was st when the offi | ma bleeding freely from quts and abrasions and resembled a slaughter was armed with a kalfe, de claims he did not use and Qwens held a hatchet ‘gnd Miss Owens added their fa various ways The three mea were taken to po- Dedquarters, On the way! Teanyaon and Wilson decided ® mitle the matter tn court and fertrude Used Odd Mar hoodwinking the authori several days, Gertrude An | @iored, was tried Monday} on a charge of assaulting | Braubent, a fellow prisoner! w for 20 minutes in the office of Be city jail. May 31, before Po-|» Dr. 3 P. Woodard, and beexed Pedge Gordon, who fined her|® the physician to end his lite by aad the costs of prosecuting |» chloroformin He insisted }& that his days of usefulness was committed and sent (O/% wore ended. His body, after eounty jail | & death, he offered to sell to the —y ® physician & “You can dissect my body ® for the benefit af science,” he # pleaded. “I've only a few days ® to live anyhow; please chloro * form me.” * prices on drugs and accey- tarries to you @ story of al- M Martiing saving. The argu- is one of present economy— to save money-—where to Money savers for to- Be ‘Bum, finest quality, full pints Shaving Soap, 19 size Se Powder, lbe size .. Oe Lotion, for rough hands face, 350 site ... 230 Hazel, fut! pints 170! Derma Soap, te cakes 160! Hyer cont discount on al) Razors, Strope, Mogs and Brushes. TO DEAL AT LANG'S ING DRUG Ce COLMAN BUILDING. |W FIRST AVENUE L Columbia and Marion Streets, 's Spec. Will make it to your advant- to buy your pliers this week. think we have one of the most =vicTiM COVERED WITH BLOOD have each a Bob Wilson, of rged with as attempted oust MrS./sault and battery. The detective Rat nt her ty daughter|and patrotman held a consultation rooms by them, infand decided to arbitrate the mat - Ww xatory | ter t made two Ko Bel Seo bere aiais Slouth ‘Adams, | » of assailants Monday | masking hia face with a Solomon ES calimed th Wilson | look There's no w of you fel | his home » a tem-|lows going to court about this} pastile and was hokling the) Wilson says you must get this } woman out fall ] F@, HATCHET, FEET AND FISTS ch by lock tomorrow, | and I advise you to do It “Well, if that woman wil! get her duds together and jar loose, that's I want,” mumbled Wilson, and Tennyson seomed satisfied. Adams adjourned the temporary court, and requested his clerk, the patrolman to enter a suspended Judgment in his docket Behoes from the scene of battle gieaned by The Star man bring a gambler upon the boards, Wilson says that for the use of the house Mrs. Owens took care of him and he lodged in bis own heme. She stayed out late at nights he averred, and he locked her in. The father came to the resoue, bringing Girard to assist, They tried to break into the home and locked horna with Wilson tn his own door yard. Wilson says he was “legged, stabbed and beaten ques JEROME NAPOLEON BONA. PARTE, YOUNG WASHINGTON BUSINESS MAN, RECOGNIZED AS THE HEIR OF THE NAPO- } LEONIC HOUSE, I8 NOW CON FERRING WITH THE ENTIRE BONAPARTIST FAMILY ON THE RIVIERA—THE KINO OF A FELLOW HE 18, BY C. M. PURDY | (Special Correspondence to The Seattle Star.) BALTIMORE, Md., June 6.—18 an American Bonaparte being groomed for the imperial throne of France? People who know and are inter- sted in the Maryland doscendants of Jerome Bonaparte, king of Weat- Aanle Rooney, recently arrested on a state charge of vagcancy, waa the principal witness for the state. The police maintain § that Annie drinks to excess she bas never been caught tm a lie, and her statements went far with the court Dr. Buckley testified to the num ber of stitches taken in the head of the Braubent woman, who was struck with a slop pail and ren dered hore de combat SRR RRR AT 79 BEGS DOCTOR TO END HIS LIPS. sete INDIANAPOLIS, June Van Buren Vance, 79 years of * & veteran of two wars, eat * . * Teer rere eee’ CLUE The police received a strong clue to the dental office robberies of a few days ago when C. B. Coffin, a local Pike street jeweler, reported the unsuccessful attempt of a little girl to pawn a quantity of dentist's gold which she claimed had been given her by a doctor now in Port- land The story did not sound good to Coffin, so he requested the girl to call again and bring an order from her mother. The gold is identical with that stolen from the dental! offices, so the police say, and they are on the lookout for the burg lar’s youthful foil. Coffin told the police that there was about $4 worth of the gold. MUST STOP DOUBLING UP lines in Seattle. Below 2 few of them Burner Pliers. P. 3. W..2 Forged Burner Plier Forged Burner Piter Carpenter's Nippers Bhe Carpenter's Nippers. 35¢ Tessot's Bright End Cut- ° ASe Tersot's Bright End Cut- 270! B4e) | Level . 500¢ Barnard’ Cutting | 69e in, Barnard’s Lever Cut~- te The BS tin Bernard's Lever Cutting otagie 950 M Fish Polo ‘T5e | Corbin Barbiack Mall Box od) e i bet Meads are better Many more of them ter than there ever are INING’S, 1310 SECOND AVE. Monogram and Crost Rings »pular they ¢ showing t of them n and am at te fee our window AVB. COR CIF AEWIS & CO. St. y Gold dust valued at $10, hunting case knife, a silver tobacco box and other articles disappeared from the room of G. A. McMillan at the Great Northern lodging honse last Friday. The police were notified Monday |by the victim, who thinks the thief is @ fellow lodger who slept in the same room. The practice lodging house keep- ors have of doubling up on their guests for private gain is to be discouraged by the police, who state that many reports are recety- jed daily of like occurrences. ee ee ae bd * * MISS AH 80U GETS Aw® * BRAND NEW DRESS * & Ab Sou, the Chinese girl held # # in the county jafl under the ® ® exctusion act, is proudly faunt- * * ing a new drens before the eyes ® # of hor sister prisoners * * Attorney John B. Hartman & # nent his stenographer to the & % jail Monday morning with the * ® dress, which wae tried on un- ®& & der the watehful gaze of Dep- & *& uty Marshal Gritm who * * wanted to be sure that no * ® sticks of dynamite were so- # * creted in its folds. * * ‘This te the little Chinese ® & girl's first new dress in a year ® * and @ helf, during which time & % she hag been the guest of the & * * * ed SAN DIBGO, Cal., June 6.—Cap- tain H. ©. Gearing, of the navy, in here to locate a site at Fort Rosecrans for a wireless station to ring of eight stations Diego and Cape Flat Setete eee eee ete eee ee eee phalia and brother of Napoleon Bonaparte, say that there is no doubt but at the present moment there Is being planned on the fa- mous Riviera, a new Bonapartist movement, and that young Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte, of Washing- ton, ts hailed as its leader The first Jerome marricd Miss Bllzabeth Patterson, of Baltimore. | The emperor declared there was no | marriage and made his brother take ja European princess. But in years after Empress Ru- } genie secured the recoguition of the first marriage by the French ¢ cll of state, and this fact gives young Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte the ent over Princes Victor and brothers, who a the | lime descendants of marriage No. 2 For years the ex-ompress has maintained that the American ts |the rightful Bonaparte helr and the jother European members of the |great family are being brought to her position one by one. They ar EX-EMPRESS EUGENIE. all on the Riviera now, with exeeption of Louis, who is a Rus- sian general of cavairy Barly in May Jerome Bonaparte and his mother closed their palatial home, 1627 K street, N. W., Wash- ington, Quietly they went to New York and safle for France, for & week or more have been with the ex-emprees and her colony of tm perialista on the Riviera. Jerome Napoleon Honaparte ts the direct descendant in eldest male suecession of the Bonaparte-Patter- PRINCE VICTOR. PRINCE LOUIS. | son marringe. He ts 30 years old | The young fellow is a society mixer, | but has little of the dignity suppos- | Alfonzo kind of king In bis “set” they look on him as very democratic. When he goes jout to punish the little golf ball, }his whirt sleeves are rolled up and hia clothes have the same fitting | grace as his caddy’s. | Jerome is one of the best handlers jof the short sword in Washington, lan many attaches to the foreign em }bassies know. He is an excellent | boxer and likes nothing better than a few rounds with light gloves. He is a keen fisherman and the upper banks of the Potomac know him well | Automobiling is a great fad with him, as the two big machines tn his | garago allently testify. He rarely! has company on his jong apins about the boulevards unless it be his mother, of whom he appeara to be passionately fond, At theaters concerts and reading she is rarely Grooming an Am ed to ooze out of kings, except the | THE SEATTLE AR —EE erican ‘TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1905 ——eaaQaQqauanaoaoaeEeEeE=E=Eee—————eeE=E=E=E=E=E_____ Held Landlady Captive-- Almost Killed By Family GRANDDAUGHTER AND LOTHARIO AS For the Imperial Throne RRR RH) ny wt in Brooklyn, The half * ®) length coat was semi-fitting and *# BRGGAR LBAVES $5,000 TO *!) was worn with white linen colle * LUCKY MAN */and cuffs. She wore « white + PHALADICLPHIA For & ©) gerie bodice hat made of fing * simple net of charity, re: ed *) embroidery, muslin and Ince. | * five weeks ago, H.W. Hartung * *# & traveling salesman for the * five ipanye phurmaceutt, «| OLAD AE DID NOT * cal chemiets, has fallen heir to ®| . & $6,000. It was left him by the LOSE HIS RIGH? ARM: * man whom he befriended and *® # whom he thought a pauper *| ae eka ek eh eee eee eee | WALLA WALLA, June 6.—-Guy 4 a ecemeennny | WUTKIR, 22 years old, a young man | eraveree. |rehiding at ¢ we Place and al |graduate of Wal Ww ' ene | lost his left arm wh work ith a woodsaw at Ts ob woodyard Jin this eity | | The machine is op ed a} |gasoline engine and torch on the engine went o f kill climbed upon the engine to light it. He asked the foreman for & mateh, As he ached for it hia] foot slipped and he fe the rap- | idly moving saw. The other men at} work were horrified to see bis arm cut off and drop to the ground below. One man grasped Wolfkill and hauled him off the feed table to the ground. | In spite of his terrible wound Wolfkill retained his presence of 3 mind. Grasping the stamp with his att” ¢ +e right hand he held it until taken to be, tibet get Le the hospital, where the flow of ae Ra thee blood was stopped and the w 1 * syed fo dressed. On the way to the hos-| pital he remarked he was glad it was not his right arm, as the loss! of the left would not interfere with JEROME NAPOL EON BONAPARTE, The young Washington business man who ts being groomed for emperor } seen with anyone else, while the #o- jelety (irls of the Potomac city see very little of him. Mrs. Bonaparte ia @ descendant of Daniel Webster, Last winter the goesips linked bis name with the daughter of a west- ern senator, but her engagement to another announced later, followed by her marriage, and the cool indif. ference with which young Bons parte accepted the event, sidetrack- ed the rumor. One of his best friends was Count- eas Cassini, the adopted daw rot jthe Russian ambassador, who soon leaves for Madrid Those who know his quiet, easy manner were surprised at the friendship with “the Cassini,” as she was always called, but it was evidently her thorough knowledge of Buropean affairs that led to t friendship Young Bonaparte does not lead the life of « social butterfly & Washington. Day after day he of Fr ance. the American Surety Co, @ large trust corporation with which he holds @ rather important office. Jerome's only alster, Louise Bu gente, married Prince HMultfeldt Dec. 30, 1896, and visited the Bona partes t year in Washington. Her husband, at the time of his marriage, was in the Danish em y at St. Petersburg. He de- votes all of his time now to his vast estates near Copenhagen. Young naparte is slight, - der and je and never would let “ne pot whiskers grow. His quietness t# excelled only by his pineid disregard of the materials of lite. He cares little for money, less for honors and still less for posi izes in a modest way that rightful pretender to the thrope of France, but from his ac Uens and demeanor no one would ever believe it. His most intimate friends may he never discusses be seen on his way to the office of | France or Prench affairs. “TOM” BURKE IS NO MORE Thomas Burke, one of the beat | known court house employes, died | Monday night at his residence, 166% Thomas street. Burke, although only % years had Mr of age at the time of his demise, been in public harness for years. During State Senator Vanter’s service sheriff | Burke acted ns chief deputy At one time he wes expert book- jers. A few days ego Mr. Burke w taken Ul. He leaves a mother, wife, brother and «ister Te Serre eee ee se ATLANTIC CITY MECCA OF BRIDES. ATLANTA CITY, June 6 A canvass this woek of the Ho” tel Colony showed that there are 76 brides here. They arw making the morning's parade on the Boradwalk things of beauty, while thelr aunts mothers, sisters and cousins contribute to the flashing dis play of summer attire. eeeeeee eee ee tee ee ee ee ee of the viethn of @ Fé. Spranger, proprietor Hiliside bar, was the | clever ruse on Monday. loner by a bottle of sherry wine the change returned a | check for $10, purporting to be jin by Charles r, & member of He tw the and }the well known reaity firm of Osner Meihorn. Apranger 414 not doubt the mon- told nent when he had been | senger's statement Thim that the check | by and gave him the }and the change. When the had been sent through the channels It k to Spranger marked “forgery.” Osne any | knowledge of the check was drawn on the Puget Oaner which pund National bank. The police were notified of the affair. The Cirst robbery to be reported from the new Alaska bullding oo- curred Monday evening. The vi n was Dr. Capp Het hours of 6 and 7 p. m., while keeper for the county commission | SSSSeEEEE EERE ES | washer absent from his office a thief en- tered the place and carried off a fine overcoat, The doctor's name w: worked on the inside of the collar. CHINKS WIN’ STRIKE PORTLAND, Ore, June 6-—Be eause he installed a patent dish im the kitchen of his ree- taurant at a cost of $256, R. A Proudfoot, proprietor of t ream. erie restaurant, faced a strike of his Chinese help, who refused to work uniess the machine was removed. “No goodes” insisted the cook ‘Bom biody getiee hand cut heep bad, you sabbee? Evly blody quit you 60 takee him out.” So the machine was removed and the Chinese won their firet strike. ST. LOULS, Mo, June 6. H. Brooks, head of an educational securities company, alleged to be a get-rich-quick concern, who convicted Saturday by the federal Charles Jory for using the malis to de fraud, was sentenced today to 17 months in the penitentiary and fined $509. Miss Gertrude Slocum, grand- daughter of Gen, Henry W, Slocum has set the seal of approval upon was | his teaching school COON SAYS OUR DISPLAY IS BEST WASHINGTON BUILDING 18 LO CATED IN FAVORABLE POS! TION, AND DISPLAYS WERE READY ON TIME Lieutenant Governor Coon was in ttle Monday evening, return ing to Olympia after a visit to the exposition at Portland. Of the Washington exhibit at the fair Coon said It te conceded by visitors that the Washington building an the Washington exhibit is far su perior to all others. Although there was but a little lays in which to erect the building and in- | stall the exhibit, everything | |found ready on the opening day, a} jeondition which did not exist in} Certainly )any other state building | the state of Washington has reason |to be proud of its commissioners land the great work which they did The building is acknowledged to not only be the largest and finest of the state buildings, but it also has the best site, a fact which ts| due to the insistence our state commissioners, who declined to be put off with an inferior site. The jexhibtts from all portions of the state are singularly most interesting.” Lieutenant Governor Coon accom panied Governor Mead to Celilo at the opening of the new portage rail way, which in to be such an im portant factor in the transporte tion of the products of astern Washington to tidewater. The Port land association, which has this important work in hand, were most hospitable, and the trip was in every way most enjoyable. Some funny incidends urred in con Rection with driving the last aptke, the Washington governor being one perfect se i | of the few who actually hit the spike. Tite others merely succeed ed in making large dents In the ties TELEGRAPH BRIEFS LONDON, June 6 Glynn Ails, Curry county, has peti toned the courts to order the com pulsory winding up of the Interna ~The bank of tional Bank of London. Petition ers are creditors for more than a million and a guarter. The applica tion was adjourned three weeks to seo if the shareholders of the bank will agree to voluntarily wind up its affairs. PORTLAND, June 6.—For the] next two weeks from two to four Oregon cities will participate in the exposition. The Transcontinent | Passenger association is in sens! and will cut the one-way Missouri river points to the fair Continued rain caused a postpone ment of the athletic program. | | n | rate from | NEW YORK, June 6.—Superin tendent of Insurance Hendricks to day examined William H. Melntyre, fourth vice president of the Equit able. Mcintyre is a Hyde sup porter. PORTLAND, June 6.—The steam er George W. Eider, which ran ¢ the rocks at Goble two months ago, was yesterday sold to junk de for $9,000, By failing to sell th jer immediately after she went the rocks, the underwriters lost more than $30,000 and in addition to this} must pay the Harriman interests in the netghborhood of $160,000, the amount for which the vessel was in sured. PALERMO, Soleily, June 6.—Six men were drowned today during the course of an experiment with submarine a new LONDON, June 6.—The entire diplomatic corps today paid respects to King Alfonso at the Buckingham palace. Ambassador Reid had a long the white summer outing sult. On| conversation with the Spanish king ecoration day she appeared in @| Subsequently the king attended natty white mohair sult to assist] mass at the R Catholic cath in the unveiling of her grandfather's dral at Westminster. | made j nished | inal basis of claim to what is known | minent 0 deceive yn in this, Cr * Just-as The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne tho signa- cure of Chas, H, Fletcher, and ersonal supervision for over 30 years, Counterfeits, "are but Experiments, and endanger as been made under his Allow no one Imitations and health of Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregorio, Dreps and Soothing Syrups. neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, It destroys Worms and alla ft cures Diarrhwa and Wind Colic, Troubles, It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach Its age is its guarantee, Feverishness. relieves Teething Flatulency. It is Pleasant, It contains tt cures Constipation and and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of af ¢ In Use For Over 3 ee O Years. ew rons orry How England Lost an Empire The opening of the Lewis and Clark exposition at Portiand, Ore gives timely interest to the ca tion of two odd drawings {ilustrat ing the discovery of the Columbia lriver in 1782. These pictures are tn he possession of Mra. A. 8. Twom ley, of Newton, Mass, a grand jaughter of Captain Gray, who dis covered the Columbia by George Davidson, a mem bér of the exploring expedition The discovery of the Columbia by | They were|lumbta a few miles south of the reached Vancouver island the next June About the same time Captain George Vancouver, of the British royal navy, began a series of voy- ages up and down the Pacific coas, for purposes of exploration. Ie April, 1792, he reached “Deception bay” and made some observat! ‘ns, falling in a little later with the Co- Straits of Fuca. Captain Gray free- ly informed the Briton as to his own observations, but Vancouver de an American navigator was of high | clined to believe In the existence of fur orig it its uch as States inportance. inasr United as “the Oregon country,” out of which the states. of Oregon, Wash ingtop and Idaho and parts of Mon tana and Wyoming have carved. early two y¥ * before Wash CAPT | been | ward in the good ship Columbia, land on the 7th of May entered the River of the West and Great Britain sailed away from an im discovery of great import- ince. Leaving Vancouver in the Straits of Fuca, Captain Gray sailed south- port which he named Bullfinch GRAY EXPLAINING THE DISCOVERY OF THE COLUMBIA, i ington was inaugurated as the first | bor, in honor of one of the owner president, Captain Gray started upon a voyage on which he visited the Pacific coast. Two American vessela, the Columbia Rediviva Jobn Kendrick, and the Lady Washington, Captain Gray, sailed from Boston, September 30 with cargoes of goods for the Indians, They rounded the Horn and s&iled up the Pacific coast to Nootka sound, their object being to engage in the fur trade of the great of his vessel. Many Indians sur- rounded his vessel, rowing out im their big dugout canoes. Gray warned them to keep off, but they advanced, and he opened fire on them. It is this incident which George Davidson has illustrated in his curious drawing which gives a most remarkable rendering of the heights and headlands at the mouth of the Columbia river. On the 1ith of May the Columbia safely crossed porthwest, The two ¥ els, how-|the bar and entered at last the ver, were separated by a storm | mighty river, upon which Captain soon after passing Cape Horn, and| Gray bestowed the name of his the Lady Washington reached the | ship. Oregon t In August, where Captain Gray's discovery of the near the 46th parallel, Captatn Gray | Columbia, together with the explor- ran bis ship aground in attempt-jation of that river and the interior ing to enter an arm of the sea/country by Meriweather Lowis and |which he already had explored in| William Clark, 13 years later, gave mail boats for some miles and/the United States its claim upon the | which he believed to be the stream | Oregon country, and by the treaty hon vaguely known as the River of |of 1846 added 307,000 square miles he West—now the Columbia The | of opulent territory to our domata. ship was attacked by Indians and - seaman was killed and thle ka ke eee k ARK EER was wounded, This attack] » * he ship to bo put to son| » ¥ again. Historians differ as to|* BERRIES ARE SOUR * whether Gray actually visited the} * * me ) A *% Unless the sun come * age hat the flight] 4% warm very soon, W * ith th piace in the| %® Washington strawberries are & Columbia, but Bancroft is inclined | % going to be and there will # to the bellef (hat it was Tillamook |% be many of them. ‘The season #& bay. Gray returned tq Boston on * opened with ications for a ® August 19, 1790. |* big crop, but lack of heat Is & He remained only six week *Y g the berries from & Boston after returning from his|#% maturing. This ts the statement & first voyage, starting for the N * of t Insp © Brown, * Pacift gain ont Mth of Ser * * ber, 1790, U 1 * * the ship Columbia Re i ee

Other pages from this issue: