The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1905, Page 1

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ADVERTISEMENTS THE STAR eLe AN ae PTEO BY The Pioneer One Cent > Paper of the Northwest -_ — NiGH T EDITION. te faisers Determination to LE! sc MIGHT flumiliate France Seems! HAVE WON likely to Cause Another * = pence Disastrous Conflict ES ere PARIS, June 16.--France ‘ = “i eRe F a pouring fom th parts using the market te break fas asked Germany to ex-: what is to be the exact “i. poner sinus g of the proposed con- *: "ied ference on the eiscdas'= my Sunes eae tn me question, for which Germany \ 0S wently sent a note to the (mys Sm ers, before signifying what answer of the French gov- FIRST JOBS OF Fone tieren te tS 8 * * : ent will be. Seances: [ The situation is considered *++++++++r+++++' the frontier to the Sine Sse at the feeling between the "8 diers of the two nations ms high. Several conflicts GILMAN ve occurred and in some EPLAINS es pickets have exchanged ..”: rena) | reemtved | that the $864,000 worth of securities jatotee from the safe of the Duminion, SEA. A CHICAGO DIVINE SAYS OUR WANTS ARE AS THE BANDS _OF THE HAVE YOU TRIE D THE BTAR “WANT ADS6."? WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, JUN WAR. BETWEEN GERMA PROBABLE--SOLDIERSE Chief of Potice Delaney has just word from fellingham Express in the robbery of the Canadian Pacific overiand, near Mission Jauction, last September, have been recovered. A former cetimate of Bill Miner, the alleged Quentin effected bie from it oific the ee California, penitentiary, the recovery of the valum- Miner will not urities coul prosecute 1 never have bees located without his assistance. ¥ persons re-| garding the pr eliative to| Some few weeks after the train the termn of the Moore-Gilman|fobbery occurred, Miner's former] franchiae, which J. A. Moore offered i¢ elimate was eenployed by the Cana- to the corporations committee on| dian Pacific to recover the secort Wedneaday afternoon. D. H. Gitme thea. He came direct to Bellingham, | made thé following statement on| and tinder the name of Brown, has IMIS, June 16.—An official an- make France a second rate power | Friday to The St been conducting the negptiations ot is made that Premier, '? erepe. The kaiser te determined | ‘The city is*to rewerve the right to| for the retarn of the secarities from bas decided to permanently to Ruméfate FP o# and recognizes | purchase the system in 1684, the| that city since that date the position as minister of | ‘i “4, his opportunity, as Brance’s! date of the expit n of the Beat While he was pasting under the atly, Russia, more than her affairs, made vacant by the! ponds full now. The battle of Lioa |e Mieetric company® franctrise, on| ame of Brown, his real mame ie igeation of Delcasse. The selec-| Yang definitely convinced Germany |® Valuation to be fived as moliows: | Jake Terry and that he has served if the new minister of finance | of the military impotence of France's The annual net earnings at that/@ne term ia prison for cownterfalt- be made tonight or tomorrow. | ally. and the possibility of an early | time to bé capitalized on the basts|iMe and enother for smuggling It 4 jreturn to Europe of Russia's Man-| of 4 per cent and the city to pay} ¥* while under a 10-year sentence sc Benth v0 io fre om | if the net earning are $100,060, the | CMe acquainted with Miner. After | eapttalized valuation will be $2.500,.| the two men were released by the | 000, and the city would pay one | | half that amount, or $1,260,000, pay- | ment to be in 4 per cent city war chased. These kinds of warrants under decistons of the supreme court of this ctate do not count against the city's Limit of bonded indebted- {TESRRURG. 16. Japanese advance posts. Other re-| June d Duke Alexis, head of the Rus-| ports from the front state that the | nese Badmiralty department, has re-| rainy season is beginning seoner| “Thus the city would be purchas- RRS than usual, and if downpours con-| ing a gving mas earning § per cope gry ound ce |tinue the military operations must|cent on the amount it pays for the e. No reason is giv t come to a standstill without an | uriners, and only giving therefor armistice. its notes drawing 4 per cent, the other 4 per cent going king (0, Jane 16.—A. EB. Bouguoin ST.PETERSBURG, June 16.—| fund to retire the principal of the an, bas been remandet for Ive thousand employes-at the | Hotes. on a charge of furnishing in- | Putiloff iron works struck today in-other words, the city would n to the Rassian goveru —_— ome the owned of a complete He came to Japan a8 a mili MOSCOW, June 16.—The engt- et railway system withe eve Mttache. M. Stemng. English-| neer’s organization decided to cease | having been compelled to pay a dol paee, 8 stepqon of M. Bouguoln, was) work this evening and will urge all) lar for it | ed because of insufficient) workmen to join in the strike. = é LONDON, June 16.—The Evening | HANGED PL WASHINGTON, D. C., June 16.-—| Standard’s Tokio correspondent ca [SB & rumored here that Minister! bles that the war tendency is still Fa of Japan will be recalled to! strong in Japan and peace prospects | j Lomis aa assistant secretary are unfavorable. DECATUR, Tenn. June 16.—The & The report has it that the — train bearing the three negro con-| mato has requested Griscom's re-| SAIGON, June 16.—The Ruesian| viets, which was wrecked near} 2 auxiliary cruiser Kouban, formerly | Birmingham this morning, react f — the Hamburg-Ame p 6 steamer|here safely under military guard 8 PETERSBURG, June 16 passe Victorta, arrived off this|and the negroes were executed | y Linevitch reports that the) port and asked for cowl suffictent to| without incident. Smith and Colller| 4 turning movement forced | reach the nearest Russian prt. The| were convicted of killing Miss Belle | t ieee to retire from lulantze| vessel did not participate in the| Bicedworth, of Decatur, after | 5 June 11 after burning their sup-| naval battle of the Sea of J. n, | eriminal assault. Jackson killed Of | On June 12 the Russian | having been detached to reconnoiter| fercer Steele, who was trying to ar-| 5 @dvanced from the valley of} on the cast coast of Japar When | rest him. ‘Tein river to the » Of} she heard of the fate of Rojestven —— | ingow, pushing the sky she steamed to thia port eee eee eee eee ee * * igently carrolling from the bouse-|* ,A mass meeting will be . ® at Ma “i hall, West Bea * tops rumors to the effect that cer|% Joig ine tor th : at tain local magnates do not PTO |» te od tes ‘ett F datos, * pose to let Considine enduce them | 4 aoe pei, pesspasih a i da * into such a foolish and self de-| 4 '™*" structive policy +d ERNE Re WEATHER FORECAST. z Cloudy and Occasional Threaten- “ ate _ ling, with Probable Showers Tonigne| BEFORE GRAND JUR} beritt C. H. Lund 18 | and Saturday; Light to Fresh South | a now-a-days and 1% \to West Winds. he marks of several pain CHICAGO, June 16. Pred Gard Mifaries received by being drag- | AN FRANCISCO, June 16.—De-| ner, of the I 1 ee ur 14] & South car, Satur- | 1 ed In apirit and empty of pock 4 Alderman Dixon, of the Dixon tight | 0 farmers hailing from the state nafer company, tentified before wh he was Washi: arrived this m the grand jury tod in the labor “ ar the moto ¢ on th toamer Newport graft investigation. This afternoon a ost on the juice” too soon » %, Panan Over a J. V. Farwell, Dudley ylor a u arid caught in the anc they Invested their savir 1. Hartwell, 5 ent busin pee draxgod for at least a block » society known as the Panama! men, went before jury to give! | Loa nd Impr ment company,| the employers’ side of the sitwatior l0c¢ hich promised them fortunes in| The executive’board of the Interna. | Ma T Panaa rubber plantations: tional Teams Brotherhood held a gnates The men from Washington pur-| another secret session. It is said] ” ay chased round-trip ticketa and de-/the board is making a final effort > - * al there found fever-laden - Te would-be theat swamps instead of rich rubber plan-| NEW YORK, June 16.—Prenjient Pewoter, sgt tations, McArdle, of the Internatio Asso : | aoe ciation of Foundrymen, has ¢ ¢ | NEW YORK, June 16.—Superin®™) pounced that if employers in New t jtendent of Insurance Hendrick #aid| york and New Jersey, gvhere th one |today that he had not yet submit-| strike is now on, refuse to grant ae ted bis report in the Equitable mat-|tnoreas@ of 25 cents a day, he will . _Impres ter to the governor, and declined) exgend the strike over the entire z an bi alto when he string Ban CRair-| country. ~ work “ir jman Morton today terated the — - » h, if true, m nm th “¢ tement that no action would be John F. Johnson, who was arrest acta will be ed at}iaken in r ra to the Hyde-Alex-4 ed last Sunday at Madison park for t prices. ander affair mtit Hendrick’s re-j gelling Mquor, was fined $100 by weverul little birds are | port was filed, ° | ness said that the Canadian Pa- heaition iner a@}daliver the man for a certain sum Sj of California, they wireday Terry stated te am newspaperman ¢ had been accomplinh: came ie section together an@ were aja ha ates for some length of time, |; finally drifted apart » a Bel- hat od his He that while Miner will be al to go soot free the other rob- of the train rob- | BErs will be jugged bers, who wae a prisoner ip the San) Geptain of Police Parberry of ngbam, alvo had certain clews Miner's whereabouts and the railroad to listen to whereby Parberry oney. The road turned = i captain down and gave to Miner's ex-celimal tried to & prop- wae to the po- the job te “The robbery of the Canadian Pa Miner train train by the first and bis gan robbery which road had ever experienced and road, ar well as the Dominion cen company. spent a fortune in chase of Miner the hotbed of all sleuthe wince the robbery ki Kiown that Miner was in that etty | Daeem ber 25 ‘The Reattte police had a good de-| HeUingham has nde of} Tt was! iption of the man and co-operated the Bellingham police | te jand him “Terry, the amatour but successful | notorious smuggler dptective is “MAMMA IS BAD--I WANT TO: KILL HER!” -b/TTLE WILLIE BICHO!. im trying | PRETTY DEFENDANT IN DIVORCE SUIT BOWS HEAD IN SHAME AT WORDS OF SON SWORN TOIN HUSBAND'S AFFIDAVIT es To hear her shame pronounced by handkerchief. her own child! is will be the ordeal of Mrs, Edna Bechol if her husband, Louie Bechol, substantiates the affidavita which contain the ugly charges has brought against her in his sult for divorce. The sensational affi- | davits were read before Judge Fra- ter Friday morning Mra. Bechol, a woman of pronounced in dress, sat tn court room while comely young fast idior the rear the of sworn testimony of numerous persons was the charging her with frequenting boxes in saloons, with going about company of men other tham and with leaving her at home while read in the her husband little boy uncared for she caroused. The demeanor of the pretty young woman was haughty and independ- ent while the affidavits were being? read until an unexpected . phrase caught her ear, then she bowed her head and hid her face with her Volley y of s @f her husband, and it the statement that little Beehol, upon seeing a eaw, had said) poher 17 hewished he might take it and 64W | boxing rules, and I certainly had it that Upon | handed to me on a folding platter,” Ms mother’s head off; Selag asked his reason for t do such # thing he had replied | gijitaring with wrath at the memory his motber|of the battle that he did not like any more, innocently addin It was the affidavit contained Willie wishing | ng prat- tle to the effect that he had wit essed his own mother's shame. Mrs. Bechol’ attorney stated that jone fight under I dhe desired the opportunity of dis ing the charges, and ter continued the purpore of allowing her her defense t she will bring charges feasatinal against the her cross complaint eThe little boy, howev given over to Mrs. McCle quat of the defendant, Sedro-Woolley, to be cared {Hl the settlement of the ¢ solle Bechol f* a laundry qarne $12 a week, Stove Wood Greets Astonished Landlord Poul ©. Harper member Jocal real estate firm of this elty, met with ‘olley of stove wood when h empted to oust tenants ate Thars dea r who refused to v at 1821 Third on John premises the real estate with the r charges » of ane of @ fault and intends to bring desirable tenant into court Harper told Assistant Van of the prosecuting attorney that “John Doe's” wife also fight and that he Place on the run to prevent mix-up. hearing plaintiff ving had to leave 4 serious Judge for to pre It is understood equally in er Han was an at for un ane. ftor and | the un- rderveer, # office, showed “FIGHTING JOE” AND DAVIS’ GRANDSON RIDE IN PARADE LOUISVILLE, Ky. June hee “Pighting Joe” Wheeler and Jetfer: son Hayes Davia, a grandson of = veterans, all of ferson Davia, riding side by side, a with General Stephen D, Lee, | Frisco mmander of the U, C. V. dred thousand p ° A bun gee cheered the | amateur who, jom walked, re-| gl) @Qmatours in his class in one or | fusing carriages, Which were pro- | two rounds, is after honors, Judge Gordon Wridey afternoon, “the eonfederate parade (his gy Vided for about 6,000 in the lina the} THE STAR CRUSADES AGAIN CRE PSM SEATTLE PAPERS CRU VOL, ST GREEDY CORPORATIONS— } SADE FOR THEM ~~ The Only Paper in feattl» That Dares to Print the News ; PER MONTH iY AND FRANCE CHANGE SHOTS “Frankie” Neil Tells The Star of Fights (BY DAN DEAN.) | PLucky LITTLE BANTAM, IN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW, TALKS | Frankie Neil, 21 years old, chan i : pion bantam-weilght pugilist of the } ENTERTAININGLY OF HIS REMARKABLE CAREER IN PRIZE world, race horse owner, capitaliat ING—"STIL H " - " jand philosopher, says he is in Seat RING—“STILL IN THE BUSINESS,” GAYS THE DIMINUTIVE |} tle only on a pleasure trip and not CHAMPION |to offend the majesty of the by causing mars to twinkle before the ny jopticn of some ambitious local} | : but I have wired that I can't fight{is that Tacoma can’t afford to put San nelsco Juntil the first of next month. They|up a big p’ and ¢ inn't yet who has astonivhed the 1 to take Tenny on June|well enough known draw big world by bis remarkable feat nd t the time is too | money { al fight towna.” arena, has been ir ue was only licked on Outs keeping tab on the jopening of the race wht at 118 to 120 5 is | ra S not trying to | Meadows, where he t bot at’s the o fa stir in Seattle, | “ponies” wh he decla ho ring on a few day the more to his credit, | ways in the running n litte figure, clad | Nell ix a queer, democrati he best fight I ever|in “quiet” but hionable cloth jchap and talks inter nkle puckered up| with his stock Ue, his diamond ifing career which ed wh istled tly in per-jruby pin and his big “glim” on hig was a “ki work as a ii ! fon't know. Harry | hand, is well known among the loesll apprentice on the Fran. | 7 ampion bantam ports wit whom the nervy j aminer | welgtt of the id ti! 1 knocked | dimunitiv itam is justly popular, |} “tl got $6 a we and it was hard o as & pretty te propo I'm lea dance now, 4 picking wid Net! to t ‘ r had to figh m more! Frankie it's great sport.” | Thureday The fig ef I took bt title| wa ban ic bngtishinan tecaase t| BIG DAMAGES a) ia) like rut Ang 1 I Sis, i poor] eee dan ee FOR INJURIES ’ apd | i t Tommy Moore looked me days after-| Then Forbes got his again wards, asking me how | would | » ads. William §..Chic was on Friday to make $15. 7 » right of I put it over Hughey | afte $1500 damages in forme, and ft eald, ‘Sure!’ He n tix rounds in Philadet-| ag: ¢, Renton & South. told me that b wante me t ight tha Bowker lad | ern in jes suffered all vig y * championship title | the head In ap ace | n when loft my be jmy old man fc 4 out a ' he I then went to sco, where IT | was protiy dubious yat he wa nocked out Dick Hyland in 16 . ay. von lid un Frankie, notwithstanding that fight you can heap al i. but |.2wnls evan, naretinmanding] B/G BUILDING ou lo { bis fistic encounters, is, with- to hg id ed : sl. anything but bombastic and has COMPLe TLD a e ntertaining reminis found that patron had h t the 5 ¢ senpreh sated hh of wets cemenll ences about the ring and his own | that 1 to fight the éther]""\When asked if his father inalsted | The local offices of the Chicage chap. rap waa {f IM) upon his abandoning the ring at the; & Northwestern railroad received @ when | 1 to the! time he lost bis first fight, he said: |telegram from the home offices im mter of the ring and found myvelf I never lost a fight whieh con-|Chicago Friday morning stating ~ . vinced the old man that the decision | the new building erected for the was an honest one, and he says that | Northwestern lines has been com- as long as I am not licked to a| pleted. The building is 14 stories point where nobody can question |bigh. Its cost is between $1,500,008 the decision 1 can keep right on | and $2,000,000. The three top floors wearing the initts |are fitted with club rooms, reading Neil has been over to Tacoma! rooms and cafe. These are used ex looking over Perey Cove, the Taco-|clusively by the clerks of the road. | ma youngster who is fighting at a speedy elip. ‘ove is @ pretty tough proposi- tio * said the “Frisco boy. “He has a good strong punch and can take ponishment like an Indian. It took Johnson the timit to beat Cove, and if the youngster went down onee, he went down 20 times, Sure, I'll fight the Tacoma boy if there is enough fo it. The trouble New High lor Ne FRANKIE NEIL. facing a big Swede, who weighed about 25 pounds more than I, my knees knocked together like a pair lof minstrel bones. 1 weighed #3| T¢ time for a new high school pounds then. The big chap made @| has arrived few lunges at me, when I clipped! phat the board of directors will vests Dg and down he went [0r/ have to provide more high school E room is now a certainty. That “$15 fight,” as Frankie 4 dubbe It, started him in his career|, THe hundred and cighty-ceven which has brought him many sheck-| "ve already registered for firet beep gbiar gy whe ? year work, and with those who The Frisco bantam bes fought| ter the higher clafess, together thiee fierce comtesta with Hanion. with the newcomers, the school will be so crowded that there will who recently gained a doubtful vic tory over Young Corbett. The first two fights were too close to gain left in the the students not be enough seats recitation rooms for | who desire to study pel Fo ed . i fc | The work was handicapped this Sone year by the crowded class rooms, as Of his recent fight with Joe Bow-|2 Stest many pupils cannot do gat- | ker, the English champion, who was | '#tactory studying in a room where given a decision over Neil. Frankie has much to say in language im pressive if not permissible in the United States mails. “1 fought Bowker in London, Oc last year, under English Norway Has xclaimed the little fellow, his eyes | “I didn't know as much about English rules as a steamboat rustier does about aerial |navigation. They took me to see nglish rules, in om was @ princtpal | which George Di | Both of the boys fought clean and | fast and I couldn't see the differ lence between the English and the American rules So when Bowker and I square off I go to him {n good, old-fashio | Unele Sam style, laying my head on his ehoulder and boring in with my | free hand. | “1 did this for several rounds. Jand the Britisher-looked like he had {swallowed a pint of prussic acid. | Finally the referee said | I soty, old chap, you know—you cawh’t fight that way here, You must stop h'it! Frankie's sarcastic imitation of the British ring official's accent | was delici I quit for a round or two, but boring in is second nature to me, so I thought I'd take another chance, | and in | goes again ‘But Mr, Wise Guy in the flanne! | is next and tells me that if | ‘com mit the h’offense’ again the fight! | will be called and Bowker get the Jlong end of the purse. | That rettles me and T go way jup in the air and lose the fight.” Frankie declares that he has tried |his “d-—dest” to get another crack at the doughty fnglishman, and that the twp boys were off a $20,000 pureé for a round go in New York, but that Bowker backed | down. A San Francisco club of fered to put up $15,000, but could not coax Bowker @vaygfrom his na tive heain “L just THE UPPE! R BULLDING IS A CH INTRY HOU or of Norway is a architecture In is the most. re state of queer its architecture markable in the world «The country fact new Some of the suburban houses America may appear to say about @re last word in the use of shingle but the Norwegian how leave them at the post. It is amazing te see how many roofs a Norwegian architect will stick on a edi professional fice. Of course I'l) we re Bach ia varv steam sn the snow received a telegram from ffering me a fight with! ‘enny, Tenny is a clever having knocked out | Harry a ingle ("Marvin Hughitt president of the {road for 18 years, has always bees an advocate of such a building, and now that his wishes are realized he is happy. This structure is the only one of its kind in America, and hag so successfully made an impression on the minds of the railroad mage J nates in New York and Chicago that several other large roads have decided to follow suit. School a class is reciting. Much time wag lost in getting from one room to another, due to the crowded halls, Considering that the building was only planned to aécommodate 1,400 students, it is evident that the beat work cannot be done when 2,000 are in attendance, although the board has handled them admirably under the circumstances. The time ft past that one high school will be large enough. In an address to the students of the high school last fall, Superin- tendent Cooper sald another build- jing ought to be in course of con+ | struction, as the present one would |prove inadequate before the year was over. Some Queer Buildings URCH AND THE |OWEBR THE A WEALTHY CITIZEN | will slide off in winter, and where one, roof ends aneiher somehow manages to be un@! the lowest touch the'ground, The Tho abund- ountry makes ding nraterial, eaves almost effect is picturesque. j ance of timber in the wood the ch t-bui The town of Bergen, the largest town on the west coast of Norway, and the principal tourist center, le almost entirely built of wood, and | as a result there are frequently dan- earnne fires gt

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