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LAST EDITION VOL, 10. NO, 102. PRINCESS WHO ELOPED ; WITH AUTO SALESMAN THE MINISTERS ATTACK Dr. Van Horn’s Sermon the | Beginning of Race Track Crusade. Will Agitate Question for Effect on the Next Legislature. ‘The ministers of Seattle are pre PRINCESS AMALIE OF FUERSTENBERG. Amalie belongs to the Austrian nobility. She recently ran away BB automobile salesman named Koczian, an exarmy officer. Bprincess and her plebian husband are belleved to be in Eng Amalie is of age and haw a large fortune in her own right aT to New York and will meet Luke B. Wright, the new secretary of war here on Friday. Then he and/ Wright will go to Oyster Bay to! confer with President Roosevelt. | heed ‘Taft expects to return to Washing: | paring to wage & campaign agaiost rd tom Saturday and wind up his bust | horse racing and bookmaking at on ness at the war department and| The Meadows which they hope tara over the office to Wright. The it in having the next leg fe York Gives Nominee 2%, "= s20%¢ ', the hiehont [lmore sucuian poot wus deg praise of James 9. Sherman, the | *tate viece-presidential candidate, and! ‘Dr. F. J. Van Horn, pastor of the a Greatest Kind of = his interviewers with vis-| ptymouth Congregational burch, crouse band shakes Gnd broad) sanded the first gun last night Greeting He said that he expects to spend | When he preached on “Seventy ca | September and October at his home three Days of Racing, Robbing and who [in Cinefamati. | Rate.” Pat Ne yi a —_—— | ‘The matter will be diecunsed this [afternoon and evening at (he meet tn a ling of the Methodist ministers at hee Couple of Hours | aw eae Conn, June 22.—|gouth Park. Rev. WH. W. Rees mn | any we we Dit | will take the matter up and reso . y. “Big BUI” |iutions may be passed ae Then Leaves jot the class of ‘TS, to the old) The pool selling evtl will uo “grade” who gathered at the sta tion this afternoon to greet the re- for Yale. publican nominee for president of the United States. The crowds assembled here to tend the annual commencement (By United Press.) ereives, take the tome that Taft be- YORK, June 22.--William | longs fo them and they are so proud was with loud | of bin that they are planning to when he arrived at the Pen-|¥ake Old Ell up tonight with & there may be no formal discussion atation in Jersey City to- | demonstration that will be a his (of pool selling and racing, bet it was given another evation | tory maker in campus history | will nevertheless be talked about landed at the 23d et. ferry members of claas ‘TS are In| py the pastors It was New York's first cbarke of arrangements and they! ‘The Presbyterian Ministers’ asso ‘of Taft as the candidate 2#ve served notice that it is going ciation will not meet until Septem Teception was up to the ‘© be a “sinm bang” up affatr. No | her but as individuals the Preeby of the party leaders. |%* program has been arranged. terian pastors of Seattle think the ‘Tatt was Frank B. Kellogg, | Th¢ presentation ceremonies of question needs atring counsel for the government ‘he senior clase were held today,, Rev. Van Horn strongly scored the suits against the Standard ‘ith the traditional oration and the bookmaking and pool selling tn I ty. They went directly cls history, followed by the plaat- gonnection with the racing at The Hotel Manhattan, where |!m@ of the ivy on the campus. [Meadows He sald that the book & conference on trust) aca ie. ca ee makers played a system that could Mrs. Taft and her dangh-| Free Port for Yokohama, | not lose, ard that each year some ar the Manhattan to greet| YOKOHAMA, June 22.—Dr. Tax! mon and women of this city were jist, formerty the vice sinister of | involved tm financial or moral ruin ‘Taft lett for New Haven, | Onance of Japan, In a pablic speech | as a result of the races to attend the Yale com today urged that Yokohama must; Rey. Van Horn stated that the t. He will go to New| become a free port like Hamburg, | racing Would sot be tolerated much me to witnews the Yale-Har- | so that Japan will receive the bene jlonger by the public, and that he ’ beat races on Thursday. fit of increased commerce by way! expected the legislature to abolinh New London he will retarn of the Panama canal. it next year "SEASON FOR CANVAS-BACK PL doudtedly be the subject of stirring resolutions introduced at the Bap tist conference at Kirkland some time this week Several ministers have announced their intention of starting the discussion. The Congregational ministers hold their annual plenic this after noon at Bellevue, and consequentiy & en ATFORMS IS NOW OPEN ! jiAe| i = PART Ya9PLATE MOB AT RENTON CHASES AWAY SHERIFFS DEPUTIES SEATTLE RESTAURANTS ARE INSPECTED WILL FIGHT MEADOWS’ TRACK 5 BEM SEATTLE STAR SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1908. PRICE ONE CENT MUST WASH CHARGE OF THREATEN DISHES | JOBBERY BODILY CLEAN | MADE = HARM Health Department Starts|Evidence Found of Effort Angry Coal Miners Resent | Crusade * gain. to Count Out Refer- Arrest of Saloon- Restaurants. endum Petition. Keepers. | Man Detailed to Guard!Names: Declared to Be (Offenders, Brought to Se-| | Against Spread of Worthless Found on j aattle, Plead Guilty and Disease. City Poll Lists. Pay Fines. | enna | Following an editorial suggestion Pvidence tending to show that With cries of “Down with the in The Star, a special crusade te} the petition for a referendum vote | sheriffs'”-and » the prisoners | to be undertaken by the health de jon the Sutherland liquor lloense,| away from th: bora!” a howling partment towards correcting IAx | welch wax declared lacking the nec | mob of 600 men, women and ebil methods in washing dishes which | elmary number of signatures, was/ dren surrounded Special Deputy are said to exist to many of the }@eliberatety ‘counted out” de | Sheriff C. B. Peyton and Deputy | Sheriff George Leighton at Renton Numerous complalate bave reach James Lee yesterday afternoon, as the officers ed the office of Health Commie | Mackay sioner Crichton which tend to show |@. D. Hamlin, attorney that in many of the city’s public Interested in the protest which har | eating places little attention t« paid) been made against the license to cleanliness by disbwashe | made a casual inepection of the A special tnepector is now spend. | petition this morning and found rants | that the “checking off process in way the city comptrotier's office had that he bas accomplished much val.| H#Bér developed a remarkable the druggist; W. D the real eetate man, and local re ante poaseee today ' were taking six saloonkeepers to Beattie for Sunday closing law Eaged on by a score of drunken coal miners, the mob pressed closer and cloner to Peyton and Leighton. and had pot they exhibited a cool disregard for the threats of the who are violating the ing his time inspecting reat and officta’ the department on of mistakes or had involved work th correcting MART | deliberate fraud om the uable part of © by whisky secured from most of his time in improving’ Eleven names were picked at groggeries whose proprietors were! y cou mu ed, hurted ugly threate at meeral sanitary conditio: fandom from those unted out, arrested, hu . a ois NC wy and out of thie lst the investi Peyton and Leighton, and some of It te the intention of the depart’) gators found that nine were actual. them even advanced with threats of ment to assign another man for) ly registered voters, The same violence Svidently a the special work of looking had been crossed out as ineligible | closer inspection of Peyton's fear ik Gebectitng clone hy the clerks who had charge of less attitude discouraged the lead ‘. wt the count on the ground that they ers, for none were bold enough to fow him to remain at the job until) were not legal voters ‘ay hands on the officers the desired reforms are adopted by | Voted Last Spring. As Peyton and bis prisoners ap all restaurant proprietors | tt was found that the signers in| PTosched the interurban station the Bioventy Dishwashing. ! 3 : mob formed a perfect jam ton Wiese cases were not only resi* | himself was loaded down with evi-| into and to ab Accordian, to the complaints be vor liaise awe venthot the beni oo see jdence tn the form of bottles of | fice, food is often served to cus) Chief Clerk Upper was imme| *Rinky i tomers in many restaurants OB diately notified of the fact that! Where's your evidence?’ yelled plates which plainly show thelsomething was radically wrong | %¢ drunken miner, “Show us your hasty and inefficient washing| with the count, and h ied thas | SVoSCeee, and t bet yen Gent get which had been administered in the! the petition would be checked |'°, Seattle with it Aid kitehen. Scraps of food and grease pif again, after he had satisfied |. a right hae Hoe So gue on knives and forks left from the bimself of the errors by a per-| ere and arrest these ment’ de-| preceding meal, are Just reminders | somal investigation wanded man, whom Peyton says | of a sloventy dishwasher 1 “L will got any we have been| "a* M. C. Walsh, a correspondent | It ie believed that the evil i¢/jopbed,” said Mr. Mackay "but | fT local morn —_ S oiiaiea ne largely confined to the cheaper ret !wome one has certainly tried to] ay ee: Sa ae the} taurants and those places of thin fob us, It does not seem reason. | '*¥ bv Se et eee class which do not employ union! ABle to suppose that It could be a| *¥ered Peyton | | Officers Are Jeered. This statement was greeted with derision, cat calle and Again the drunken miners, | urged help, although the condition exists | aitstake In all the cases, Out of tin some of the higher-priced places.) the first cleven names we picked [In many of the cheap eating places at random we found that nine it Is enid to be frequently the case were om the poll books. It is hard | that dishwashing Is turned over to ly likely that the clerks could have |atranded men and boys who are failed to see all of these names for they are there in black and groans safe in the rear of the mob. those in front to Hberate the j willing to work for a few days oners, The saloonkeepers under for their board. Having no knowl | white. arrest, Joseph Carey, D. M. Hagen, | edge of the proper methods of Wilt Hold Up License. KE. R. Treharne, W. H. Jones, Rob-| | washing dish or appliances with ‘The Comptroller han stated that | ¢ Dobdgon and L. J. Cross, made! which to work, the combination | ne would hold up the license until |" attempts to encotrage the mob naturally resuits In dishes cleaned | another count could be made jand when the interurban pulled into jin a slovenly manner and which) yr Lee did not care to discuss | Renton the saloonkeepers boarded jare actually believed to be @ mew-| ene question at length. He «ave | the coach voluntarily |ace to health . . When Peyton and his men w ff as hie opinion that some under-| | WNEM Oren weave Bote | Danger of Disease hand work had been indulged in,|*board, the mab Kayo & prolonged | There {* danger of transmitting and thought it + IY Rael eerofre geen aa me feeagpens | disease through careless washing it should have taken two and a half 1 jot restaurant dishes. It te lar months to check up the Olive st fila. snorsitini inn, tke: cbieaeinie and a transient trade, and in regrade referendum petition . paded uilty to e8 0! | little or no distinction can be ohly five days to check the names po gg rn 5 ag Se _ es |werved.. Usually it is out of the 0m the liquor license petition, com] or ot g75 Peyton announced question to note whether a res} taining approximately the same) ee en tion to watch the aa jtaurant patron is sick or well. In Rumber of signers loons of Renton Sunday in jthe very nature of thi those} the future, and ation of the | who patronize restaurants pass in| | law will result in arrests. jand out in a crowd, and unless the} } | dtahes are carefully washed after> ed being used, the next customer} * stands a chance of absorbing some } * MEMBERS OF THE PAPER disease germs left by the fiatron} TRUST FINED. + | who preceded him * * The (By United Pri best method of cleaning | dishes is aid to be the scalding MARINE ON THE BATTLESHIP * NEW YORK, J 22 * * * . * * process, This is used in practical |® Federal Judge today * ly all of the better class restaur-| "CONNECTICUT {8 ROBBED,|* fined 24 manufacturers of * ante and cafes, but many of the} |® Manila paper $2,000 each on & smaller places do not attempa any| (THEN THROWN OVER HIGH|® pleas of gullty ts the charge * such process of safeguard( the! * of violating the Sherman anti. # | health of thelr ality here an CLIFF AT FRISCO. |@ trust law. Twenty-three mem. * Hkely their dishwasher confines his Caen amen * bers of the alleged combina- * operations to a hasty drenching |® tion were indicted by the fed- * with luke-warm water, an equally (By United Press.) ==» | & eral grand jur week, * hasty wiping with a greasy rag and) SAN FRANCISCO, June * and anothe guilty * the dishes are sent out to the pext The police are today trying *® without being tr * customer robbers who killed * * Tracey, a coal pesser on the US. lg ye eee ee RR RR Peete eee eee et eee S Connectiont, and threw the body ~ * * off the higest wf Telegraph 6 H & BANK CLEARINGS, —& hill. “The pw © saiors| SEEM EIRESS * ® body and the fracture the skull — * Seattle. * Indicate that he was pably kite] City Detective vs Byrne ts ® Clearings today $1,393,260.66 & od and thrown off th looking fe Mise € fe I Sylver |@ Balances 122,459.81 @ Tracey wee last Rar who | upposed to live in * Tacoma. * bary Coast last night with a whole wattle According to a letter re i’ today...$ 590,085.00 * nth’s pay in his pockets, and|ceived by the police the young * noen 16,106.00 & it thought that he was lured to) woman ts heire to a small leg . Portland. * his death by thugs, But 30 cents|acy ‘left by her uncle, Arthur Mil # Clearings today... .$1,200,441.00 # | was found in the pockets of the|ton Devaney, of Springfield, 0. A | *® Balances 186,191.00 ® Head man. He was a native of Fall|M. Spinning, who wrote the letter le * | Hiver, Mass, and had been in the| believes that the young woman Is lee eee ee ee DAVY bul one year in Seattle or vicinity Am ity THE WEATHER FAIR TONIGHT AND TUESDAY; WARM- ER TUESDAY; g/enT EAGT WINDS. FLORENCE OAKLEY. NEW YORK, June Florence Oakley, an actress unknown on the Great White Way until the last fortnight, is going to become famous. David Bélaseo has taken her under hix wing and will make star of her Mine Oakley is only 18, and as her next birthday doex not come until January, she will be not only the youngest star in the Belasco camp, but the youngest of any importance on the sta Miss Oakley is a Kansas City girl Two weeks ago #h went to New York as a member of Paul McAllisters Stock company, and IN TWO WEEKS, GIRL OF 18 BECOMES A BELASCO STAR she madea hit instantly. Belaseo’s attention was attracted by a reports, and one night he slipped into the theratre to see her presentation of the widow im Prince Karl.” He was so impressed that he im mediately sought aod obtained ber signature to @ contract. He has two plays with stellar roles that fit ber, but has not decided In which to place her. Mise Oakiey bes played in Sam Francisco, Kansas City and Clevé- elty unknown Cleveland until two weeks ago. mob, it is probable that bloodshed might have resulted | pote Many in Mob Drunk. | } The leaders of the mob, inflam is, but this man has devoted) some one. ed the e BUMP FOR BOSTON Smart Set of Hub City Is Grilled Severely by Minister. Baccalaureate Sermon Is Cause for a Great Sensation. (By United Press.) UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, Ore., June 22.—"There are women in Boston who send poodles to hear Caruso. They get their dogs’ nails manicured. In. deed, | have seen doggies taken to ride in coaches for their health. } | | | | } | And a maid would go along to hold } @ paraso! over each one. With this arraignment of Bos ton's smart set in his baccalaureate sermon to the graduating class of the Untversity of Oregon, the R Herbert 8. Johnson, pastor of the Warren st. Baptist church of Bos ton, has created a stir in local so- tety jes, and those who heard mon are today discussing the with much int st the marked dif. ference between social conditions in the Hub city and those under which they liv ‘The speaker also recalled the ar rangements they made for a recent Eastern ball where $100,000 worth of imported butterflies were turned » delight th: He was loose guests. dealing with social problems, poodle dogs aristocracy in contrast with the working people of the} country Human Cogs in World Why, do you know,” he asked that I have a friend back East who takes city children for fresh air an that some of them struck because the milk was yellow and and not blue and thin like the kind the rich children had at home? There are children five years of age in Boston who have never seen a blade of grass, Such as these are re cogs and pulleys n the world The preacher then referred to Reston society leaders and t ir poodles Society Is Scored. At a ball in the home of a New Jersey belle, after wine of the cost st kind had been served,” he continued, “and after the hall had been decorated with American beauties bought for $12 per doses, the father turned loose thousands of yellow, gaudy-colored butterflies to flutter about unti! they fell from exhaustion under the feet of the dancers. And these butterflies cost not less than $100,000 while four blocks from the ball room there were women earning through the whole week, only $4 Dr, Johnson graduated from the University of Oregon in 1889, His father was its first president, ARE DYING FROM THE Terrific Wave Hits Chicago and Deaths Are Recorded. Prostrations Are Numerous and no Relief Is in Sight. (By United Press.) CHICAGO, June 22.—This city today is again in the grip of a ter rific heat wave, and before noon two deaths and a dozen prostra- tions were reported. William Hobson, 55 years old, a walter, dropped dead in a down town alley. Frank Pass, 35, was overcome by the heat and died in a swoon at Lagrange, a suburb. The weather bureau promises no relief until tonight. In the business section the pave- ments and stone walls are throwing off heat waves, and it is so op- pressive that it is hardly possible to walk on the stre In many of the crowded offices and in sweat shops and = similar places where women workers are employed the suffering is intense. Electric fans seem ly to kee the hot air stirring ief. The hospital have ¥ orders to prepare to give swift at- tention to heat vietims, and am- bulances are kept in readiness. Reports from the packing house districts say a number of prostra- tions have occurred there among the foreign workmen The torrid atmosphere has given the city, famous for its hustling, @ tropical languor,