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7 THE SEATTLE ~.w— TA. HOME- 7 wo I MEE 00 o SEA'PTLE, WASHINGTON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, '09, THE MOST BECOMING SUMMER STYLES |NVEST|pIT | oe Wann case, Twkr Yue COLLAGE Bove WR KING | STEAMSHIP INSIST ON THEIR HORSES WEARING, } t Marine Inspectors Testimony in Order to | Fix Blame for the Loss ii — Take W. H. Simpson, a Window THE SEATTLE TEN PAGES ONE CEN’ 5 FAM MANY SLIP INTO TH TEATH STORY 4 -yp F ponune WINDOWEILL THRUH NEW SE Washer, Is Victim of Terrible Accident at the a University Regent fp a Very Desirable THE MERRY WIDOWS Wit Be POPULAR WITH THOSE WHO HAVE SEEN THEIR Mares DRAGGED TO of the Yosemite. Hundreds Have Entered White Building. | the Grounds, Using the CUPID GETS A FEW | silinotaiinai ‘Thing in These Days of | THE GLUE FAC TORY. | The investigation into the cause W. H. Bimpeor 43, a wid KNOCKS IN DWORGE Manholes, Where 9 jutedmer Youemite, belonging from & window on the tenth .f — }D, Hillman, off Port Washington! of the White bu Iding at 9:40 this - ~ Manson eee of all the passengers were par Every bone in his body was broken __— out of several hundred admissions of the National Bank ¢ alsen, Was begun thik morning It and Internal Injuries were #u®| FRANK E, WELTY 18 GRANTED |q rowd of et the San tt! sft the office toamboat inspec: | tained a mploye 9 ree of Sea r tore, in the Fe } bullding. Marine Simpson was washing the wir OEORES BY JUDGE th trunk sewer eted dged member of the | Inmpeote Whitney and Turner| dows in the office of A. J. Bpecht GILLIAM through the fair grounds ther ents of the Uni |took the evidence 04 White building, and had not suecsummsanaian friends, relatives, acquaintances and af regent | The first witness called was the | fastened his safety belt to the ledge A ee pin kainan ae of Washington | |chief cook, a Japanese, whose testl-| Hoe was standing on two boards on| Prank B. Welt lubman and | some strangers, have been making Died thereby hangs a tale | }mony Went to show that one of the | (he fire escape and tn some way he| president of the Welty Investment | thelr ent to the fair grounds p Ae 7 ‘ : jauartermasters, who claimed to be) minsed his footing and fell head-| company, was granted a divorce | through the capacious tunnel of the Duietly, and with a determin | Mandate FREE DELIVERY }in the pilot house at the time of the | jor trom his wife, Gertrude M. Welty, | new sewer, and up through a man en wort! f t e Yee STVLE REMmaing vounel’é striking, was In fact in the} The window on which be trom his wife, Gertrude ™ y of a better cause he window on which he was), he nfa court thi - hole to the fair ground 1% Site | UNCHANGED | kaltey |working is above the Inside court |!" Judge Gilitam’s court this morn “ 0 ' ve ds, we is in Seattle have for) | The next witness was William /and near the new Henry building, | !o8 he wcheme of free admission ; , tomary, & steward, who hat| which is being constructed. Simp. tr, Welt arried in Den-| Was discovered yesterday by Chief months—for yea in ' & steward, who stated t . & constru imp Mr, Welty wos marr a {fort “ as he knew Captain Michael | son etruck a scaffolding on the new! ver in 1904. He charged bin wife | Wappenstein'’s guards, after they oe ¢ ery « ver ee bent st 5 fe ea ing rs ‘ayy hr gre aa aaa bad abentones ag Welty livet | pad been working a week on the ¢ rol t ae j hour after that time, he sald, he} {ow and ao on till the body reached| That was not the only blow that | ©##*. lying fn wait along the fences, versity board of regents | went to the captain's eabin, but he|the skylight over the first floor Cupid got in Judge Gilliam’s court | Guarding the lake front and trying T interests are those in jeauld not open the door, ax the ship | court this morning. Grace and Jobn all manner of schemes to discover \ ‘ WR FETCHING FOR had Heted so much as to cause It! As the man bounded from one Francis Dolan, married but a few | whey came the groups of mi oh of the meteopoltan) BLONDES to jam. When he fing uceeeded | platform to the other like a huge | short months ago, in January, were) |, area each evening walk ny, Which com-| jin geining admission he found &)rabber ball the rebound caused him set asunder, She charged drunken Sige the . Shey * A eas } }womin sented in the esbin. He did | to turn over and he did so so many ness, cruel and inhuman treatment | I UP ve ey from oO pen holds a SO-year lease on} hot know whether the captain War! Umer that every portion of his body ,and nonsupport, alleging her hus bo srt te ES oe — pion st. property of the or not at the time had struck before he finally | band had given her but one dollar pli BOM GEO GRUNGE Deere q A . | The case will be continued to-| reached the inside court since their marriage sity of Washington | morrow afternoon at 2 o'dock He was taken at once to Provi-| Corsey Van Horne Du Bose was Here Was a Mystery. Gov | back broken, all that is left dence hospital, where he |granted a divoree from her hus-| “The mystery of the muddy shoul- | With all tha t her iT wae ox i & a \aesped Hay been | of the old } y mite sul! hang#/amined. it is a wonder to the doc. | band, Tascar P. Du Bose, a snles-\ dere,” from being a sort of jok totheinfluence | acroen the feet, which proved her|tors that he was not killed jp. mar Sherman, Clay & Co. They |among the guards, became a serious . i i j lunddiag. All that Was valuable and | stantly were married in Callfornta in 1904. | matter when Chie: Wappenstein pertain selfish interests | | portable-within her haa beon car The alimony has not been decided | learned that the exposition was los- tle, the board of | t : iT | ried away ‘on scows kee ee Ree RA EER Epon, The Du Boses live at 1317 Ing probably more th 00 w day on i i THIS DAINTY LITTLE MODEL éetipetes - * WEATHER Fi Third av because of the mysterious entrance ints of the state univer- | HT) ADASHING CREATION. VERY oF pp apeiech be PERSIAN | | vi ORECAST. § “Jonnie Smith was granted an ab-|to the fair grounds dnow be compos- | pe dl AND VIOLETS 18 VERY | | # Fair and warmer tonight # | solute divorce from J. F. Smith, on| An Inspection of the fences was tte : POPULAR WITH ICE WAGON LACE and Thursday; ght north * the grounds of nonsupport. ‘They |ordered, but revealed no break or g the majority of | AND BREWERY HORSES. BECOMING TO LARGE TRUCK, * east winds were married at Myera Falls in |opening. Meanwhile the number of B would be kindly dis- HORSES | SERRE ee me) April, 108 muddy shoulders increased datly, en ¥ t is the Metro- — ee J = = = —— coos | pecially in the evening, and every Building company. | NOTED WOMEN VISITORS pt Hay, however, re an effort was being scar, ___ GIVEN ROYAL WELCOME he 38 + baa of | | While International Dele- John C. Higgins, al gates See the City, the P Seattle lawyer who | National Delegates Hold | be “absolutely depended b protect the interests of | First Meeting. y. | While the National Counell of ¥ for lw ; here thi Bwhen the term for] somittina THAT HI6 HUNTING | WOme™: Which convenes here this PATTEN AGAIN RAISES WHEAT CHICAGO, Joly M-—James Pat ten cungingly perfected a coup on the bears today that brought out an advance of seven conts a bushel in the July option of wheat here, the ¥ by the appointment Staff Correspondent of the United gatos, who arrived late yesterday, Presa. | dG. Cosgrove, an-| ; a | were taken for a tour of the elty | NAIVASHA, B. EB. A., July 14—! 1. sutomodiles and every courtesy lawyer who can! , cose 7 Although Colonel Ki velt te possible shown the from depended upon to re-| laughing today over his recent ex- | other nations visitors tard a few weeks |supply was exhausted and they bad jignity) tour of the city followed oe Hay was taken | little food left. | SMe og They arrived at a pool of water) and made a hurried late Sunday when they were in a| Each machine in the long string j serious condition from thirst. Col-| that started from the private train | Roosevelt would not let any of bis| which will take the international and thelr stroggles hereto- }been led into to cover were on a scale fore unknown. Fair Guides in Charge. July wheat soared to $1.25. At noon the closing hour oe APPEAR cen on Page 7. s neti lcompanions drink from the pool | delegates to Portland this it touched $1.26 the niachine in most instances act CHARGE if Mra. William Pitt Trimball, who! PTR A 5 | until the water had been bolled. was owned by one of Seattle of five and one-haif pointe over the ed as guide and told her guests the | is chairman of the local entertain rit} TH j ment committee, had her hands full | | | she one the big touring cars, and taal | eu WILL | be x {nent club women and the owner of| opening price. July ARE ARRESTED FOR points of interest along the route she showed remarkable ability in| | B Hf. Richards and Onle Cutting. seeing that the visitors were plac drivers for a Second ay, store, were E bot appoint my chief dep | th days yet,” said Ab he ed in machines with friends. § this morning. Mr. |arrested last night by City Detec | Sedalia bape ian | the” brilliant contumes, the Bas Yesterday promoted tives Adams and Ryan on @ charge)” After the tour of the city, along) Society Women of Seat. | mens is sure to bo a decided hit BPMY county assessor to as-|of petty larceny. It ig charged 1) 11. beautiful boulevard, then skirt | Two hundred soctety people are in ie succeed bis fathor, Thom-|the complaint that the men bad (ov payee aor mimi Lie wie| tle Will Represent Dance |the production. in dances of all na been making petty thefts from the stock of the store. One waa fined $25 and the other escaped on a sus pended sentence. Part of the plunder was returned this morning, after It wae recovered | The appointment was county commissioners. Parish will take charge of ‘s office tomorrow. Hin then for Olympia to on €6 4 member of the } tax commission. rr gates were taken to the exposition grounds, The gates of the grounds| | were throwh open and the {ilustri lous visitors from other countries) were welcomed in true Western! atyle. ers of Many Nations at Big Kirmess. It ie novelty, more than beauty that is I the international delegates and the) have a combination ed. Every detail was carefully ear | _ —__ ———| ried out and the luncheon proved) Sometimes we & success In ever wonder what It te that packs the good vaudeville the atres to the doors, and in most cases we decide that It Is the nov of the acts that attracts respect Prettily Decorated. The New York Building Mrs. Seleocal to the corner where a tobacco store is kept Tells Broken Story f She thought that he was simply which Is 7 her husband, who has *uuled. since 9 He was a man, according to the y ' junday after-| woman's story, who never drank to|few hours’ duration, and the next nearly frantic seepvearan eof her hus Mays, has been a The stay there will be of but a/just the same Mies Stewart whispered that it nighta, sharpest advance noted for many a) quick to discover the trap they had! During the firat hour of bidding, | A net advance) Ll After brooding for a week over some trouble between herself and | VER AN END | her @weotheart, Amelia Miller, domestic, @mployed at 223 lath av took ecarbolle acid ig and was found by her mis Nn, this morn | treea shorily before 9 o'clock room to ascertain the trouble, and found her dead, with the odor of) y7/ Under: | ° Little fe known of except that she age. She had only been employed jhere for five weeks and little of JULY GOES UP SEVEN CENTS! her affairs was known the earboliec acid in the room. taker = Bi According to J. Howard Stine, su)” 4 z perintendent of playgrounds, moth-| tions of those who will prate of it, erm should Interest themselves suf. ficiently in their children’s welfare to have them patronize the play grounds, Four are already in oper ation and are fully equipped with nds are Apparatua utterworth leharge of the body The gre has lo'clock in the evening TO tiona, from the Wigwam dance to! \the Merry Widow waltz. Each dance NIGH IN NOVEL ROLES al woman an 30 yours of It te sald, | tain young | condition that had to be met, but not to be remedied When | the president of the S$ week, wae settling down to the jhowever, that a f “S Hartman had] PARTY WAS IN PERIL, HE |e eee the convention in an AND SHORT SELLERO ANE \fape, eth whom. she was intaty expired, Gov-| SEES FUNNY SIDE, cebatted olaainn (ik antaina, S40 CAUGHT IN HIS TRAP. aad threw her down and she de very wisely over-} in the Auditorium at the exposition gy oon re ped A this | Hartman and filled) BY WARRINGTON DAWSON, | grounds, the International dele-| (he Calied Press.) lmorning, her mistress went to her CANT BE DOD There is every indication that the charges involving the a judicial integrity of the supreme court are to be bottled up, and |the men responsible for these charges punished Attorney De Wolfe had no need to exercise any but a superficial judgment to be certain that the legislative commit- tee would avail him nothing That was a conclusion foregone, ow, with no very great hope, he makes his appeal to ate Bar association, asking that a com Whether or jridges will judge it proper to heed the request of De Wolfe remains to be seen mittee be named to examine the charges not President If President Bridges sees taken | fit to ignore the communication of Mr. De Wolfe, he will not feo » ine Detlences on the desert, it is known | ‘Thirty automobiles, whose mono-| Y¢4r be outside iM-tthat the party was in peril while grammed door panels and liveried| Patten has quietly been borin | SHOULD SEND CHILDREN jon its way to the Attendborough | chauffeurs bespoke wealth, left the up all the available epot wheat in! by Surpri: estate, where it arrived last Mon: | inion station, each bearing its ca- sight | prise. |day, The party went into camp on pacity of delegates from the Inter-| With no cash wheat to deliver! TO P. Sawyer resigned |{B* Plaine Saturday night. The | national Counell of Wo who upon the contracts they had sold,! 7 | hunters were fatigued, their water! 5. here for the day only, and a de short sellers of the ‘July were! er closed at! from 9 o'clock In the morning until! $1.26%, touching $1.27 just before! 12 nodn, and from 7 p. m. until 8:30) open |find himself without praise in the columns of a portion of the | press, for the press, not less than the bench, have been found a profitable instrument for the aggrandizing corporations There will be much printed concerning the necessity of retaining popular reverence for the supreme bench, a reverence which does not exist, as a matter of fact, even in the imagina- There is no gainsaying the statement that there is a large proportion of the people of the state, including lawyers, who We still have as precedents decisions by former Justice Gordon believe that the supreme court is not what it should be. which control decisions handed down today, and in the popu- | lar memory rankles the conduct of another former member of | that tribunal, who can hardly lay any claim to reverence. T | Admitting that the wrongs done by these two have been | tho roughly aired, there are several other charges and rumors that worthy of consideration. Either there have been “leaks” from the supreme court, in advance of the filing of are decisions, or there are some clever persons in this state with | the gift of clairvoyance so well developed that the possessors are willing to wager their money on their accuracy For instance, the Chehalis county division case. That an an set by fteelf and each inter. Ofganized crowd of men should put money into a pool for the | spersed with is the Kirmens tion of Women's Clubs, In honor of {and charm as well as novelty you | Chidren's hospital songs. The whole |opening with a grand parade, This men hard !and girle will dance thin week to purpose of betting on a decision of the supreme court looks sus- picious at the least. There can be no popular reverence as long jas this Chehalis incident is unexplained, and the explanation must be convincing. here are several other cases of a like nature that will be |from the home of Richards The luncheon and reception nloe charm that is wld to attract All for Children. = Ss \the New York Building, which was! os vin yon have beauty |. The proceeds of the Kirmons will Ts given by the Washington Federa ™e™ Du page i awell the fund of the Orthopedic called to the atfention of the State Bar association committee help the tiny little sufferers of this elty to some the sunny sky night day dance out under} There will be a performance day afternoon ing tion July 6 UF. da to Thursday, Friday and Satur day evening and a matinee Satur-| should such be appointed Star is well aware of the | The | Wolfe, that is, being contemplated to act as a counter irritant action against Attorney De against his charges, and equally well aware of the means that Fortunately for Mr Teats, some other form of punishment will have to be provided will be utilized to bring about this end De Wolfe and his chastisement, there will be more said later, For the present, it is decidedly up to President Bridges, of the State Bar association, to appoint a committee to investi- going after a cigar, but since then | splendidly adapted to such gather yu Will find more novelties on) + . m " b - o yur of Ddrilllant dane’ » Mayor Miller. Says) nothing has been seen nor heard |ings, was decorated for the affalr| ang program of the Kirmees, which a imo, howre of | briiiant dancing Was Model M from him. Y@8sterday Mrs. Hicks|Aand tho visitors expressed them-| jong thin evening at the Moore atte society. You cannot atford to ; fan. — | went to the Barber Asphalt Paving| selves as delighted with the oppor-| theatre, than on any vaudeville bill |Mtle woclety. | You cannot afford to | At ployed, and drew his wages,|ed by estorn | restzated with eriet and eee iniing to $24.76, Aw for money, | This afternoon the ladies wero| Rehearsal a Success, | Hicks of 214\ she knows that he did not have|the guests of the exposition and| Tho dress rebearen! last night) SHEFFIELD 18 NAMED. % called upon Mayor Mil more than $2 in his pockets at the | Jontah Collins, chairman of the en-| was like all dress rehearsals.) ww. MM, Sheffield was appointed Reming and tisportuned time, vo the robbery theory is|tertainment ‘committer, showed) mighty discouraging for AW con: temporary receiver for the A-Y.-P i $ t \them about the grounds. jeerned, but It was @ suecessful one! News by Judge Gilliam this morn-| gate the charges, with the realization that the legal antecedents The paper suspended publica Stevens and excens, and Who always came home | stop will be at Balt Lake City, After) more than came up to her expec John J. McGrath were the publish Alt during their fifteen | this the trip will be through to Col-| tation, and when the stage director | ors, and connections of every member of the committee will be open to the closest scrutiny, THAT SOONER OR guard in the district back of the forestry and machinery bundings reported scores of cases where he observed men coming up the paths from the Lake Washington shore, brushing dirt from their shoulders, All sorts of men were observed, some in laborers’ clothes, some well dressed, some apparently young college men, The puzzle was a tan- talizing one to the eblef of guards, They didn't climb the fence, they didn't crawl under the fence, they didn't come off the lake, The chief could think of nothing else, unless they came by alrehip. The muddy | shoulders were his only clew. The Sleuths Succeed. | Yesterday afternoon the mystery was solved by the discovery of hun- dreds of footprints that had beaten down the soft earth around a man- hole leading out of the new sewer, where it passes through the woods near the N. P. Railway track, back of the Natural Amphitheatre. Climbing down the manhole, the guard found at its foot a big torch made of rags soaked in oll. Light- ing this, he proceeded northward along the sewer, which is new and clean, never having been used, and large enough for several men to walk abreast*in. He came out a quarter of a mile to the northward, outside of the fair grounds and on |the university campus, just above the university boat house, where work is now in progress on the sewer, Here another torch was found. | Two Other “Entrance: | Further lovestigation showed two other open man-holes inside the fair grounds, one located back of the Michigan building, and another just below the raflroad track oppo- site the Great Northern Railway's locomotive exhibit. About each were signs of much traffic, where the men with the muddy shoulders have been entering the fair grounds, The dirt on the shoulders was eas- itly explained by the small size of each manhole, where the men must have brushed against the sides as they came out. Chief Wappenstein is of the opin- ‘fon that employes on the sewer, dis- covering how it led into the fair grounds, spread the glad tidings, un- til hundreds were using the “North- | west Passage,” as it has been nick- ‘named, daily, The existence of the subterranean passage {fs said to have been a secret in the bosom of several university fraternity houses, and the college. men did not hest- tate to slip into the grounds through the secret tube. After solving the mystery of the muddy shoulders, Chief Wappen- | stein quickly clamped on the lids of the manholes, and hereafter any wayfarer in the under ground en- trance will find himself barred from the grounds above. | Caught in the Act. Last night Chief Wappenstein de- tailed Private Gassert and Patrol- man White to wateh the manhole be- hind the Ampitheatre, and at 8:30 the officers rounded up six men as they came up from the tunnel, All were young fellows living in. the nelg rhood of the fair grounda, and they admitted that the tunnel jentrance was well known to them nd their acquaintances, and regu- larly used, None of those were laborers on the sewer, which confirmed the theory that the un derground entrance has been exten- several hundred men, arrested sively used by at least After » tightly closed, the the manholes arrests y years of married life they haye not|orado Springs, thence to Denver|says that, you know what to ox i | ONE THING Is CERTAIN: _800 R te men arrested wero locked up that he got had a quarrel or any trouble that and back 6 ee rea pi Gane = ie |* * Aad iP PERERA Ray * *| LATER SOME ONE WILL GET TO THE BOTTOM OF i hag to hours and then put tinder atternro” (he | Would lead a man to leave bie home| ey Connell of Women will begin| national dance? A costume dance? | Yeutorday's adits $| THIS SUPREME COURT MUDDLE, AND THE SOONER |hjiny fave thelr names as Kmnett ‘ i tor A moment, before the chief of police, who dis-| tomorrow morning, The meetings) aanere sre rnore dances than BOP HMO aes 7 s1T IS DONE AND OVER WITH, THE BETTER FOR Catinhan, Clade Gattertnan Harold ito the house, patched a detective to her home for| will be held at the Plymouth Con- Hy ne Sie ae a pretty girls, ‘otal admissions,...1, [ALL CONCERNED, oh batten anie mikes aml walke to- | further information, gregational church, Not overlooking |p eR RR RRR ROR OR i |