The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 9, 1909, Page 8

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me ne ; OOP i H hi | ree | \ ! (Hy United Press) iy | SAN FRANCISCO, ( ; | & Who fe she i ned chamber in a atutater uf: | Jerground oj fen in the laba | Letter Left at Treat Resi- earold Wah dence Demanding Mon- ¢ offers con : vi Ing f of Caucasian birth la ey and Servants Given a | ne chaitored 64 tha Chinsia Pram Big Scare. byterian Mission hore, pending a }deciston by the juvenile court as to her custody A « boy gave a honseful of Whose child Is she? j servants a big scare and kept the] What are her antecedents, her ab entire police department of Seattle untry, her language? | ‘ are # ol b porple al bi on the qui vive all last nist be edge egal agape il This ts the belief of Chief Ward | iined efforts of the locul police de ah today after a further Inv gation parti t and the dicere trom thé § of the demand made fc At juventie court have bee able to an the home of Harry W last | newer ah night Held capt for Ars, Un A was not f hoved Titorated f mind, and her i}! under the Treat | ow nt allow in Ort ab) residence entalisy e girl hers * unable { night. The servar to throw y ht ‘ he wy | fled the police, and all last night | pory i the officers were looking for a bold. aaa i bad blackmailer, who Wax neve ‘ea # found. Mr. and Mrs. Treat are now Ingator j traveling In Yellowstone park, of | pol t Vieth which fact the writer of the letter | girt's rescue ti Was not aware Informed that a whit airl was } Today Chief Ward thinks it was « held in Chinato by a Chi | the work of a boy. A copy of the | family in Spafford all to i letter follows gother they went to the number gly en, Into an ilbemelling basement The Letter. th palt Oeacended Repeated | “H, W. T. You are going to give knocks upon a b r which me $600 In money or jewelry of the | they later found le vernous | valuation of $1,000 in the next five apartment, aroused a toothions old minutes or | am going to blow this woman, who attempted to bar thelr more, because more time to trick me, not get help tn think your telephone will work, and get out you cannot and ar house and you into eternity got two sick babi the Bast who is in distress, and by God 1 will commit all crimes on the calendar for them. help them in an honest way giving you five j [BURIE Have and a wife in ey forced their way through the door, and, working along the dark passage, they came upon an since I cannot interior room. It was small and Amidark, There was no sunlight and minutes and no/no ventilation. A Mickering gas should | give you light threw fantastic shadows on would pr sur that time of without my knowledge. find directions on the stone t your front door. house by front door, make no effort to get any one out of the hous And make no to catch me, for if you do think | am going to get caught 1 will get busy Come come back and make threat, I hope my last, good will return what I get f The reason I want mone because | think that b will be able to save my little ones and | am go- you ing to have it or—well, there wif} | Present foster mother, whow he be no tomorrow for you, yours or married, Her tale, however, = myself.” not conform to the document she} a ee exhibited, and the child was re moved to the detention home 4g SESE REM EE ME HH! Secluded for yoars in a basement! * % | where no sunlight can enter, when % SWALLOWS HIS TEETH. ® removed to the street the child * (By United Press.) *% covered her eyes with her hands * PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa, #/ and cried out in pain, Not a word ® Aug. 9.-—Peter Jackson swal- #/of English can the girl speak, and ® lowed his false teeth while ® to an Interpreter she doctares that ® drinking. To save his life the #' never before in ali her life bas she ® surgeons forced the teeth into #, heard the strange language ® his stomach and then removed * % them by ap operation. Jack- ® Brig. Gen, Atwood Dead. , ® son ix in A critical condition, ® CHICAGO, Ang. 9.—Trig. Gen ® but may recover, *% Edwin B. Atwood, 68 years old, who * ® was placed on the retired Het in lin din diate dna tndtind This ts my first crime and And if! August 11-12 $60 0 “Oriental Limited” “Southeast Express” 10 p. m. Seattle to Kansas City, via Billings, without change. the blackened wall teal Chinese den corner of the room woman was discor obably try e you can for do not the house | ing to conceal the You will skirts sad at, The woman was out of the of the child. or ffort Tight to the child. and | will my home-finding ood s originally been ever make | erased, | She si his former wite, 6 ther Points Proportionately Low ment signed by the soctety of the person to wh declared the offspring of her who died in New York, her death he gave It was a typ In the farthest | another Chinese ered vainly try child behind her Tun See, wife © offiver ve her a docu f It was officers of a but the name hild had 4 been child ix husband and a white woman 4d that at » child to its om the iven h t ee ew 1908, died suddenly here yesterday ST. PAUL DULUTH SIOUX CITY — OMAHA KANSAS CITY — ST. JOSEPH Chicago....$ 72.50 | St. Louis...$ 67.50 New York $108.50 | Boston. First Class—10 days to “get there”—final limit October 31 — Stopovers anywhere. 7 P. M. Try One of These New Trains on Your Next Trip For further particulars, reservations and tickets, call on or address C. W. Meldrum, City Passenger and Ticket Agent. Uptown Ticket Office— eo ‘2 1 Second, Cor. Columbia Mah Juy Sin, and the foster mother She showed th & paper that purported to « | turne | Bryant iO Seattle to Chicago Without Change “Fast Mail” 9 a. m. Seattle to St. Paul, without change, over the mountains in daylight. SEQUEL 10 FLIRTATION A SUIT: THE STAR D SEVEN YEARS IN A CHINESE DEN---WHOSE CHILD CAN SHE BE? onoiniat srcunc A TRAIN (Ry United Pree) DETROIT, Mich, Aug Thom an Gray, manager of the Robert H Jenks Lumber company, and prom inent Detrolt society and club man. on arrested on a caplas In & sult brought for $60,000 damages against him by Wellington R. Bry ant, a prominent Kansas City at orney, for alienation of affections The woman in the case ia Grace) G. Bryant, a Michigan woman and s former resident of Three Rivers as her husband describes her in hin declaration, a “woman of great personal beauty and disposi tion In She ts summer of 1997 she 4d to Michigan, according her yearly custom, to visit he rente and friends, and on the t from Ludington to Grand Rapids Mr. Bryant declares, she met Gray who made himself eo agroeable to her that ehe gave him ber photo graph and ber address Again in October, 1908, she vielted her friends in Michigan. lowing January Hryant says he con to file a petith on the grdund of are duty and extreme oruelty On ber next visit to Michigan, awears, Gray met her at the neglect of — MINNEAPOLIS — WINNIPEG .9110.50 In 72 Hours and in the fol-| ph for divorce | Niles and ¢ ager for the “id her he waa the man Robert H. Jenks Lum ber company, that he was gotting « salary of $4,200 a year, He told her he Inherited $46,000 from his grandfather, who was a rich Cleve land lumberman, who held larg properties in Oklahoma, and that} his family belong to the “Cleveland aristocracy,” Bryant charges | By persuasion and flattery, the husband asserts, Gray induced Mra. | Bryant to go with him to fouth fend, Ind, where, according to Bry-} ant’s story json as she got a atvores, = MAKE DASH T ~ GAIN LIBERTY | FOREIGNERS NERVED TO AC TION BY LONG WAIT IN DETENTION CAMP, Bickened by the filthy conditions ting at the United States tmml-| gration «tation at the Great North ern docks, and grown desperate) jthrough the thought that possibly } many more months might roll by jere they would again see the light of liberty, four prisoners used a jakeleton jand made thelr escape. Two have since been captured, one in the woods back of the station and j the other on the Colman dock, and jtwo others are still at liberty, The jmen etiil ai ‘ee are Edward Gal lant and A. Mueller, both Freneh men. Edmund Cormeau and R. | Woodman are the men who wore captured. WANT TO RETURN TO THE 6000 OLO SAIL v ) GAN FRANCISCO: Cal, Aug. 9— RK. Brent Mitchell, a former lawyer who practiced in San Francisco and | who eseaped to Honduras several }years ago, after defrauding bie cli- jenta out of $100,000, Is now repent ant and wants to leave his South American refuge and America. | Mitchel! te managing @ realty pro fect in Honduras, from which he expects to realise a fortune. | According to Stephon Upton, a mining engineer who te here, Mitch. oll said that he intended to take his profite and settle hie debts, thus clearing & way for ble return to the United States. Upton stated that there are 12 fugitives from the United States living in Honduras who desire to come back to America, Prominent in the colony {is Major Hurke, once editor of the New Or. leans = Times-Democrat, who ab seonded in 1886, during the cotton exposition in the southern elty WITH KISSES SHE return to (My United Press.) PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 9 --Miae Helen Haasis of No, 400 Penn at, Germantown, was peated In a wagon at the Wister station waiting fe father when the horse, frightened by an auto, ran away, Mise Haasis could do nothing but cling to her sont ast saw the runaway coming to. ward him. He threw off his coat and hat and leaped for the horse's head, He clung desperately to the bridle until the horse slowed down to a walk Then he lifted Miss Haasis from the seat, As he did #0 she burat into tears and, throw ing her arma around his neck Kissed him again and again Miss Hanaist is just 4 years old WHE ING, W. Va, Thomas L, Lewin, | United Ming Workers of Amert announced today he would be jcandidate for re-election, 9 Aug MONDAY, EL ‘WOULD YOU BOYCOTT YOUR CUP OF CHOCOLATE YOU KNEW YOU'D FREE A SLAVE--A CHILD Si key yesterday afternoon es Edward PAYS HEA RESCUER her! Deputy Constable Robert Pender-| president of the AUGUST 9, 1909 KLEPTOMANIA 1S ON AYP, GROUNDS MI68 ETHEL JONES ARRESTED FOR THEFT OF A BRACELET,, Kleptomania may be a di recognized by the beat allentet it lw not recognized by the beat 5 Hcomen,” saya Chief of Mxponttion Guards Wappenstein, and when the day arrested the first the ohlet took aalon to jaeue & warning that maniacs and souvenir hur ill hot be recomnized at the exponttion guard h but that all per caught #tealing on the grounds be considered common thievex Yeutorday Bthel Jone arrested for taking a bracelet fr booth in the Oriental building, Bhe attempted to run but was iat by Captain Mraith of the guards. A charge of petit } t f nwainat her th ring. Th an pocompanted, when arrest t tvoreed hunt D long. 9 taken i t but not held WILL INVITE DELEGATES. r ot J. B Chilberg of th AV ot © Beat tle thie ¢ ‘ here he will tor an invite tion to the tlona Irrigation nit Beattie and the exposition EXPOSITION HALF OVER! BY DOROTHY DALE wer exported to these planig in 1908 It gives yoR a shock, doemn’t 14) ™ i uion the great to Jearn that the cup of hot Choe | tiem,_ ~ manyfacturing ‘ late before you was partly pre | these men declare, that the pared by the hands of a wlaye? It bor rf at ene 4 y though, very likely. Much of |" “y : he ” y Through the Methodist 1 the cocoa used in thin country); ondon an appeal has been 1 mes from Portuguese growers, |to Methodista of the United whose plantations are worked by | to join the boyeott ave Hought outright in Africa The matter is a serious one, #0 Jaerious, indeed, that officials of the rament are aroused Portuguene # to the neve of reform, and are suid to be about to call upon the United State ae the country using mont of the ¢ duced in the worked product lave tx, to boyeott the Buch a boyeott would probably affect the price of cocoa and all hocolate products, It might even | }raine the « of chocolate sod and fudge, and thus impress the trange fact upon the mind of the ri ¢ imer that she te helping it in alwaye an adult slave either. In a letter recent! tb |iwhed by th ndon spectator Pngland’s most conservative jour nal, a friend of the editor writes under the date of July 6 of having himself seen # cargo of boys and girls sold at @ station Angola Portuguese West Afriea, and shiy ped to the ox for the cocoon trade When he got to Lobito bay, the writer says, he saw another Portu | The A.¥ exposition was half] ver at mild git last night Tr firet half of the 0 has shown ple in attendance, and the last half bigger in eve . With Seattle Day, Taft Day, Concessionatres Day, | the International Live Btock Bhow/ and other big events to be celobrat me Closer to four w r nite thre iiilion, the riginal emtiy 1 BRIEFS BY WIRE | | Chicago—Ella Gingles, the Irish] lacemaker, recently acquitted of a harge of larceny after a moat een jwational trial, left this elty day for her home tn Larae, yonter Ireland. | | Buffaio—A suit against Coll Wookly for itbel was fled today t Gray promised to marry | her and take her to Oklahoma as Wm. J. Connors, ¢ an of the | Democratic State committer Dublin—At the meeting of the Ancient Order of Hibernians here te jon pted. | |yesterday a resolution of thar the American ¢ eu of thelr excellent work was voys In ree impeach: | Wednes Rchivety gin here Olympla—The jment trial will b | day | North Yakima—A golden engie, measuring seven feet from tp to tip, w shot here yeater: | jday by rirude Herke, after the| bird had attacked and injured her. | Colfax--A fire, starting In a tire fotting machine yostemlay morning, | destroyed $16,000 worth of property | Spokane—During the first week | lof harvest in Pal une county, which opened Sunday per cent of the grain was shocked | j Tacoma—Diahop J. O'Dea of |Beattin confirmed embers of | ithe Church of Visitation at high mass yesterday. | | 7 | No Dock Tailed Horses. BAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug, 9.—/| No horses with docked tails will be allowed in the Admission Day par ade, to be held here Beptember 6 according to the edict lesued by the officials in charge. NO MONEY—SUICIDES, CHICAGO, Aug. $.—John C. Diebi New York, retired manager of the) Hamber@-Amertean steamship line, | was found dead in a clay hole be] the outskirts of the clty, He had committed suicide. He had tried| to borrow §6 from a friend until his allowance came from hia father Alas! Ne. eried the optimiat mn note that saya the Will be amall next new | You @on't see anything there! about that hook down the baek out of style, do you? rowied. the peasimint a1 Herald. Chieag Navy Yard City | Has one mile of Puget sound ‘er front. This beautiful wa. ter front property Is alongalde the Bremerton Navy Yard. We are making a record sale of Navy Yard City lots and tracts because we are taking many people every day At Our Expense And proving to them that they certain make large \J ore to a profit on a small investment We do not take you on a wild goowe chase to look wildtooking jungle tiles from anywhere Our property has real merit and none around Seattle has a better future. Our booka will show you that many of Seattle's shrewdest tnvestors are buying in Navy Yard City, We are buflding a cfty there, and until we complete our new dock we will continue to sell at the open ing prices, Large lots $40 and up. 1,000 pleces of land to choose from, on terme of $4 down and $2 monthly, Certified abstracta; clty water In and pald for, We bulld homes on easy payments, You can get lots of work in the navy yard Call at our office and go with us at away wome off, | | | on the fast new steamer H. B. Kennedy, leaving Colman dock ten times dally; fifty minutes ride, | BREMERTON DEVELOPMENT COMPANY 106 Cherry St, (Ground Floor.) Call or write for maps and prices. guese steamer which had taken on 160 slaves bound for Ban Thome This Portuguese possession and the neighboring inland of Principe are covered with oo According to the « Jow. Burtt, an Engiishe THE CHOCOLATE GIRL AND A GROUP oF also recently returned from a ree SLAVES IN PORTUGUESE WEST AFRICA dence of two years in tuguene ING THE POLES ON THE TOP OF WHICH THEY 6 West Africa, nearly 6,000 slaves PODS. Telephone — Main ind, S471, Pike Street, Near Second Avenue. ont Lowest Prices Consiatent With Quality Shoes That Give Relief for Tired Feet a line 1 Cush of the on sale 2 Two Great Bargains in Silk u i $12.50 Dresses for $ 7.69 ° { $20.00 Dresses for $10.25 { These beautiful one-piece dresses are made of fine i taffeta silk, messalines and satin Foulards, in choicest plain colors and figures. Handsomely trimmed with } soutache braid + point desprit lace and buttons. Yoke i and sleeves are of allover French lace inspection of these beautiful dresses We invite your you will be sur- prised how great bargains they are at the prices on sale this week—$20,00 dresses for $10.25, and $12.50 dresses for $7.69. Shergaies in Wash Goods Best Standard Prints; light and dark colors; plain and mercerized finished; extra good values, 5c per yard... % inches wide White Waistings; a medium weight, fast color material in madras designs; regu- 0 lar price 15c a yard, special,....ssecseeeseeee Cc Mercerized Crepe; one of the new and most popular summer fabrics in all the new shades; spe- cial, per yard., Cc ’ pie oaeeeaeeacadecenecieseademene SSE SSSI BE LIIESA 75c Embroideries for 23c A very large selection of the most beau tiful patterns in eyelet and shadow em broidery in flouncings, insertions and edgings, They are up to 23 inches wide, and the regular values range up to 75c a } yard; your choice for tomorrow at the special price, per yard, eeetees Vea bet Cc) ARRAS CHILDREN'S RYE TROUDLES Given special and careful attention by our specialist. Bring them in for Davenports Lounger and Sant tary Couches in} am examination If you suspect great array trouble, Our charges are very PoYNon, moderate FURNITURE, SCHUCHARD OPTICAL CO, Saves You 30 Per Cent TOS-10 Pike St, 1207 Seeund Ave. > z= S Eat Mapleine ior & Ice Cream “hea eee —It's Delicious Bankrupt Sale $23,000 stock of Clothing, Hate. Shoes and Furnishings af your own price PK Mapleine ts the new flavor better than maple. ST. 424. Special Showing of Hats | $3.00 Madam Paul 1328 Third Av. The Raven prescription service 8 that the doctor’s skill In pre soribing |e most efficiently supple mented by the druggist’s skill In compounding, RAVEN DRUG vO, Le ae te MacPherson-Gray Co, $3.00 Parasols for 83 1 View Lots 0 THEY ARE In People's Bank} * lear out the remaining ve have marked that will appeal to have no immedi need for one—at this }} for women, This fine a bargains enous ial ih footwear gives won erful next Season, after you have i i ba to sore and tired enough wear out of them }}) feet—mand if you are con ; i stantly on your feet it's Th CES monthas ust the very thing you These parasols are tucked B ought to have. The re stitched some with i lar price is $4.50, but this bourgh ion. All haves week we ha them ‘ We specialize fo week a gradeof§ women that con vorably with many $5.00 Shoes where, They est shapes, and antee perfect fit. B style, mat top and leather tips. You ir} a pair and you the Per feeling which char izes only the 4 ne footwear. \ { g, Special thes ey and Ladies free” every po You WANT TO RENT OR EXC! REGIS Wo are ind | kinda, wit you THR § at) Piret Aver uly $200) T ¥ "Per Joternattonal erican

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