The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 19, 1911, Page 1

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rd a Certs : WAPPY IS SENTENCED THOUSANDS 0 KING ARRIVES: BIG PARADE ON While hundreds of water craft whistles and sirens set up an ear. eplitting -din, the treasure ship Portiand with King Edgar and the regal retinue arrived in Elliott bay just after 1:30 o'clock this after. noon. Eugene Ely, royal aerial courier, went out from the carnival city to bear a message of welcome to the, approaching monarch. Welcomed by Dukes. The king and queen were landed at the Grand Pacific dock at 2 clock, where they were welcomed FPR EERE SERRE EEE EER HR EEE HE EH EHH by the 40 dukes. The royal coupie| was then escorted to the Potlatch | grandstand, following this route of march: South from Grand Trunk dock to Yesler way; thence to First ayv.; thence to Virginia, to grandstand.| Coronation at 2:30. ‘The crowning of the king will be accomplished at 2:30 o'clock and/ the reception to Queen Daphne and} the court will follow. | Promptly at 3 o'clock the great historical pageant moves. Here ts/ the line of march: From north of grandstand south on Fourth ay. to Stewart st, west on Stewart to Second, south on Second to James, west on James to First, north on First to Stewart, east on Stewart to Third, north on Third to Lenora, east on Le nora to Fourth, south on Fourth past grandstand to disband. The Historical Pageant. The twenty richly decorated floats that formed the historical pageant proved a dazzling surprise to the thousands who lined the | route of march. Seated hich up on a gilded throne on the first float in the procession was King Edgar d'Oro. He was surrounded by the six knights who formed the guard of honor. The second float hb toria on a throne surre emblems of progress canoe to the modern ocean linér, and from the old Indian tepée to the greatest modern skyscraper. | Captain Vancouver's famous ship “The Discovery” is represented by | the third float This ship navi-| gated the Puget Sound in the third centyry. The fourth float represented an old pioneer home carved out trunk of a giant fir tree. -see First Log Houses - Float number ‘ive held a r interest for many of the old-timers who cheered lustily as it passed ‘This float represented the first lox house built on Alki Point. The sy tler’s family was represented and there was a savory chunk of bacc sizzling over the fire The next float, No. 6, showed Chiet Seattle and his people. This is the Totem Pole float. Float No. 7 is a replica of the old sawmill operated on Puget Sound by the Yeslers. This typifies the ploneer methods of conquering the, forests. In the eighth float was showing the driving of the last spike on the | first railroad that entered Seattle Float No. 9 showew the attack} on the first block house in Seattie by the Indians. This was one of the most faithfully depicted in cidents in the long pageant. The 10th float is the replica of the steamer Miike Maru, the first; Japanese trading ship to come to the Pacific coast The Treasure Ship. Float No. 11 brought a mighty cheer from the spectators. It rep- resented the arrival of the treasure ship Portland in Miss Seattle is shown holding out a model of the ship in her outstretched palm, while about her are Alaskan mountains and snow, sluice-boxes | and a miner panning out the yellow | dust, while two malamute dogs| stand guard, The Queen's Float. he 12th float, a great bower with a marble throne bore Queen Daphne. The float was! drawn by four superb dapple gray | horses. The Queen was surrounded by ladies-tn-waiting, all garbed in beantiful court dresa. The next float, No. 12, represents | the fishing industries of Seattle, the | tate of Washington and Alaska Goddess of Agriculture. oat 14 held a huge emblem figure of the Goddess of Agri-| culture. This figure is surrounded | by the products of the state.” It aroused @ great interest among the| out-of-town visite | One of the most beautiful floats | in the line was No. 15, which was the contribution of the Japanese | residents of the city. A great wis tarla arbor was shown and in the rear a small Japanese villa where & Japanese family gat at an infor mal gathering. The float was pre pared by Japanese artists and was unusually beautiful and elaborate. It cont more than $2,000. Picking Up Nuggets. Float No. 16, which was suggest ed by the Scandinavian socteties of Seattle, wan labeled “The Lucky Swede,” and depicted a native a 4d Miss His ded by the from the } rosy | li | gets in Alaska |shows a great metropolis of HILL MAY FLY | Northern railroad, | here VOL. 13, NO N TRAIL OF THE “GOLDEN GIRL”-WATCH FO The Seattle Star IN SEATTLE ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER 126 SEATTLE, WASH., WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1911 i ee ee ee ee In addition to the gold prizes tomorrow The Star's Golden will distribute from her treasupe auto 5,000 theatre tick ets, Every envelope she throws Will contain Yomething of value, It may be @ theatre tleket, and it may te @ gold coin So follow the trail of the Golden Girl tomorrow. TOMORROW 18 THE BIG DAY, " Girl eeeeeeeete RRR RRR i tees PRR ee eee * # loyal subjects of Seattle. *® obedient reception and welcom *® Ishes and commands his subjec *% Care, to forego strif * * *. * * * eee ROYAL The King now deer reign of Edgar d'Oro. This is the treasure ship which today brought King Edgar from This ship today plays the part of the gold ship Portiand, which brought the first cargo of gold to this city from the the sister ship of the old steamer Portland. the land of Nowhere. Klondike in 1897. She i The King extends his imperial greeting of good will te the The King thanks the people for their the petty jealousies of life and the dark and evil thoughts that beset all mortal that the Reign of Happin last with ali of his people forevermore Signed upon the treasure ship Portland, this fourth day of the ee Eoic YAN D NIE), ims. a DGK TO | DICK Declares That He Never Wrote Letter and Does Not Repre- sent .. Morgan - Guggenheim) Syndicate. 2p Grand Trunk Pacific dock. The King particularly admon from this hour to banish Oui! encorted to the begin, to down town streets, p review at the grandstand, after which it will be die missed 2p EDGAR |, REX Settee eeeet te | m.—Demonstration harbor with filghts by Avi tors Eugene Ely and Robinson. 8 p. m—Concert by Chan Seeeeeeteeeees eee ex " (my Valied Freee Vensed Wired | . NEW YORK, July 19.—Denying| | that he ever wrote or even heard of @ |the famous “Dick to Dick” letter, | Richard 8. Ryan, claimant to band at Controlier bay, Alaska, started for Washington today to testify be | fore the committee on expenditures [in the interior department which | | investigating the Alaska situation Ryan decia repre- | ent the M synd cate in and he had never i the name of Charles P. Taft in writing to former Secretary Ballinger well enough to add Dick to mex’ letter,” said Ry 1 never wrote any postscript or such address, and I do not kno AT CHAUTAUQUA mal manner, 1 do ne | dent Taft's brother on by sight and could not possibly refer to him made public Clarence D. Aked, ‘the English preacher who brought to this country stand. * Parade in the harbor; geemfrom along the *. Capito! Hille. 9 Pp. m—Opening of Hoyal bali at the state armory. 9:30 p. m—Street through down town by Potlatch Flambeau club. Prominence in the city. King and Queen at Royal bail, Pmte armory Seeteteeeeeeee The note Miss Abbott eons me to be something} crazy Ryan declared his firm was Probst-Wetaler company, and that so far an he knew they were not connected with the Guggenheima He said all he wanted was his Innd hie —_ | Dr, Gabriel McGuire, le ee ee a eH) Mpoke last evening on “The Ex it *| periences of an irishman * WEATHER FORECAST the Heart of Africa,” will *% For Seattle and vicinity ture again this afternoon. # Pair tonight and Thursday McGuire was the first ® light = southwe -winds. % Temperature at noon today, 71 * oe eee eee eee eS Laugh at Murder Charge (Ry United Press Leased Wire) GRAND JUNCTION, Colo, July 19—Laughing and joking about | their arrest on a direct charge ‘of | having murdered Clark A. Wolfkill, | a rancher, four children held here refuse to take the matter seriously. Lee Baker one of the four prisoners, red nonchalantly today Ghuroh in New York, wil! lec ture at the Northwest Chau teuqua this evening and morrow evening. terly the Dark Continent. IT’S A SHAME WASHINGTON, July “Getting my face slapped be * - « * * * * from my wife's kimono i right treatment,’ | Carpenter, a government clerk divorce here today. makes me do the family cook pains.” ETHEL BARRYMORE (By United Press CHICAGO, July make any sta affairs, Ethel here today. Much mail sed Wire.) Refusing ment on her mart n't do more than send is » penitentiary for life, any three held, Gladys Thompson, Lillian Osborne, 14, other Sweden picking up the gold nug Bulky City Directory. The seventeenth float shows a great city directory supported. on | the shoulders of four golden ath-| letes. Atop of this {s seen a tiny | volume which represents the city | directory of 1897. “The Growth of Seattle” is the title of this float Float 18 held a tableaux of the Boy Scouts of America Float No. 19 shows Santa Claus | and his reindeer entering the United States by way of the Olym pic mountains Float No. 20, the last A Viston of Seattle in in line, 1920. is It aky-| scrapers. iW AEROPLANE (My United Prea Leaned Wire) | GRAND FORKS, N. D., July 19.—~|} louis W. Hill, president of the Great who is expected Saturday, has invited to} an aeroplane trip with Walter | the Wright aviator, as! take Brookins, pilot TOMORROW’S POTLATCH PROGRAM Here is the Potlatch program 1:00 P. M.—First motor boat rac Elitott bay for prizes. 2:00 P. M. over same course for prizes. 2:00 P.M. and Hugh Robinson by hydro-acroplane < 2:00 P. M-—Division No 3:00 P. M,—Races between utter harbor for prizes. 3:00 P, M.—Boat races on Lake Washington 11:00 A. M.—Speed motor boat races on Lake Washington Second motor boat race Daily airship flights by Curtiss aviators, Eugene Three flights 1, Pageant of the Nations. Industrial Pageant-*-Products of the Soll and Sea. her at the Blackstone hotel it fs reported included lette her husband and other members her family urging that she ag to a reconciliation. Mixes Bar | more .went on New York t | afternoon drowned STILL COOLER =|. 10s Axaiies, juiy is Jander Afkmay, proprietor of Still cooler today. Tempera Jang John Summers, an- offic ture at noon was only 71 d@ the Pacific Coast Biscuit Co grees, as against 74 yesterday, |aimost instantly Killed 79 the day before, and 83, roe ah ae oo urday. ‘The god of the weather | aud Mary. 2, wore severely Iniur is certainly smiling on Seattle | pear oe ae ee | for Potlatch week, anc the pre dinp road today when a big tour | diction of fair weather and lear driven by” Aikinany tan IRE and Virgil Watson, 17, all refuse to \tell what they know about the mur- Ider of Wolfkill, sticking fast to} POLITICS," BERGER * (By United Press Leased Wire.) COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 19. —“Everybody in congress is playing politics,” said Victor L. Berger, socialist congressman from Milwaukee, addressing a monster crowd of state social ists here today. “The stand- patters are playing politics for the trusts, the democrats for the politicians of the south, and the insurgents for Bob La Fol lette. The working class is not represented sufficiently to play politics, even if we wanted to, which we don't.” “LUCK OF ROARING CAMP” SAN FRANCISCO, July 19.—“In| © the Luck of Roaring Camp,” to be | given for the F nal Order of | % agles during their conclave here | next month, the 100,000 visitors ex- | + pected will witness a portrayal of | % the days of 49 and early {fornia | characters. An elaborate tacts Al fal Fannie, moderate temperatures, sent” [tortie out from the Washington, D. C., office, is being ful. Men’s Summer weather filled. OR IT WAS ALL O, K, It's all right to throw base balls at human beings. ‘That is the sense of Patrolman Nutting’s finding last night. Dr. Mary B. Martin tele phoned the police from the ¥. W. C. A, stating that men and boys were throwing baseballs at monkeys at Fourth and Union, Nutting was detailed, and reported that the “mon # keys” were only human beings, lw who were getting pald for it * tt eR ITI K tO IIR * *” \* AT PRACTICALLY Is expected ESE SEE EE HEH EK * 2 for tomorrow: Ribbed for yachts in ten-mile course in $1.00. Bilk Underwear ‘ $1.60 Summer Underwear $1.50 Japanese Silk wear Tbe Cool Summer and Mesh of all cruising motor boats Ely each day. Demonstrations Try headed sody tarrtreeee ng Cheater Division No. 2, ne From drug Te atrawberry efush at half-past crews of naval reserves in the ° Zeb Willings’ ho! Arcade and Arcade Annex » pie there leuae Second at University. fate Waterto™ be le ie ee ie a ad m.—-Arrival of the King on the gold ship Portiand at The King and Queen will be Potlatch Grandstand, and the historical pageant will move through the ing in of the Curties hydropiane in the Hugh * ning Ellery’s band in Potlatch a 9 p. m—Iiiuminated water may be water. front or from Queen Anne and the parade diatrict 10 p, m.—Grand display of fireworks from floats in Elliott Bay; may be viewed from any Miinight—Reception by the i 19.— cause | could not remove a spot not id Elmer B. in anawering his wife's suit for ‘She even ing and washing and then beats me with a broomstick for my NEARING HER HOME | f°)" Barrymore arrived awaited, which | Will § from | TOW na Trail of the Underwear) | Off Loge 65¢ 90¢ Under- She Underwear ae ShaferBros. THAINK “AN Wh REA ONE CENT. oN D N be * * * * « Thousands Followed “ o * OPP eee eee ee eee eee ee eee eee eee eee ees ss 13 big wae to preach in John D. Rockefelier's to who in Or. white man to follow Stanley through This_is Ismay Darragh, the Golden Girl, Just Before Starting on the A Trail Yesterday. Watch for He r Today Between 12 and 1 o'clock. at noon tomorrow. Follow the trail and you may share in the shower of gold. The envelopes will be weighted tomorrow, so that the Golden Girl can throw them far away from the auto. None of them will reach peo. ple nearer than 20 feet away from the machine. you see the Golden Girl coming. The nearer you get to the machine, the less chance you will have of secur ing one of the lucky envelopes. The trumpeter will announce the Japproach of the treasure auto con taining the Golden Girl. Be sure to look for the signs on the treasure auto that announce the coming of the Golden Girl. Yester day enterprising individuals drove up in advance of the t She ‘will. make stop: these | auto and distributed red envelor cde ‘ad ard containing advertising matter x crowds were waiting for Tlie Star's Golden Girl at noon » |today, whfen she made her trip abroad in the big treasure Hu the precious env were cast into ‘owds, and 1 lreds of lopes } waitin | ner gold [S| crowded into the k t and t flice before t to| Girl had finished her gc tal | ing ride icky win certificates bby of Pan rhe even The Trail of the Golden Girl be taken from 12 up z to 1 ain tomor o'clock a some of noon ASUT ex: | a cafe of we and Aik Golden Girl’s Trail So don't crowd when | R HER TODAY! CATR GETS FROM THREE 10 IO) VR, Charles W. Wappenstein, ex-chief jof Police, convicted of accepting a $1,000 bribe from Gid Tupper and | Clarence Gerald as protection for the Midway and Paris houses, wa sentenced by Judge Ronald this morning to a term of not less than three years or more than ten years at hard labor in the penitentiary. Preceding, the Attorne passing of sen Shipley for Wap ad affidavits in which it exed that « of the jurors | had ressed a desire to convict | Wappenstein, On this affidavit, as | we | as on the contention shat the | Judge's instructions were erroneous in part, also that there was a failure |of proof sufficient to convict, and jthat there was a variance between |the charge in the indictment and |the proef, Shipley based his motion for a new trial, which was denied by Judge Ronald | H. Morris, chief counsel for Wappenstein, then made a motion t idgment, and this was de- ©. Morris then, without as ¢ any legal reason, said that cted to Wappenstein’s being because there were indictments against did not want the state benefit of referring to future trials as a con- Ronald overruled the as having no legal foun- re and he to. have th the Pleads for Fine then made assionate mercy on behalf of Wap fter reviewing a good the evidence and arguing conviction should have re- ted. Morris pleaded that a fine should be ap a is the sentimental side in too,” he sald. “You are arted man,” he ad- Judge Ronald, “and 1 am med to approach such @ art with the plea for mercy for father of an 18-year-old girl and 16-year-old boy, and for a wife e family bas never known the int of dishonor. The object of the aw is to make an example of vio- stors, and justice must be temper- 4 with mercy. A fine will be as much a humiliation as incarceration for this defendant. Humanity should lend an assisting hand to a man | who is as unfortunate as this man,” Wappenstein Is Moved. For an hour and a half Wappy’s attorneys pleaded for him, and |when Morris again and again re- ferred to the wife against whom there has never been a taint of dis- honor, and that it was as much @ blow to the Renn family, pioneers of this state, to the defendant,” Wappenstein's cheeks reddened and his eyes grew moist Judge Ronald, after expressing his regret that in nearly every sen- tence some innocent ones must suf- fer, said he was bound by the jury's verdict and that to impose merely a fine wowld be fo make the trial degenerate into a farce. He then imposed the sentence. The maxi- mum is ten years and a $5,000 fine. The minimum is discretionary with ithe trial jud, Wappy is out on his present bail of $87,500, pending appeal. ge, big-he | 10, . ed ved Iden Girl ye Th The ter an ns usand fol G afternoon, Owin ht, the lucky p who redeemed their gold coin $| prizes at Pantages theatre did not leave their ng ; but here those who called at The ffice yesterday, to redeem |their prizes: Sam Rings, 525 Pine son, Ninth and Spruce ser, 716 N, 48rd st 916 Howard: ay venth av University Densmore ing ned day are Star « ye st Harry Thomas Phelps Ralph Wills, 1326 Frank» Nordy Albert Drangs, 3 Arthur Taylor 619 Union ‘st mith, Railroad ay, and Bay st., | Bessie Brighouse, 1 Davie Vancouver, B, G, Richard Mills, 1626 37th at. N Murphy, Cal houn hotel. st av, ly * old), You may turn a woman into a cksmith and mayhap*Milady will make good Portia even as |the pilot of a biplane, but» she no never, will make good as clerk | | ble as or » of the curtous incidents of | neve | ail of the Golden Girl yester-|q goda-wate | the findin This is the assertion of 3 |$5 gold certificates by Dr. Bessie/ay, man who has just tried | Brighouse, one of the visiting ladtes |some girls as soda dispense from Vancouver, She found one of | the red envelopes lying on the side walk im front of the New Washing ton hotel after the crowd had gone | on, When she picked it up and looked inside she found the $5 gold reward, and came down to The Star office and got her money ®| ‘They are too cagpful in drawing Beautiful tsmay Darragh, the | soda Golden girl, will hit the trail again| ‘They are inclined to be too fussy of one of the out He has now dispensed with thelr ervices and the men soda clerks are back on the job Here are the reasons employer, why wom good as soda clerks hey take too much time. this make says an't ° Second | in making up a mixed drink And lastly they are gossips. These are awful charges to bring against the fair soda girls, but out of #00 soda dispensers now em- ployed in Seattle, not more than ten are women The girls go at making a Golden Potlatch sundae as though they were making a batch of ginger- bread,” said one of the clerks to- day. “People who want a drink of e or an ice, want it in a hurry. I guess the where we men fit in.” So this is the why a man 8 favorite line today instead woman. reason, ssibly, es you with your of temperance food of a fair young

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