The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 15, 1912, Page 6

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THEY DIDN APPEAR AT TRIAL Th police today are looking for b. Burg and D. Levy, charged with burning thelr tailoring establish ment a year ago, and who were to Appear yesterday in the superior fourt for trial, The men gave bonds in the police court when arrested, and it was not until yesterday that Wt was ascertained that the bonds were fnoperative im the superior court Attorney W. H. Morris, who ap- red for the defendants, promised fo do all in his power to have the men tn court by May 24, the date set for the trial Burg and Levy insured their place of business at 224 Madison st., for $6,000, when they carried only $2,000 worth of gods. Two months later the place was burned. RECEIVERS ARE APPOINTED E. M, Mills and O. D, Colvin are today receivers for the Seattle, Renton & Southern Railway Co.. having been appointed yesterday by Judge Hanford of the United States district court, on petition of Walter 8. Fulton, attorney for Peabody, Houghton & Co., who declared that the appointment of a temporary re- ceiver for the company injured the credit of the corporation. Evan 8. McCord admitted tn court yesterday that the company had outstanding debts of more than $1,000,000 that it was unable to Meet, and that $300,000 of the com- pany's notes were now due and pay- able, and that, the company being without funds, he prayed the court to appoint receivers to keep intact the property and operate the road, lest it should suffer a forfetture of its franchise. Old Prison Shi to Be Discarded BREMERTON, May 15.—The old prison ship will go. According to orders received yesterday from the war department, disciplinary bar- racks will be established here on June 1 for the imprisonment of all those convicted of lesser military offenses. At the same time, the marine guard will move into its new quar ters. siiiihiitenentpaialignmneces THREE HOUSEBOATS DESTROYED BY FIRE A houseboat owned by H. D. Ken. ward, at Lakeview ay. on Lake Washington, caught fire last night, and before the flames were subdued two others had been practically de- stroyed. The total loss is about $4,460. The fire leaped from the Kenward boat to the “Kentucky,” where Miss Mary Knauss and Dal Ferguson were living. “The Dixte,” adjoining, was soon enveloped in flames. EIGHTY ACRES, KITSAP COUNTY exchange for lot. or ind lot. Lar treat Bale or how: a stream. 750 M. th county Poad to salt water one mile MERIDIAN AV. SNAP FOUR lots, 20x00 each, halt block to car, He level. and ready phy id on, Price $1,756.00 for the four: terms Some assess- ments, A pick up. 727 Northern Bank Bidg. M. 1667. NEW SERVICE TO Victoria, B. C. Btee! Steamship “IROQUOIS” Leaves Colman Dock dally, ex- cept Saturday, at 11:30 p. m. Returning, leaves.Victoria dally, except Sunday, at 8:30 a. m. Tickets interchangeable with Canadian Pacifie Ry. Co. All rail line coupons accepted. Tickets and reservations at TICKET OFFICE, Colman Dock Phone Main 3993 Strong Nerves for You ‘There is no use trying to cure ner vous troubles of any kind with drugs. | Potsons won't make weak nerves | you need ts he tite of the n this nerve force is only r nam for electricity, and you can easily re- store it by saturating your body with fow hours while you sleep. Electra-Vita is an electric body bat tery which infuses a steady, un- broken stream of nerves and vitals for hours at a time without the least shock or burn or unpleasant sensation. The weak, im powerished nerves absorb this electric trouble Is GET IT Write trated REE for our? free 90-page bo which tells all about mail un this coup We'll send the book diagnosis you can't call Physician's free to all and advice Please send me, prepaid your free 90-page Sllustr book 6-16. |KILLED IN GAME || Grover were catching ball in a field, ||Edgar, the 6year-old son of Alzie Now, | | @ gentle current of electric life for a | dng io es || ADIEU TO THE yess, We ARE ALONE, HIST, OSGAR f. ARE WE ALONE By @acw OppeR £ OUDT CNOVEW. cre DENMARK’S KING FOUND DEAD IN THE STREET King Frederick was stricken with pneumonia jast February, and ap- ESS VRSCE TH TNS FB * %* COPENHAGEN, May 15. # | parently was unable to regain his * —King Christian was pro- *! ‘health at home, His condition had ® claimed here tod: on receipt # improved there, and he was on his ® of news of the tragic death In # | way home when death occurred Tn % Hamburg of his father, King # addition to the queen, King Fred ® Frederick Vili. ® erick was accompanied here by the | Prince Christian was just # | Princesses Dagmar and Thyria. |® returning from an early-morn #/ The mywterious clreamatances tn % ing ride and noticed that flags # connection with the king's death de ® | veloped shortly after the royal par- ® /ty arrived in Hamburg. Last night #| King Frederick announced to the # | members of his household that he *® | was going out fora walk. When he ® fatied to return at a late hour the ® queen sent hotel employes out tp ® search of him. They were unable *% | to locate his majesty, and the police *% were notified aan early hour to- ® day * see ‘As he was asking this ques % tion, a courier who had been ® riding in mad haste saluted |® the prince and said: (® “Your royal highness, the \* king is dead. Long live the | king.” i Prince Christian almost col- |® lapsed and was hurried to the |® palace. *| “I found the prostrate form of an * ® aged man lying in a side street near eee eRe eee eae the Water front,” a policeman cas Po “asada jually remar to one of the king’ (By United Drees teased Wire) | atlendants Some to think of it, HAMBURG, May 15.—DOressed in he added, “the corpse did bear a jan ordinary business suit of clothes, | striking resemblance to King Fred- King Frederick VU of Denmark 4 dropped dead while alone on the! Investigation proved that the old streets here last night. The bedy,|man was indeed Denmark's king unidentified, lay on a stab with sev.|When an ambbulance rushed the eral other corpses at the harbor| body to the harbor front hospital ‘front hospital morgue, where it was| none of the attendants there recog: found at 3 a, m. today by searchers|nized the monarch. Three persons for the king. propeunced the man dead, and the Mystery surrounds King Freder-| morgue officials ordered the body ick's death, the authorities appar-|placed on a common slab, with ently trying to conceal the fact that | other corpses on either side of it. he died on the street. When the police later learned the First reports stated that the king | real identity of the dead man, of- died at the Hotel Hamburghof.|fleers of the royal suite were eum- King Frederick and the immediate | moned to the morgue. These repre- members of his family arrived here | sentatives drew back the sheet and Monday from Nice, en route to|murmured: “The king is dead— long live the king.” eran RS | Must Serve Term Mrs. Gladys Johnson, under sen- Ex-State Senator Commits Suicide sence ot tro" years tor perjury, Washington C. Rutter, aged 58. peen ordered imprisoned following ex-state senator and member of the | he decision of the supreme court af- First state legislature, is dead today firming the judgment of the supe- a8 2 result of a bullet wound yolun-/T!F court in finding her guilty tarily inflicted yesterday afternoon oo with a 38-caliber revolver. Mr. Rutter has been ill with nery- ous prostration since last December. Recently his wife took a revolver YY from hin, and asked him why he had bought it. “I don't know; I must have been crazy,” he explained. Since then the family had been watching him closely Yesterday, suspecting that some thing was wrong, Mrs. Rutter rush ed out to seek her busband. She found him lying near by against a | telephone pole in front of the house, with a bullet wound through the left temple. The police were notified and Coroner Snyder took charge The family is at a loss to learn where he secured the revolver. Mr. Rotter was born in Pennsyl- vania 58 years », coming Wes when a young man. He became ac tively engaged in King county poll ties, having filled several positions. He leaves a widow and two sons to mourn his loss. Found on Water Front. | LOGANSPORT, I4., May 15.— Mre. Mathias Simons haa filed di voree proceedings, alleging failure to provide. She states in the com plaint that when she needed dental work, Mathias refused to provide and told her he had a set of fa teeth that didn’t fit him and would do just as well for her. || VISITORS SEATTLE} Every automoblie owner in Seat || tle is out today with his machine to aid in the entertainment of the Mys- tie Shriners who are spending their second day in Seattle. Lu Lu tem ple, with ite band of 80 pieces, from Philadeiphia, arrives today, and will parade down Second avenue from the Union depot. Trips to the navy yards and other Interesting points will"be made this afternoon. “Tl tell yer, Skinny, how wi get in the show for nothin’. We'll walk in backwards and the guy'll think we're comin’ out.” |SEATTLE HOT SPELL BROKEN AT LAST Seattle's brief spell of hot weath- er is over—at least, today, for clouds hovering over the city have brought a cooler atmosphere and relieved us from a warm apell, Yesterday at 2:30 the maximum heat reached a temperature of 90 degrees, when the wind shifted to the southwest, causing the mercury to fall to 67 at 6 o'clock. Charge “Honor” Men With Stealing SALEM, Or., May 15.—Complainta of foreign workmen employed in road work near Salem that the “honor” convicts doing the same work robbed them of $50 today have resulted in a decision by county of- ficlals to move the camp of the convicts a considerable distance from that of the foreign workmen The foreigners declared they would not continue work unless the con victs are camped some distance away from them. FLIES MAY ENTER OF CATCH ARLINGTON, Mo. May 15.— While Dewey Loughridge and Ollie Loughridge, ran between the boys and was struck on the back of the neck by the ball thrown by his brother. His neck was broken, causing death in @ half hour. LONG HATPIN NEW ORLEANS, La., May 15.— Hereafter any woman in New Or- leans who wears a hatpin protrud- \ling more than one inch from the ||erown of her hat will be subject to arrest, according to an ordinance which passed the city council, || TRAIN BEHEADS A BOY TRAVELER || WEST SALEM, Wis., May 15, || Edward Frylinger of St. Paul, 16, |after being put off a train attempt ed to board one passing at 30 miles an hour, His head was cut oft. He) ALABAMA SALOONS was on 4 trip “to see the world.” MOBILE, Ala, May 16.—Mobile NEW GAS ENGINE PLANT saloons may not screen agaiyst flies, In response to a petition Fox Gas Engine works will erect | a plant here within the next ninety days for the manufacture of their engines. This will open up a new Industry that will mean employ- ment to over one hundred men and their families, from a retail dealer the excise com mission ruled that the law under which saloons are operated in Ala- bama prohibits screens, partitions or objects of any kind which might obstruct the view of any person on the sidewalk into the saloon. is ae 9 Diss 93 1D, OSSAR— You KGEP ME ‘TOO CLO3SGS. I DON'D GET For M& 198 Like figure, Clarence to right—Robt. 1 KNOW ID \$9 AH, You | CALL ID Vor T SPURN your —1 VOULT Rappep S0$| your Dooty To VOUT BRIBE | YOU VILL — CORRUPT OFFER! To Te AC a Keep Me CHAINED FOR VON NIGHT OF SPY YOUR MONEY FRom you! NIGHTS, BUT CAN'D UiGeRTYy 1 VILL ASA GIFT Voucy mide You THE STAR-—-WEDNESDAY, MAY 1 Fo 191 Tries Bribery to Get More Freedom REET ID DISS VoNnce £ DARROW’S TRIAL ON BRIBERY CHARGE BEGINS George N. Lockwood, juror in the McNamara trial, began before Presiding Judge Geo. H. Hut- ton of the superior court. The case was called in the Hail of Justice, in the very room where the Mo- Namara brothers were sentenced to the penitentiary for dynamitin buliding of the Los Angeles Times. Darrow Caim. Darrow listened with calm de- meanor to dictment that He appeared In excetient health, al- N though it was apparent that he had of May 15.—Trial the in- his honor. Upper, teft to right—Ear! Rogers, Oarrow’s chief counsel; central Darrow; Presiding Judge Geo. H. Hutton. Bottom, left F, Bain, one of the bribed jurors; Olstrict,. Attorne: Of | John OD. Fredericks, Bert Franklin, detective who says he bribed jurors. (Ry United Press Leasea Wire) LOS ANGELE y Appearing for Darrow were his chief counsel, Earl Rogers, who mareshaled the defense of Patrick Cathoun in the course of the San Francisco “graft prosecutions’; W. H. Dehm, associate counsel; Judge Cyrus McNutt, who was associate counsel under Darrow for the -Mc- Namaras, and W. H. Anderson, The sta’ forces were led by District Attorney John D, Fred ericks, who successfully prosecuted the MeNamaras. He was aided by Assistant District Attorney Jos. Ford and Deputy District Attorney Arthur Keetch. Ford also played a prominent part in the Mc- Vamara trial Counsel for both sides appeared aged much stn coming to Low today to believe that the trial Angeles, several months ago, to would be stubborn and long drawn take up the defense of the Me- out. Much difficulty in securing a Namara brothers. IMPRISO tively, with Intell been unearthed here today The two mental dwarfs are Ja imprisoned by their mother, an irrational women, and no one but the family physician knew of their existence until the mother died. The father died when they were infante. tter of the alphabet from the other, they can scarcely talk devoid of reasoning powe: in for their imprisonment tive of the Salvation Army for the) district west of and including Chi-| conducted by him tomorrow even to the grave. SALVATION ARMY LEADER COMIN Commissioner Estill, chief execu-| tomorrow. CLEMM THEATR Seattle's Best Photoplay House ER SE NED SINCE MENTAL DWARFS ARE FOUND SAN FRANCISCO, May 15.—Imprisoned in a lonely house from the by the state / A New Bill Today 6 Big Photoplays Headed by “TREASURE ISLAND” Wonderful Version of WelbKnown Novel New Musical Numbers 1,200-—Seats-—-1,200 Only—10 Cents—-Only jJury was anticipated. ‘B See eS IRTH, 2 er, aged 21 and 17 years, respect- of the average dumb animals, have nity commission, and Mary Crummey. They were Neither brother nor sister can Both were taken to asy- @ mother carried with her ee = : es jeago, who has had thirty years’ ex- |perience in the army in Holland, South Africa, New Zealand and Japan, will be in Seattle for a threedays’ inspection, beginning A public denfonstration will be ing at the Army Sth and Washington, Citadel, | PENCIL SALE | “X" pencil sale will” be conducted Friday and Saturday for the bene. fit of Orthopedic hospital for chil- dren by charity-inclined women of Seattle. - Friday will be devoted to the tak ing of wholesale orders and Satur- day the women will cover the whole city in their sale and give every- body a chance to help the good | cause along. |. Forty Women, among them the | most prominent in elub, society and |charity work in Seattle, will have charge of the sale. | LEFT $500,000 | Mrs. Lena Allen Rood, widow of the late Hugh R. Rood, general manager of the Pacific Creosoting j company, who lost his life on the | Titanle, has petitioned Judge Frater jof the ywobate’ court for letters of administration of her husband's estate, No will has been found to provide for the disposition of the estate, which Is valued at $500,000, Words by Sc Music by Comal Be DISHONEST? K€ YOU A GIF ae eer BETES — Or ALL MY SAFINGS. IT COST $1 It cost H, Nesland just $1 for hit jung Bernt Koppen with a heavy | foasit © Ume ago, this amount being charged up to him in Judge Myers. department. Koppen saye he was unable tb eat for a week and sued for $1,000. PLAN NOMINATION OF DEBS FOR FOURTH Max Hayes Says It Looks as Though i Parties. Honor State Flower | ah Washington's state flower wil) be | BY MAX S. HAYES honored Saturday at Anacortes by | Socialist Candidate for Vice Presi- a big pienic, with the usual accom | dent in 1904 paniment of speeches, games and The Sta r jollification. That all may be as fens © ing i 45, | 08 the democratic side the sured of a good lunch, the commit-| 'NDIANAPOLIS, Ind, May 15—\are growing more favorablan tee in charge has provided for free | There is a strong undercurrent de-| day that Bryan will cream, sugar and coffee | veloping in the socialist national | Baltimore convenes to bis The rhododendron is especially ton ¢ te Eugene w./ “04 grab the presidential beautiful at this time of the year|Pene-tor the fourth time reg presi. |the fourth time. Bryan eam and the people of Anacortes think dent this week. Some man, wen |! all of Wilson's gt it most fitting that it be honored. | known in trade circles, is favored chop deep into Clark's via SWANS s as Debs’ running mate. and annex two-thing as HE OFFERED PRIZES || debs is not in attendance at the |#ates. The country Is sect FOR BIGGEST CATCH convention. He ts one of the prin. | radical Ppa yn cipal witnesse GLENWOOD, Ia., May 15.--Cash prizes of the amount of $35 have 6 for the defense in| a what promises to become a cele-|P#lgn. 80, to —— brated court case rom been offered by Mayor Frank Done lan of Glenwood to the boys d Taft can only win by steam nearly ail the contested which act would G. O, P. up the back beyond s a! he 4 * i at Fort Scott, | OTsanizations Kansas, where the Taft administra: |4nd hold i cheek the girls who capture and kill the moet ae. files between now and October 16,| Appeal to Reason and send A, Way-| themselves to the fate of The youngsters already are plan. | socia a, to prison because they: ex- ete ate ee pte ge the rottenness « and corrup- getion. Heace it & IS LARGEST BOY Some of the more politic dele- by some of the most IN THE STATE kates who are not iufluenced by | he Probabilitics i BURKE, 8. D., May 15—The| Sentiment reason this way in urg-|"0 + Bir epee being. Butte valley district, in Gregory |!2& Debs for the nomination: The | one Debi: the K county, lays claim to the largest boy | bitter primary fight in the repub- the country, as the Shimmerhorn. The lad is 15. years|that the socalled “progressives” socialist —_— of age, in 6 feet € inches in height,| Wil) either — the ote yn and weighs 180 pounds. He came) vention to nominate Roosevelt for a) to Dakota from Kansas with his|a third term or dictate a dark horse| Swanson Removal Sale sow) parents. to thelr liking. It appears that! Watch his specials. tion Is endeavoring to destroy the lcotiation, the big ning to wage war on the posts . ‘ tion in the Leavenworth prison. the probabilities of the in the state for his age in Jacob|lican party has made it quite plain California Wild | Over Sulphurro Great Circle of Wonderful Cures Report by Correspondent From San Franciso Gospel of Health From Canada to the Mexican Line Golden State Joins in Showing Apprecia- tion of New Medicine Personal Story Tells of Remarkable Cures YEARS OF SUFFERING ENDED. C. M. C. Stewart Sulphur Co., Seattle: Dear Sir: I have been taking Sulpburro for some time visited your home first. You had gone East, but I was bottles of your medicine, and then as soon as it was on 1 bought a $1 bottle. I thank God every day for such a medicine. I am 68 I had suffered from rheumatism and stomach trouble for y now my stomach is cured. Rheumatism was in my hips I could hardly get out of my chair. It left after I used 1 also had kidney and bladder troub! It is all gone, I sent away all the little booklets I had to people in ofl of the United States. I wish you would send me some more OH to friends. If you wish to use my name, you are at liberty t (Signed) LOIS A, BOBLET, Blaine, ferers in all walks of life, It pointssonly a short time dist a royal route to ealth that can be/ tient found Sulphurre traveled with enjoyment at each|«reat good, though at fi step. The booklet is honored |unable to qet into @ bal screed wherever Sulphurro i8/started h a foot-bath, known jthe internal use of Sulp The Stewart Sulphur Company's |she been able to follow offer to send a booklet free to all/tions in the booklet her who ask for it is proving a great|ment would have been aid in informing why it makes such | rapid. wonderful cures. I predict that sev-| Another eral hundred thousand people in| pnurro toot bath Callfornia will soon be readers Of} fated to me by A insta) ‘ompound of Sulphur His case of the power over Rheumatism and imp rother demonstration | which Sulphurro has by driving the! itles out of the ‘That Gives You Vatuable Information, the remarkable little work. aged of the Sa: t has wrought tn this state.|Rheumatiam of the feet. Let me tell of some of|/by taking Sulphurro ff | © refer to the/the first treatment,” ase of Mr. Harry | one end to another is ts eumatism, starting in his lower |trurre has brought Fel has been a pleasure as T have|Loe Angeles. through California to learn |sale druggist gave bin few-of the many marvelous |Suiphurro, for a, severe re are scores of persons in this|to a Turkish Bath, put Me city alone who will revere the name |hot Sulphurro bath fOr 's medicine until their|—as hot ae he could es well, accompanying it lwell. y NEWSPAPER MAN cunep, |Daibs, he was cured withil “I felt 500 per cent I have permission eof Mr. Harry C. Noe, clreulation |thusiaatically the other anaer o} iS rancisco Pos Great Demand tor Selp And so tt goes. Californl jabout Sulphurre. Lote, city [Rheumatism have de . afflicted with |the big office buildings, By F. W. STRANG. limbs and feet and spreading over |RyUrre has broughh ele SAN FRANCISCO, May 16 (Special | )!* entire body, that he. was 1°GR" | the same circle of Sul Dispatch). —SuIpRUrTO een eee ee tion ae ty Of Fe- | hag™been made here Cailfornia by storm, Kning his position and returning |Tacoma, Portland aamal |to hie f in the Bast, in| vccmern citi ; ver was such a popular remedy | t . % pduced the Golden state. | {he hor sanee of climate | 7 must not formet 16 7 friend of Mr. Noe had/ oF peands tify to , the The & ulphurro bas now obtain a bottle. So the sufferer been pr the newspapers iN Stre ty and purchased a from British plumbia — through hows > mase, an Washington, Oregon and California ewihe hicie Tienes to the Mexican line, Byerywhere We thewea ee has ite suce demonstrated that © showed me the nota- it i# the greatest medicine of the time. t intro A close Mr. Thompson 9% pital three months wit tory and muscular ey jerything was done we ferings, but to no avalh Am vst return home he read abe nd tee ithout, ary began taki April 18 xt notation fn his diary AY Treads most gone,” On April 28. pletely gon Sunday Swi eity,” | An employe @& the San Franctsco | Bu fice had almost the same |? on ere. “Rheumation al- | 12S, left, his muscled in ten days he was He is completely cureds son found tmmediatt tomach troubles reat suffering, ifornia is un and Oregon in h It is the medicine in cases stomach and such ai orders, because ft ¢l }tem and gives it a new [It cannot heip but de [Disease germs cannot system if Sulphurre @ whit less enthusiasm do | the ple of California show over Sulphurro than did those of Seattle and Washington, where Suiphu irst came to be ith olled like a wave 1 multitudes ow umatism com- ked 14 miles as Colony vineya south of the| o from pain and dives merits of the new medicine. t Never did rheumatism meet such ag Sulphurro, The West especiall¥ affileted with this dr disease and until the arrival of phurro nothing seemed to give m than slight or temporary relief, Now the story is different. Sulphurro's wonderful curative properties have ta sufferer where the medt- has been taken carefully, . |sclentiously and In accordance |the Instructions « in the in: esting booklet accompanying hott! Oakland Woman Thanks Sulphurro, Another ea that came to my at- tention was that of an Oakland woman whose lower limbs were drawn up with Rheumatism to such | blood. a degr that she was virtually] I hope every alling B |helpless, She dragged herself about | Pacific C the room by leaning on the backs |60-cent or dollar bottle of ¢ a with the aid of mem ‘a drug store (ah bers of b family. have it in both sings In three weeks she was so much |send for a booklet tm impre that she could lie flat on }Sulphurro story A her bed in comfort with limbs per-/Addressed to The G fectly straight for the first time tn]Sulphur Co,, 71 Colw months, and she is improving so|tle, Wash., will meet rabidly that her complete cure is ae ery One Reads the Booklet, “Ttead the Booklet" is becoming a slogan for rich and po@r, and suf- reply. %

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