SECTION FIVE Pages 1 to lO Woman's and Books VOL. XXIX. PORTLAND. OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1910. ' NO. 31 WOMEN IN TROUSERS LEAD LIVES AS MEN Amazing Careers Recalled by Startling Discovery of Adventurous Esca pades Mystery of Catherine Coome. ieified Credit" at Powers Asbestos Pads Ours is a different credit plan don't judge it by others in vogue in Portland. Ours has absolutely no objectionable features. Our credit is free no extra charge of any kind. Our plan is confidential. Lib eral concessions are given there's no crowding of payments. "We'll tide you over adversities take H no undue advantage of you when sick or out of work. We'll help you in hundreds of ways, protect you and grant favors that would be relused m any other store in Portland. In addition to tins, you re given a selection more varied-than any other store affords and the prices we ask are always much lower than those ruling: elsewhere. est 30c Mattings at Cash or Credit Terms to Suit Matting of every kind is becoming scarcer day by day, and in consequence prices are on the upward move. If -we hadn't been forehanded enough to contract for a year's sup ply many months ago we couldn 't begin to sell the best 30c matting at 19c, as we shall do tomorrow. There are 20 patterns to choose from largely the much-wanted browns and tans. ALSO A SALE OF ' ' SUMMER BUGS" The very thing you'll want for the Summer cottage, being cool, comfortable and inex pensive. Cash or credit; terms to suit. BOKANYA RUGS WOOL-FILLED 9x12, $17.50 value, at $12.20 9x10.6, $16.00 value, at 59.95 7.6x9, $13.50 value, at . . $8.75 FIBER RUGS 9x12, $14.00 value, at S5-75 8.3x10.6, $11.00 value, a. $6.85 WOOL FIBER RUGS 9x12, $16.00 value, at $9.75 7.6x10.6, $14.00 value, at $8.95 .6x9, $7.50 value, at..... $-4.20 y A N ri rvi I KF JiUU-S 9x12, $17:50 value, at ..$12.15 9x10.6, $16.00 value, at $11.20 7.6x10.6, $13.50 value, at $8.85 19C : These are exactly what is needed to protect the dining table from the heat of dishes fresh from the hot stove. Prices are ex tremely low. Canton flannel covering. 20c Asbestos Pad, 4 by 5y2 inches, J C 30c Asbestos Pad, 6 by 9 inches, 25c Asbestos Pad, 5 by 7 inches, 19 at........ IOC 50c Asbestos Pad, 8V2 by 12 inches, 2 'Jq $4.00 Stand at $1.95 Cash or Credit Terms to Suit I I $19.50 Dresser at $11.85 j P 1 Cash or Credit Terms to Suit I 111 4 j! Very handsome . n fll u i"""! " " ""In m 1 $ waxed quartered 3 V ' V-lST golden oak i 7 llTTTfXi 3 ).'. T shaped posts and l Jrlr'S-I7 fal S3 fji-' P't ' mirror stand- Ml ill Ml , m ri '. 1 ards, beveled i fT! flK El til m- 1 French plate 'ff'jjj " Vl M il J ' lllmiptor, 18x30 I tf I til LI N M l-i A Inches. The top i f f 11 t This stand comes in mahogany finish; the top measures 24 by 24 inches; the shelf is square; the legs , are square and heavy. A very rigid piece of furniture. $7.50 Iron Bed $4.35 Cash or Credit Terms to Suit This is an extremely good bed at the price. Comes in green only and is trimmed with gold. The posts are heavy and are ornamented with heavy ehills; five filler rods in head, and foott the foot being extended. $18 Go-Cart $11.45 Cash or Credit Terms to Suit. These Go-Carts are of the best make of ' ' one-motion ' models and extremely easy to operate and carry. They have rubber tires, and come in green and brown. $23.50 .ffiS $11.85 Cash or Credit Terms to Suit "fiTe've just received another shipment of these fine Quartered Oak Library Tables duplicates of those that sold in such a rush a few months ago. They come in Early English and; golden finish; have a double top, 24x44 inches, and a roomy shelf underneath. The construction and the design are both extra good in every way. $80 Rocker $4il5 Cash or Credit Terms to Suit Made of hardwood, has saddle wood seat, shaped slat' back and arms ; very heavily con structed. Rich golden finish. Exactly Like Cut I J 1 11 1 i t 1 v A - M siiiiiiisiisiiiiia LOS ANGELES HAS HORROR WEEK FILLED WITH CRIME AND TRAGEDY Murders and Murder Trials With Members of Promiuedt Families as Principals Make People Shudder Frank Bell, Ruined Millionaire, Kills Man Who Hounded Him Talented Artist Is Burned to Death. BY R. M. WHITNEY. LOS ANGELES. July 30. (Special.) The shudder of tragedy has held Los Angreles longer than usual of late; murders and trials for murder have filled the news columns of the papers and have monopolized conversation when men and women gathered. They have not been commonplace crimes, , but have had many features of unusual Interest. The principals have been mem bers of prominent families, so that the details of the awful events have been discussed more widely than Is usual. George C. Luitweiler, who killed his wife, wounded her sister. and took poison himself, is the son of a promi nent business man who has been iden tified with Los Angeles industrial life for more than & quarter of a century. Luitweller's life was saved after he roic efforts on the part of physicians called from the county hospital, and he will be tried for murder. The trag edy was caused by the refusal of his young wife to agree to the sale of their home to provide funds for Luit weiler to enter a sanatorium for treat ment for consumption. That the crime had been planned in advance is shown by the .fact that Luitweiler purchased the revolver with which he killed his wife and the poison with which he tried vainly to take his own life the day before. Luitweiler and his wife had grown from babyhood to maturity In this city. They had hosts of friends gained during their school days and In after years. The news of the trag edy gave many families in Los Angeles a shock. W. C milinghsm. father of the murdered woman, and of May Ag nes Dillingham, the wounded girl, cre ated a scene of intense dramatic in terest at the Inquest when he appeared before the Coroner's ' Jury. In a trembling voice, often choked with motion. Mr. Dillingham told what he knew of the .married life of his daugh ter the short five years that preceded her tra1c death. He told that Luit weiler llad made her life an unending torment: he told of the clashes he had had with the young man, and how Luitweiler had threatened his life and that of his wife on more than one oc casion. There was something terribly Mtthetic and dramatic In his final a re peal to the Jury "I ask you, gentle men, only for justice for my child."' Hounded Man Kills Lawyer. The Luitweiler tragedy marked the beginning of the week of horror. The week closed with the killing of O. P. Widaman, an attorney, by Frank M. Bell, a ruined young millionaire. Be'l was a prosperous cattleman of Texas I up to three years ago. He had in herited more than $1,000,000 and had proved his capability by taking good care of his fortune and investing it judiciously. He was well known In the club life of most of the big citie of the United States and he and his beautiful wife had many friends and an assured place in society. Then they came to Los Angeles and within two months Mrs. Bell brought suit for di vorce. Widaman was her attorney, and for three years he seemed to be a Nemesis pursuing Bell to his doom. Mrs. Bell was unable to secure a di vorce, but the Bell home was broken up. During the trial of the suit Bell and Widaman met by appointment in a room in the Hollenbeck Hotel to dis cuss some financial feature of the suit. Three shots were fired, though no one was wounded, in that room. Who flrod them is a mystery. Each man ac cused the other of trying to murder him. Bach had the other arrested on an attempted murder complaint. Neither was convicted. Widaman had Bell arrested for perjury and he was acquitted. Widaman had Bell's private yacht attached as it lay iu the harbor here, but Bell threw the United States Deputy Marshal who served the pa pers Into the Pacific Ocean and sailed away to Mexican waters. When he returned to San Diego after a cruise of several months, he was arrested again, and Widaman again appeared assisting the prosecution. Bell proved that he was outside the three-mile limit and the attachment had been il legal. He was acquitted. Bell's for tune was dissipated by this litigation and the incidental demands made upon it, and he" was left penniless. But his lawyer, John R. Fleming, out of friend ship for the young tnan, gave him a home at his residence In Hollywood. Immediately Fleming was bombarded . with anonymous letters threatenlrtb him with death and his children with kidnaping if he continued to harbor Bell. For the past five months Flem ing's -home has been guarded by de tectives. Two months ago Fleming, visiting a shack on the rear of his lot, found Bell bound and gagged In the building. He bad been set upon and beaten almost into Insensibility, and left in the shack where he had been two days .and nights. He spent six weeks in the hospital as a result of this experience. He declared that his assailants were friends of Wida man. but he was unable to muster sufficient evidence to warrant the is suance of a complaint. Two days after Ike left the hospital he was arrested wandering on the railroad track not far from Widaman's home in Artesia. He was armed and Widaman said that his (Widaman's) life was in danger. Bell was acquitted when he told with convincing earnestness that he was planning to commit suicide, but wanted to have one last interview with Widaman to persuade him to leave Mrs. Bell and their children alone. Then came the final tragedy.. Bell is in Jail awaiting trial. Fleming, hi faithful attorney, says that Bell has been Insane, driven to madness by the continuous troubles of the past three years and many sober-minded people believe Fleming's statement. Elopement Ends in Murder. In the course of this tragic week, marked by murder at the beginning and the end, George E. Figueroa, de scendant of Governor Fisrueroa. one of the early Spanish grandees of Cali fornia, was tried and convicted of mur dering his bride of five weeks. Sie was Sarah Madeline Pugsley, daughter of a respectable family and sister of & prominent newspaper artist. Fig ueroa and the girl eloped after a brief acquaintance and the news of the murder was the first news many of her friends had ot her marriage. It was proved trell his wife's charms to a friend and that he killed her after she had fought him to protect her honor. It was a grewsome tale. The connection" wixn the Carriega fortune made the story of unusual Interest. Mrs. de Samman, Figueroa's aunt, was the principal wit ness against the youth. She it was who secured a large portion of her mother's fortune, the Carriega esfate, by proving years ago In a court trial that her father wa.s not her mother's husband. Her mother had occupied a secure position in society of the early days of Los Angeles and her fair fame was not tarnished until after her death, when her own daughter, the present M de Samman, exposed the early amouxs of the dead woman. as a neces sary prelude to obtaining a large tor tune. Nothing but trouble has fol lowed this money. Accidents, fires, un fortunate Investments, disgraceful episodes left a long trail from the co irt where Mrs. de Samman secured the for tune to the court where she succeeded in convicting her own nephew of mur der in the first degree "without rec ommendation of mercy." And in the meantime, in Santa. Ana, Frank F. Skelley, a lumber merchant and member of numerous frater-ial or ders, has been on trial on a' charga of murdering his wife by throwing gaso line upon her and setting a matcn to the drenched woman. At the time of the woman's death Skelly was so badly burned, supposedly in trying to extin guish the flames that enveloped his "wife, that he was' in the hospital for several weeks and is scarred for life He said that the gasoline stove ex ploded while his wife was preparing breakfast- But several witnesses have testified that they heard Mrs. Skelly, fatally burned, as she was being car ried into the house, and as she lay upon the bed, accuse her husband of ier murder, using such expressions -as these: "Frank has murdered me; he threw gasoline on me." "Frank, why did you not shoot me?" "Frank, how could you do it? What have I done? What a horrible death. Oh, Frank, how could you?" There had been noth ing in the married life of the Skellys to indicate that the young husband wanted his wife out of the way, but after the woman's death rumors of trouble were common enough. Skelly has been overcome several times dur ing the trial with grief and his condi tion throughout has been pitiable. Artist Dies Tragically. Another tragic death was that of Mrs. Gustav Faber, an artist of more than usual talent, the wife of a musician. In Germany they had eacl made en viable reputations in their respective lines of art. but after coming to South ern California they met with reverses and had had hard work to make both ends meet They lived at San Bernar dino, where they occupied- a bungalow built fn their more - prosperous days. Mrs. . Faber was preserving jellies in a small outhouse in the rear of her residence. As the wood fire failed to burn properly she poured coaloil upon it. Instantly- she was wrapped in flames and a gasoline stove close by exploded. Thinking of her home and the art treasures it contained, and seemingly unconscious of the fact that she was ablaze, she rushed from the outhouse to the residence, setting it afire also. She was completely en veloped in flames when neighbors, who had heard her cries, rushed to her aid. Before the fire could be extinguished all her garments had been burned off, her shoes destroyed, and not an inch of her body escaped scorching, her' back and breast being actually cooked. Her remarkable vitality and pluck were shown as she lay on the ground under a tree, whiles kindly neighbors wrapped her charred form with sheets. "Doctor, am I going to die?" she asked. When informed that her case was hope less, she continued: "W'ell. call all these kind women and men close." Then, gazing about her, she said: "I want It thoroughly understood, and you are all my w.tnesses, that all we possess belongs absolutely to ray hus band. He owns the land and the home. Tell him there is money in the top bureau drawer, and tell him all the jewelry is concealed in the . lower drawer." With that she sighed and died. Five' minutes later her husband, who had been summoned from town, dashed through the crowd and madly threw himself upon the dead form of his wife. He is prostrated and his friends fear that his mind is perma nently wrecked by the tragedy. His faithful wife's forethought, however, went for naught, as the house and all it contained were destroyed by the fire that caught from her blazing clothes when she rushed from the outhouse in her aeonv. One of the most pathetic events in the local courts was the finding that Mrs. Mary C Jack Bobbins was insane and her commitment to the asylum at Patton. Mrs. Bobbins had Just filed suit for divorce from George A. Rob bins, a mining engineer of prominence, known "in the mining regions of Can ada, the United States and Mexico. An unkind fate seems to have been, pur suing Mrs. Bobbins during the past year and this latest development comes as a climax to a series of disappoint ments and heartbreaks. She was mar ried to Bobbins in Vancouver about two years ago. Their honeymoon was spent in Portland. Thence they went to Idano, where Bobbins was interested in some mining properties. Then they came to Los Angeles, where Bobbins opened an office and had a prosperous business, beverai montns ago she be came an invalid and was unable to leave her home. Her husband ap peared to be very attentive and she was happy despite the affliction that would have sorely tried one with a more gloomy nature. LONDON, July 30. (Sp-eclal.) How many women are there masquerading' as . men in your locality? Maybe the question is not so foolish as it looks. For before suffragettes came to trouble the world women often found ways to gain"" equality with men. There was "Harry Lloyd," for in stance, who has just handed in her checks on the outskirts of London. The mystery of this woman, who for over 25 years worked and lived as a man, has roused tremendous interest. So well did she scarry her masculine I clothes that nobody suspected her secret. When a doctor was called to the house In Alma road, Enfield, on the Northeastern fringe of the metropolis, to attend "Harry Lloyd" In his last moments, he presently came downstairs and said to Miss Lloyd, who believed herself to be the daughter: "I thought It was a man I was called to see?" "Yes, It is so," she replied, "that is my father." Then she was shocked to hearthat the dead body upstairs was that of a woman. Inquiries established the fact that the' woman's real name was Marie Le Roy, the daughter of a French officer, whose widow resided in Brussels some time about 1872. Well educated and full of the joy of life, the little French woman-used to attend the Hall or Science in Old street in the days when Robert Ingersoll. Charles Bradlaugh and Austin Holyoake. his publisher, lectured there. Why this well-educated woman cut herself off from all her friends and lived the latter half of her life as a man is a mystery which she has carried with her to the grave. Probably, however, it was due to a wish to protect the good name of the girl who believed her to be her father. This theory has recalled similar acts of devotion disclosed from time to time In the life histories of other women who have posed as men. More often, however, women, have adopted man's attire through sheer love of adventure, and a dislike of the limitations and re straints imposed on their own sex. Of this the most notable example was the famous Madame Velasquez, who took so active a part in the war between the North and South. She organized a company of recruits and to the intense surprise of her husband, who was an officer in the Confederate Army, she one day presented herself before him in camp and he was in the extraordinary position of having to accept the serv ices of his own wife as lieutenant. Soon after she joined him. however, he was killed by the accidental discharge of a carbine. Madame Velasquez had many exciting adventures during the war. She fought through the famous Battle of Bull Run and was, badly wounded at the- fall of Fort Donelson. After giving up service as a soldier she acted as a spy for the Confederates, and when the war was nearing its end she took a hand in Jjlockade running. In keeping with Tier adventurous nature, she married three times and had several children, but the cares of motherhood do not appear to have in duced her to settle down, for in later life she Joined a miner's camp as a man and made extensive tours through Europe. - At the beginning of her male career she went to great pains to con ceal her form and had made for her half a dozen fine wire-net shields', which she wore next to the skin. Over these she wore an undershirt of silk or lisle thread, which fitted closely and was held in place by straps across the chest and shoulders. These under shirts could be rolled up into the small compass of a collarbox. Around the waist of each of the undershirts was a band with eyelet holes arranged for the purpose of making the waistbands of the pantaloons' stand out to the proper number of inches. An ambitious imitator of Mme. Velas quez came to the front as lately as the South African War. Among the host of strange offers that poured into the office of a London daily newspaper, was one from a young woman engaged in business In a South Coast watering place, asking for advice -to enable her to go out to the wat1 as a private. ' The sage counsel which was given to "Mabel" had little effect, however; for ehortly afterwards, in the khaki uniform of a young recruit, she fell into the hands of the authorities, whose unsympathetic conduct nipped, in the bud her patriotism at the very mo ment when It was on the point of blos soming. One of the most successful and adven turous of female masqueraders was Han nah Snelf, "the female sailor," who ended her romantic career in Bedlam asylum. - She had married a Dutch' sea man who robbed her of her savings and disappeared, leaving her with an Infant daughter. On the death of the child, Hannah dressed herself in a suit of her brother-in-law's clothes. assumed his name, and set out to wander over the face of the earth in search of her hus band. ' She enlisted, and at the siege of Pondicberry was the first in a party of English foot soldiers to ford the river breast high under an incessant Are from a French battery. She received a danger ous wound in the leg, but a negress to whom she confided the secret of her sex assisjed her in extracting the bullet and healing the wound. Shortly afterwards she went on board th "Tartar" as a sailor, and was trans- .Off TVCe MyOT L A ? 1? I r 'Htf v - W- 5 n v' jyrAjyjYJiCyVjDojv. jfrscx; ferred to the "Eltham." While the vessel was at Lisbon she learned that her long lost husband had been arrested at Genoa for murder, and to expiate his crime had been put into a sack with a quantity of stones and thrown into the sea. On her return to England she obtained release from naval service by allowing her sex to become known. She was taken in hand by an enterprising showman and ap peared at the Royalty Theater in Well close square, and for a time was a great attraction. Also, on account of the wounds she had received in action, Hannah was awarded a naval pension of 160. With her reward she took a liquor shop in Wapping, the signboard of which was in scribed: "The Widow in Masquerade; or the Female Warrior," and there she flourished till her mind gave way. Equally varied and exciting was the career of Mary Ann Talbot, the young est of 16 natural children of an Earl. A "John Taylor," she was taken to sea by a scoundrel named Captain Bowen, who kept the maintenance money allowed for her support- She was wounded in engage merits, taken prisoner and suffered many vicissitudes before residing at Rhode Island with the family of Captain Field, whose daughter fell violently in love with the smart-looking young sailor. When the "Ariel" sailed for England the love-sick girl went into violent hys terics, and was only pacified by Taylor promising to return as soon as possible. On the voyage, to the young sailor's dis may. Captain Field spoke sympathetically of his daughter's attachment to him, and told Taylor that he intended to retire and hand over to him the command, of his vessel. From this dilemma the girl sailor was rescued through being captured by a pressgang soon after landing, .and she had to, reveal her sex In order to be released. Her next adventure was as a high wayman, going Into partnership with notorious character named Haines, whom she deserted soon after the com mencement of their "business." Then she joined the Thespian Dramatic Company and. although she was not a great success on the stage, she man aged to subsist on the engagements which the fame" of her adventurous career procured for her. A female masquerader who attained great notoriety for aer personal cour age as a soldier, during the Duke of Marlborough's campaign against the French in the Low" Countries, was Mrs. Christian Davies, the daughter of a Dublin brewer. While in winter quar ters she amused herself by pretending to make love to a burgher's daughter,, and was so successful in her suit that she found herself compelled to fight a duel with a sergeant of her regiment, whom she all but mortally wounded. In the early days of the British colonies several cases of women mas querading as men were discovered, the dangers of pioneer life in those days being sufficient motive for adventurous women adopting the sex which afford ed them the best protection. There is living near Melbourne a wonderful character, Marion Edwards, otherwise known as "Bill," who still conducts an hotel in male attire. During her 30 years' Yesidence in Australia "Bill" has turned her hand to almost every thingrand recently told a woman Inter viewer that she wished to remain what she was "a woman without feminin ity: a man without being male." "She has the figure of a lightweight pugilist; the weather-beaten face and rather bleared eye that one sees in sailors. She has no sign, physical or mental, that connotes her gender. She tempts one to believe almost that sox can be made a matter of habit." So the Interviewer describes the Australian Amazon.