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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1904)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL',' PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 13, lCSi. C - - - - - -- - - - - r a nnrrrrN mafp-n nrrtl ffrri " mi n A m -A n nntrhTTTl A fit v-nt AnfA n . nn in FiTTl TmfhTHNr1 U 17 ' A 7 r w -1 1 '. uiiiii;- w DEATH ONLY STAYS LONDON-SS ASTONISHED BY MARVELOUS CHILD MUSICIANS luuiinm, VALENCAY DIVORCE - v -" 1 11 1 "'." ' i ' . . .. v i-l. ......... . ..... . ' ' , . . . . . .- . ... ". . . ' CO-RESPONDENTS v ARE UNHAPPY LOT ' - y " V 'V' ' i i odds TAznro orr or xrss LIMA XOBTOV TVTM A TIMy-OB-ABT TOr TO TBB STKB BUTT TO ' BETAftATIO TBOM ZB i 7 Or- (Special DUpiU-a br Leasee Wire to Tba Journal) Paris, June 13. More trouble has come upon former . Vice-President Levi P; Morton. His fourth daughter, Miss Lena Morton, who wai operated upon for appendicitis, has died of the shock. The circumstances connected with the ease are distressing-, for It Is now as- erted that the physicians who were first called In wrongly diagnosed Miss Mor ton's condition, and only when she was alarmingly 111 was It discovered by Dr. Arnaud Routler that It war case or I appendicitis and that the necessity of Ian operation was Immediate. '. Mr. and Mrs." Morton and her sister, the Duchess . of .. Valencay, spent the afternoon with the sufferer, who Is now I In a sanitarium where the operation was performed. Meanwhile there has been a lull in the unfortunate disagreements arising from the proceedings instituted by the Duke of Valencay for divorce.. Ilia wife was Miss Helen Morton, a sister of Miss Lena Morton,- whom She closely re sembles. Vlt V'"' . ;' ' -.' '. The. duke and his mother, the Princes de Sagan, have goneto the Chateau da vaiencay ror repose. j ney- win re turn to Paris t6morrow and continue the fray. '-' .v. --v.. .' Mr. Morton Is determined to protect his daughter, and has taken up his con tinuous residence with her at her resi dence In the Rue Constanttne, hard by Napoleon's tomb. He la determined to I arrives at the village of Kasan.- A sklr- X.OBBOV SAT. THB atyilTBXCTXOBS '' ncrogzo , - t y txs ' jawabzsb ABaCT orrxczBs KAXB tbb abt v or WABUnowf. 'oatbtribci ! Air. , MOST A JfOVt ABT. ,''." . '. i , i ii . . . . . t J . , - . (Copyright, Hert ; News .Service, . by. Xm4 .... - . i t,u . ITk. V....-..-I , . v ( Jaok . Zioadoa.) .... ' - Antung, First' Japaaese Amy. ' April 10. It Is all very well, this long-range fighting;, but If the range continue to Increase and If other armies are as so- ifcltlous for the wel fate of the corre spondents at are the Japanese, war cor respondents,, will become a lost'aVt and there will be a lot of war correspondents entering new professions late In life. ; : lit the first ylace, when the front of battle extends for miles and miles, no correspondent can see of his own. eyes all tha Is taking place. .What la Tap. feening to the right, miles away, behind the mountains , where the Yalu curls Into the east, and what la happening to the left, tnlieei away, behind the moun tains where the YaJu curls Into the west, is beyond him. ' He cannot understand - what Is taki Ing pluoe before his eyes (or his field glasses, rather, ' for Ms eyes show hint nothing,) without knowing what is tak ing place en. right and Jefti and there Is no one to tell him what la taking! place, on right and left - The officers may not tell .him because In their par lance, it would be an exposure of military secret. . ' f .' - . This would not be so bad if they did not consider practically everything military secret, v Apropos of this... a correspondent, on his way up, country, . vv e-- , MISS LENA. MORTON. Who' died In Paris laat week,' PARISIANS ADOPT V NEW YORK FADS - J . . - - ' ' , ' . -. . ' . . ' ....' ' "' -'r i . - :! - I . ' .. .V; ' , 7 Craze for Rag Time Coon Son'gs Horse and Dog Shows Brussels LibiaryS ; York Cook Swindled -Out WoAmirMl. (Copyright, Heartt News Bertlre, by Leased Wire toTbe Journal.) . ( y (By Pata Yllliers.) - Parle. June 18. The time has passed . when Parla, secure In her position aa the metropolis . of the world, found It perfectly natural that all other great cities -on both sides of the Atlantic " should Imitate her, while no Parisian would ever think of adopting anything In use anywhere else. ; . ' t Now. we take many of our fashions from London, while we stlU more readily adopt amusements and ' fads Invented by the fertile brains of pleasure-loving New York. ' . . . "' From New York came the erase for coon songs, rag time and the cako walk with which we are still j afflicted, though. . to be honest, ' most of us heartily hate It. , As New York society for years has bad Us horse shows and dog shows at Madison Square Garden, It comes per fectly natural that' we must also have these fashionable shows, though the true Parisian takes very little Interest In horses, except those entered in the . great 1 races at Longcbamps ' and., abso lutely no interest in creaturea of the canine family, ; - , ; Parisian Boolety Butterflies. Nevertheless, we have had our dog v FhW and it was quite a success." It was " lield in thevery" heartrof ' the city, itt ' 'the Palais des Tullleries, and was at . tended by the very creme de la creme of French society. ; Parisian society wt terflles in their most elegant robes, and accompanied by qounts and marquises, dressed most faultlessly av l'Anglaise, 'spent hours walking around among the " stalls, trying to convince one another - that nothing was of more Interest to them than, fox terriers,, greyhounds, v. spaniels or daschunde, - ' : '' Thee members of the Committee on prises all . belonged to our most . blue f blooded :; aristocracy, and With ; much dignity and no hesitation .they awarded ' medals and ribbons to animals of which ' they knew nothing. It was a most Amusing affair and everybody at least ' pretended t to be greatly interested, '' though tbe Judges felt Immensely ; re-, ' lieved when the nffair waa over and no one had even , attempted ' to criticise Jhelr. Judgments. ; ''',9romUlM SoaadaL. . ' A great scandal has come to light at 'Brussels in which a number of the of ficials of . the Royal ' library are in , vol ved. During a recent meeting of the Belgian senate one of ' ' the members, Alexander Braun, stated that an editor at Munich, M. Rosenthal, had Informed 5' the government that an official of the . library iad offered to sell him a price less volume, of . which there are opy two In existence. ' 1 The ' volume' had been shown to him. and an investigation showed that if had disappeared from' ' the library at Brus sels, and . that ' several other books of great value were alao missing.- .' Immediately after this speech in the: stay there day and night, and has sur rendered his rooms In 'his hotel, as his daughter ' Insists on remaining In the conjugal resilience until the final decree of divorce has been pronounced. Her husband, the duke, has taken up his bode with his father and mother, the Prince and Princess de Bagan, 100 yards away, In tbe aristocratic old Rue Bt Dominique. c 'y ."It la he." an Id the duchess today bit terly; "not I. who .have quit 'the con jugal domicile.'" . .... ; ' : ; Every effort has been, made, even threats.-and the servants have been tampered with. In an effort to expel the duchess from the r conjugal -- domicile The Valencay side of the campaign Is conducted by the mother-la-law of the princess, ss the old Prince1 de Bagan is In his senility. The mother-in-law ' has suceeeded In driving the duchess (Miss Morton) from the. Chateau de Valencay, but the lat ter is determined to stay in Paris la the conjugal domicile. Two stages in the divorce proceedings have already terminated. The duke has made his complaint before the Judge, the exact phrase used by him in the complaint la Incompatibility of manners." , . ' The French law provides that aa op portunity of reconciliation should be afforded the duchess with the husband, and the presiding Judge as the only persona present. The Judge, , seeing that the case was hopeless, made an order setting forth "no reconciliation," and authorised the plaintiff te sue In uurv- - - . i an anomalous ona of lnw nn j , vaiencay ana nis motneis tne Princess honored guest ; Tna restrictions whiclr mlsh had. once taken place at Kaaon. A month had passed. . The front - had moved up a hundred miles. The corre spondent saw a few gcaves on the hlll- sida . . , , ' All ZS ecrecy. ." - ;"How .many Japanese .were killed T he asked an ofrtcer. The offloer waa a major.' He replied: , "I cannot tell you; It Is a military secret.".- The above may aeem far fetohed. but it is not. It is merely typical. ; On every t aide is the military secret , Tha corresoondent Is headed around, by military secrets. , He may not move about for fear . he will pop onto a military secret though what he may do with a military secret only me Japanese Know.; v. First in order to get a military secret out of the country, be most show it to me censor ana get permission. , This ob tained, he must dispatch It by Korean runners to ring Yang, a couple of bun urcu in ues io me soutn, where It may do aispaicnea oy nis agent to Seoul and from there be cabled, via Japan, to. his paper. nut granting that the military seoret has survived all the vicissitudes or the .Journey to Ping Yane and not lost its time value, it Is not yet out of tne country. " .... ;. '"r, j Divoa or eigni aaya jater a rumor strives with a note .from his Ping Ysng agent telling him -that all cables are oemg neia up. bo the militarr u cret, like the peasant who started for Carcosonne, dies unobtrusively of old a. (Special Plspatrb by Leased Wire to The Journal) ' - London, June H. London Is positively' overrun with artistic prodigies and the curious thing about them Is -that they really are a yry . remarkable set ' of youngsters. V- -f . Frana von Veesey, ,the Bavarian boy ' violinist easily, holds the first rank. He, is but ,10 yeara old. He has played for the queen at Buckingham palace and captivated ber. .... .' . .,, .'v " - .. . There is another child violinist who,, to use- the current " phrase, has, "cap tured the town." Tilts'' Is Miss ' May Marlon, an English girl fine Is It' years old and mafle her first publlo ap pearance last Tuesday at St. James haiU She baa played alnce she" waa five years old. Is a pretty,- unaffected, child,' the daughter .of, Colonel . Marlon, of ; the royal engineers, and while not, eo brilliant-an artist as little .Von Veesey, la a wonderful violinist. . r mil I i J a wonderful violinist. r r V ;;: h ', 11 ' . I f n I h r 'J . ... ' ' "1 i ,; . ' U I . . . . .. ' TAiirrT IIIU 1U . C THE WKC ARE FEW AKBAC8ASOB CXOATB BA LIST Or TB AMXBIOAV ZBLa1. WXO WAVT TO BB rBXBZBTBB AT OOXTBT . XCABT AJTSBBSOB K BATZBTZBS BOMB. (Copyrigbt Hearst News Berries . , Wire to The Journal.) " (By Xady Henry omersei.) xjvnauu, une ( is. xne .season KAISER IS ENVIOUS ' Of OUR SUBFJARIKE pzaArronrrcs otzb rArxmus or rBBBOBC iXTBHABDrB, MM X.OOXM WOTC Z.OVaiBO mil AT TXB rXTLTOV ABB OBBEBS AMEBXOAB WsBsaBBaBBBaBBsi The picture on the left Is that of im uiM tha v Th n.iti; ikJ , ., 't " r iur jiegDer, le-year-oia singer, in dtf Sagan, who la responsible for the filing of the action, ' have arrived in Paris,' and as sobn as " the Morton obsequies, have been held, it Is' believed senate the first secretary of the library, I that the annulment proceedings w(ll be M. Petit mysteriously vanished and no 1 resumea. trace of him has been found. Committed aJelae. The Napoleonic , ideas of tha proud. ambitious and ' scheming . It is believed that be has committed ?"(f3jLeJf .JlMif0Lt5? suicide, as a revolver, which he was I I , C . " JT. , 1.1.. founT P Valencay-s Josephlnehaa not given him an heir to the vaiencay estates, most of which were bought In by Levi P, Morton to prevent them from passing .Into the bands of outsiders.- ,1 Therefore the mother and ber son de sire to- break the alliance. The differ ences, reached a head after a violent quarrel -between the princess and her daughter-in-law. - Shortly after.', the marriage of the duke and Miss Morton, the chateau ; of Valencay, having al ready been purchased by Count Jean Caatellane. brother of Bonl. the duke availed himself of a provision of the found, It la thought, however, that persona of muoh 'higher social 'standing in so ciety are responsible for the thefts, the extent of which V will not be known until an exaot Inventory has been taken, and there is the greatest consternation in Brussels society, as it has been found that,; the manuscript of "La Brabanconna," the Belgian national hymn, which is laat known to have been In the hands of a man Tery closely con nected with tha royal court, cannot be found anywhere. ' J It is rumored that it, with other stultify all his efforts show the one, tha solicitude of his hosts shows tha second. If a skirmish or demonstration is to be made, word ia sent to him to that effect; also a further word to the effect that , he Is to assemble with-his colleagues at a certain -place and iro Princess de I ceed and be directed under the manage ment or an army omcer told off for the purpose. -' He la further warned - that neither he. nor hia colleagues may go individually. . - ; : - , I I Takes rbotograpka, f Even before - the taking of photo briUlancy. . No more Courts remain to afford opportunity tor ; the . women : of New York. . Chicajro. or Boston's back Day to reach tha summit , of her ambi tion and make ber courtesy to tha klner. and only "15 of Columbia's -daughtera nave paaeea the roysj throria. - . Mr. Choate s Hatistlll holds the names of 75 malda and - matron who may wait from youth to old age for the summons to tha royal presence. The most notable presentations have. of course, been : those of the Duchess of Roxburghe, on her marriage, of Mrs. (jeorge VanderbUt, and . Mrs. George violinist and tha . right Paula - ner, . a 14-year-old pianist f. Heg BANK FAILURE IN BERLIN A SCANDAL mnhi a ahaniurniv tnrMAAnn: t -inp I -w, the last named radiantly hand- had the temerity to take a snap of an m ,n ner oowl dress, t. But,' so. far, army -farrier and his bellows. "Here the contingent of fair Americans in; at least was something that waa not a London has made little or no effect at military aecret," i bad ; thought in my 1 sensational display. innocence, rmeen mmuiea naa away .-.' xno reason or tna temporary re I waa stopped by a soldier, who could j trenchment in the Marlborough menage not speak English. I showed my ere- f ; already been indicated. thn,.rt. dentials and on my arm my official in- nrobable that th DiipIou u,ri algnla of my position In the Japanese J S ,l , ,,1 ir!" ' ",5, M?f !" army., But itras no usa ; Home thing eT. 5 rL rJ.tW bi i,n ..rin.f , mmiiiir vT waa near.H n r before the Goodwood races. The valuable manuscripts, has found Its wav Z 'T . " 1 '""f""'" 7 remain where I waa, and While I waited """ " lu u " wiourgne wm , - . . . ,,,, iDacs. an Baun-wnicn nu iwen aisposea yoo.000 nuMXM.wstne to . sTZOBXTABT Or OABX MCKT- bxss to oazb rzBMZBszoir roa TXB BABX TO TJSB AS ITS rATBOBXS?. "LADY BURGLARS" IL OF SCIIOG CRIME i m. jiuii ut bu Aimrivsa million-I - a i,v. Makes rortnna aa Cook. Statev ' H " " A few weeks ago a Frenchman.. M. I n. pi. t.A'jn I Joseph Mueller, ., returned : to thla city, heaitata to stay that there was no other from New York, where he had made a reason for: the marriage than this, so small tortune da culsslne in one far M the Valencays ware concerned. Of. the fashionable-OlUbS. w rrIn It la tht over InnaTrlia .ho..,. Oa board the French steamer which ... VABiiaal trie Tyf nr4kBV.a Am Bo era w. k a aa brought him to Havre he made the to worked counter to the 'wiahei of th qualnUnce of ft ; pleasant v younir En-1 n.inV .iPh. ' llhman JnnBfhan XVIM )ihri iiraa I . . ' " ' v.: -, ; - ; : self, waa bound for Parla TheMfWo were soon inseparable, and arriving here,' they took adjoining rooms in the same hotel. Some days later Joseph Mueliefwent to a bank and cashed a draft represent ing all his savings, 30,000 francs'. When ; he returned he sat . down to have a drink with his English ; friend outside a cafe on) Boulevard Sevastopol.' A few minutes later they were Joined by another Englishman, whom Wild In troduced as a friend of hia During the conversation the new-comer' asked the chef to buy him a cane in a store to take with .him to London as a souvenir of Paris..; ;!' r? x ; .:,- .-: 'Here are it franca, he "aald, ' '"you are a Frenchman and naturally have much i better taste than I have, and as I am a lltne' tired,' you'mlsht' o alone. However," he added, with a smile, "us you might run away with my money to New york. . let me ' bava your, pocket book as security." t Mueller thought this a good Joke and handed the stranger the pocketbook containing the 80,000 franca When he returned with the cane his two English friends . had c disappeared and the police have been -unable to find them. Next week Mueller goes back to New Tork to try to et his old position DOCK, I cudjeled my brains in an endeavor to not permit of tha physical and mental And what military secret had crept in strain incidental ; to tha elaborate en unawares. I had to give up the plates. I tertalnment, -and . tha field so , far has The functions of the war correspond- been lleft to Helen. Duchess of. Man ent, so far aa I can ascertain, are to alt cheater,; Who haa already given a few up on tne reverse aiopes or nun wnere I musicaies and after dinner dances, honored guests canno be injured.) and Vp,4,M mMit g.-,- (Oopyrigbt, Hearst - Kews BerTlee, by Leased ... wire t The Journal.) t Berlin, June ; H. German society - la stirred to its very . depths by tha dis closures being made.' in the investiga tion of the .Bank of Fommeru scandal. This scandal datea back many months and has been dealt with in the criminal courts before, but while it was known from the first trial that; tha two direc tors, SchultS and Romelke, had swindled the bank .out of considerable amounts from there to -listen- to -the -.crack of j The -Prince and Princess of Wale feUTDSOaCB WOkCAV ZJATjrOVBATES , BBW 7JTDVITBT - TOB TKB WSABXB , BX SBESSMAXBB'S APrBBBTZCB ' TTBBS EZPEBT XOnXTTZB ABB PIOXTOOXET. of money, the latest examination by rifles and vainly search the dim dla-1 d-tInwTtiiawiTK tfl uPrwn " tanca for the men who are doing tha I er I,,T tn; corruption which has atarUed tha pub- mnZr.Ti- Vrvi " . . I He, especially so aa the members of the J???' 'LW'1?5?? kalaer'a own family have become in- i"L""u".7. V. volved in tha affair. f- v ; r v 7Z ' "., T Ji. . ... . "l I The two accused ' directors,' ' it ' i iw Bumuior win d miuw wun levees, da :, r inn nnn e, Sii"? ''fTVW bank and .turned 'this- amount orer to king much relief. . t There are perhaps few men . whose name is more familiar to Americans than that of the young soldier who,; 40 years ago, then a mere stripling, spent several months ; In the United States ana wno now, as juora : JTarquahar, a dapper figure of 60 years, is the con etant companion 'of tha king.' Smart and HAYES AND M'ATEE , DISAGREE ON FACTS That. Frank McA tee is in any way con nected with the Hasty Messenger service Is denied by Jeff W. Hayes, manager of that concern. f vMcA tee, it la claimed, eald that he had purchased an "interest In the -company- when' at the county. Jail a ft vr days ago.; iie-isjateo said to have riaimel at that time that Thomas M. ord had selected him to serve as Jailer nhon be assumes the office of sheriff. ;, McAtee le In no way connected with the JIhkiv Meseenger :arvlt-'," said Mr. ilu yes. "lie was in. my employ for ten d; et two. week recently but bl yoit was unsatisfactory and I let him go. He never had a cent of money in the com pany." - -'," "It Is true that t called at the county Jail," said McAtee. "but" I did not tell Jailer Jackson or anybody else that Mr. Word was to appoint me Jailer. I did have an interest in ths sompany. Bell ing out only recently, ana my name Is on all the company stationery as manager.; ; Jailer Jackson Was not inclined to dis cuss the affair' yesterday, but admitted that the essential details of the story-published In The Journal are accurate. .v ' - Jr Is asserted by Hayes that he per mitted McAtee to place iie name on the Hasty Messenger - service i stationery As manager, because McAteo represented to him that he was well known and that such a use of his! name would incraase (Copyright, ITearit Kews Berries, by Leased Wire to The journal.) ,; .- . (By Lady Henry Somerset) London, June. 18. Women: areatart- shootlng; to receive orders from head quarters as to what be may or may not do; to submit daily to the censor his conjectures and military secrets. When he hss described two or three invisible battles and has had his con Jeotures trimmed down by the censor. he is done fos. He can't go on ae scribing the sounds of rifles and guns. thj bursting of shell and shrapnel, and .the occasional moving specas ior. whole campaign.- s ' " Personally, I entered upon thla cam paign with the most gorgeous concep tions i of what a war ; correspondent's work In the world must be. - I knew that the mortality of war correspond enta waa said to be greater, in propor tion to numbers than the mortality of soldiers, I had read ?The Light That Failed. and I '-remembered Stephen ; Crane's descrlptlohs of being.; 'under Are .. in Cuba. I had heard Got wot, was there aught I had not heard? or all aorta Ing on many new careers, some to be commended, some to be regretted, but a j an& conditions of correspondents in all lady burglars' school of crime certainly j B0Tt, battles and skirmishes, right takes its place among the latter -The enterprising .woman ' who in augurated this regrettable opening for women is Anhle Morgan, - and her his tory has been without parallel for many yeara. -v? .?.. t .. " , i u , N, . - Annie, who was known as "the lady burglar," and has been assoola ted with in the thick of it, where Ufa was keen and ; immortal momenta were being lived. - In brief, I came to -war expect ing to get thrills. My only thrills have been tho of Indignation ana irritauon. when she had secured her aerricea she several noiauio ruumjrjea, ia av asnuBonie.j Initiated ner into ner aonooi or nurpary. woman of barely 30. On leaving school she became a dressmaker's apprentice, but she was not contented with so un ambitious a career and she left ber firm in order to embark upon her first ex perience., of crime.- ;- X-.X- -.; r;:'-r.. . She became an xpett shoplifter and pickpocket, and - by the v money, she earned, she soon became possessed jf a suburban villa in North London, elab orately furnished. : A - handsome car- Her conviction; . however,, was caused hy.sh.ef Jealously of one of her employes, who had attracted : the attention of the man who had launched poor Annie on her ... regrettable career. ' She gave In formation to j the pottce -. which led to this man, Manson's, arrest but in doing so ahe excited their suspicions, which ultimately led to her own downfall: . -- Among the many device which, this woman employed was a dummy wax riage would drive up to the door and hand, made to strap to her own. which she would often be seen, accompanied j gave her freedom to Steal without sus by one of her visitors, starting for her f nicton. and a baar for receiving the atolen afternoon drive, her real object being to (articles beneath her skirt. . .. c prospect for: a house ;; which, could be 1 ; There ia something pitiful In the idea broken into. ;It was her habit to place of a bright and beautiful woman xr advertisements In the country placea for J cising such Ingenuity in so lamentable a good, looking, girl aa a companion, and 'a, manner. -, tha cabinet secretary ef tha empress, Count Von Mlrbach, asking him to dl vide it between churches and ' religious institutions, and In ' return they were Blven permission to call their Institution 'Court Bank of Her Majesty, the Emp ress, With this high sounding name they enticed thousands of people to deposit Buave,ha looks 15 yeara youngetstkan ."-.rZ. .I". , hlr actual age. I" " " t. ilrilM1! lB that Count Von Mlrbach used his per-imperlahabla-in -history as the place L-i A- with th mna , t favor of the two men who had Jmpressed him by their magnificent gifts, but, of whose personal, character or honesty he knew absolutely nothing. , -' His own reputation, however, t la, ex cellent and not one person who knows tha count would think of suspecting him of having benefited personally by the transaction, but'.in tha eyes of the great public it may be difficult for him wherein Isabella was imprisoned 'by her son ' Edward II af tef tha execution of the wretched Mortimer. .''. . -'.; Mary Anderson Contented. ' While the world wonders at tha self i denial of Mary Anderson Navftrro, In refusing a guarantee of $200,000 to deliver readings in the United States, U is left to Mra Navarro herself - to tell her story in the simplest way. -Why venture once more into the to "dear 1 himself. - Privy Councillor glare of the jootllghtsr she saya. "My I Buddesnaha, has been- connected with life lacks . nothing. It is one . endless tha scandal, " and there is no telling dream of peace. I have all that I could 1 where tha disclosures may end. want or wjsh for.. The glory of a wo- The councillor Is a brother of the man is In her husband, her home, her I minister of publlo works, who waa re children, jn one wora, j, nave learned cently knighted by the kaiser, the lesson or content.- (Oepyrigbt,; Hearst Kews Berrlet. by Leased v I 4 . w ira w in jnrnii.) '; ;. f: ' ' '-; '- Cy oolisi'JDlari.) -. Berlin, June 18. The success af tha -new submarine boat Fulton la said to. - have tilled tha kaiser with bitterness., , For yeara ha haa watched the build- ' Ing in France of a large number of powerful submarines, which .In case of -war. would have tha German navy an- ; tirely at their mercy, but ha had placed great hope in a German submarine of a new pattern, which waa to have been ahown to King Edward during the com ing Kiel week. ,' '."'.-,'-' .;.. - Great waa hia disappointment, there, fore, when tha completed boat proved an absolute failure. It would float, and diva to perfection, but it could) not be brought, to the surface when it had dived, .a most serious defect in -a sub marine. .. ;i .;.,..!, ' .'.;;.'. ,..;,' ' - K The Kaiser read tha news Of tha splen did achievements of the Fulton, and la said to have remarked to Prince Henry that It -waa strange 4 tha - Americana should succed in everything they under took, iwMle Germans, ln.aplte of their long and conscientious training in teoh- '. nical ' colleges, hardly aver succeeded in - : making any Inventions - of practical ' vaiua - - . A special order hag been sent to Can- . tain Hebblnghaus, the new naval attache " at Washington, to too on continuous out look for new developments in American - ship building which might , be used in tha German navy. . , rJ: ; ' -'-' ..i": During tha Kiel week both Prince Henry and the crown -prince will have , a chance to prove their ability to handle racing craft - In a special race for small yachts both will be at the helm , of their own boats. ' .. - Tha crown prince intends to pilot hia nevr yacht Angela, while Prince Henry says he is sure he can. steer his yacht ; Tilly . to 'victory.1 r ' -,xt -.fi The Angela waa finished only a few weeks ago in Hamburg shipyard, and tha young prince has been busy sailing it near Potsdam. ... , ,'.'' DETECTIVES DECLARE BAKER BOY IS ALIVE , , , , , V (Special Olspatch by Leased Wire to The Journal) Seattle, Wash.. June ,18. The Seattle police declare that little kidnaped Prew itt Baker is still alive and n a short News says that two torpedo boats col- j time will be restored - to his parents, TORPEDO BOAT SUNK IN NAVAL MANEUVERS (Journal Special Service.) London, June 18. Advices from the Paris correspondent of the Central lided during the British naval maneuv ers off AJaccio, Corsica,-today and that one of the boats sunK. , The detectives are searching the. upper Pueret Sound -country tfhd assert that I there is -no doubt that the boy is hidden No loss of life is reported, nor Is any and that securing him is only a matter causa assigned Xo tha accident. . lot .timet ARE PREPARING FOR : PIONEERS' REUNION It is busy times now around tha rooms of : the Oregon, Historical society on the " top floor of the city hall. The Indian , : War veterans ,of Oregon will hold their nnual encampment in tha Mulkey build ing Tuesday, where tha old Indian fight- " era will be entertained by McMillan camp. , Tha greater number of the Indian war veterans are members of the Oregon Flo- ; . neer association, ana are frequenters of the headquarters in the icity . hall, i Fred W. Baylor, a native son, has a desk in the hallway leading: to the historical aa. y cleiy'a rooms, where ha is recording tha names of the' pioneers with their resi dences and the date that they settled In Oregon, and dealing out tha badges to he worn weanesaay. - - ; 1 . , Tomorrow morning It la expected that the rush to secure badges will begin, and It will likely tak three or four oersons - to await on tha pioneer homebulldera by Wednesday morning. - FISHERMAN BADLY BEATEN IN FIGHT Hugo HendrJckson, a fisherman from San Francisco, was arrested last night about 13 o'clock in a hallway of the Ar cade lodging-house, at Sixth and Couch streets. He waa found asleep under some rugs and hadevident!y been mixed up in a saloon fight. He was intoxicated and his face and head had been battered, his nose being broken. Officers LHHs and Price took him Into custody and at tha jail his Injuries were dressed by Assistant . Out Physician Slocum. - :,;a