The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 21, 1902, Page 3

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 182 iW USE FOR CHINAMEN ON AMERICAN SHORES ATHLETICS AT OLD YALE NEW Athieti 5 HAVE at Yal Conn,, Feb, 21 began to look up) today when the didates for pos! failors’ Union Takes Action on Important Subject and |‘ons on, the Varsity basebail team Petitions for Perpetual Exclusion | tion ta not altogether r though it} -_—_—_—— is expected to Improve as the time for the season's opening approaches A careful canvass of the university jhas not brought to light any re | markably brilliant set of candidates |There ts the ofa trouble over a pitcher, and the candidates for the | gambling hells, opium joints, dens of iniguity and vice, are but super fielal ‘ev noes Of @ moral standard &s degrading in ita exhibition as tt ls | backatop are none too good. The re moraliaing by its Contact; and, P “ , Whereas, By reason of their ‘low | MAinder of the team excepting short wages the Chinese have successfully | *')P 18 fs pitchette ten etek dns at | invaded a number of trades and call- aa ‘ | present but twe promising men, They | ings, displacing many thousands of are John Garvan, who has pitohed | our own people, and lowered the | A otadldara ) ren, living, } two years on the ‘varsity, and Joe, ‘Tre Sailors’ Union of the Pacific, has adopted the fol. resoludions to exclude Chinese nem the United States and possessions ae the act excluding Chi. : from the United Rtates May 5 182, and ft is those who favor the untim- migration of Chinese laborers, of the exclusion act and} THE SEATTLE STAR, 3 AT TOMORROW, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, Nd, detrimental to the com-/ morals of all others, affecting there ipterests of the United Patte ¢ freshman twirler, The | ‘ 1 by the most Important factors essen- | feld is weak th the number and | when, ae a matter of fact, the/ tial to our industrial and social de-| *tTensth of candidates, The out Deen dts of trade to be ob-/ velopment; and, ine sees bg Veterans ‘ the so-called open-door pol- Millions of Them Winslow . ard and ean not, in even the recompense our peo- the immensely greater loss by the displacement of so ‘of our own countrymen who consumers as well as producers, the contrastex! oot ming pow- the Chinese laborer ts limited met exclusively to products of and the surplus of his earn- out of this country, ~ roe', checking {ts pros- af ae oe money paid to our opie remains and correspond- ~ as, ee. our " gndustry and trade, thereby entinue national pros- - yery opposite effect as eed og the employment of Chi- * ¥, doth for the mainiand and for the in- sular possessions, would open the gates of the United States and af- ford the opportunity for the millions of thie .the most dangerous and un- desirable element, to further invade and utterly ruin trades and callings now providing a living to American mechanics aud laborers to whom such immigration would be nothing short of a calamity; therefore, be it Resolved, That we, the Sa¥ors’ Un- fon of the Pacific, of the city of Beat tle, state of Was ton, the 17th day of February, 1902, in meeting assem. died, most respectfully but urgently request the congress of the United States to speedity and before the termination of the present senate bill 9330, excluding persons from entering any the United States or its domain; and, be it furthermore Viewed With Alarm Resolyed, That we view with alarm all proposals to Indicate to China or to the department of state of the Untted States any desire on the part ~ gatetion of Citizenship wheres, The exclusion of Chinese question of cheap labor Wa question of American , the quality of which ts ned by the genera! eondition of the individual 2 aa in our coun. ’ entirely out of har- with American ot ty and citizen- are alien to our custome as diferent from us in paland mora! ideals as it is pos- from our present national policy of excluding Chinese labor- ers; and we strongly protest against the adoption of any exclusion law limiting the continuance of that ex- clusion policy of December 7, 1904, and we urgently favor that feature of the bill hereinbefore mentioned as Senate bill No. 2960, and house bill No, 9830, which fixes no time for ex- Piration. Resolved, That @ copy of these resolutions be trapamitted to our % | two United States senators from this state, with the urgent solicitation for their co-operation In the passage of Cainde | part of} representative in congress and to the | AND HE LOST HIS GOATEE Colone! Davis G to Sleep and Suffers Therefram V. Davis, the well known Dawsor mining man, Por 90 jong years the colonel has worn @ goatee. Carefully every morning that Little sprig of chin whiskers was combed and groomed, until it had beoome as sivek and fine as a skein of Canton | alk. The gent hyr of the frigid | sone toyed with and it made the | colonel giad to see his dainty bunch ef chin ilecs waving up and down, almost in front of his very eyes That's a thing of the past now, and ao’a the goatee. It's gone. It left of the United States to recede, in any | @ night-or two ago, while the colone! degree, slept at a down-town hosteiry, Some fair Delilah with her pocket keepsake. This the colonel is loth to lieve. He thinks ft work of male vandals, awoke the morning following the catastrophe, he yawned end as he }yawned he felt his chin. A long stringer of hair was still dangting from the southeast corner of his chin. Can It Be I? “This can't be me,” he soliloquized | “Impossible! This te not Col | Davis of Dawson, who has faced the battle and the breeze for lo, there When he the bills enumerated. Therefore, the above resolutions are respec’ | ted to you, with the request that the same be presented to the United States senator or to the house of reamble and above organization. Respectfully yours, JORGEN OLSEN, President. Attest: P. B. Gill, Secretary. Address 73 Marion street. (Seal.) the people of which had have to bear the brunt of i¢ contamination, almost to our people, in which LLAMARING } O10 NOT APPEAR Mont, Feb. 21—The Col- here the singers were lined up ite Company, which 2°} ae pianist, Andre Benotst, 9p who is « Frenchman, through find Wo play here and tn Hel-| Pgtional jealousy. Russo carried his Ataking the trouble (o| pettishness to such a it that he obtamed possession of olat'a cuts and photographs and destroyed them to prevent future advertisements for the latter. In Low Angeles, Cal., Benotet won notoriety by refusing to perform be- cause the accent mark had been left off the first “E” in his name on the printed programs. Frank W. Healy, who managed ‘among the singers was the | large field of professionals, and is gr ad have takeD | regarded as an exceptionally keen ‘ | business agent. The company ts said that Russo ts in the |to have been doing a good business ot Gown the “great- | throughout the season. rite Carmen,” Collamarini, the| “Uncle Dick” Sutton, managet of administered | Sutton’s Broadway theater in Butte, ae company was playing in| wired Manager Cort, of this city, Ruse fs an athlete and|when he learned the company was Punishment is administered |not en route to keep the Butte en- 'y hotel trem- | gagement, asking Mr. Cort to attach 4s the “divine | the Collamarin! baggage until suit for damages could be brought against them. Instead of taking the route over which they shipped their baggage, the Collamarini troupe | Purchased transportation over an- other line, and thus eluded the offt- cers. Russo, While Rev. Sweere Testifies Rev. Father Adrian Sweere, of the | Church of the Immaculate Concep- | |tion, yesterday testified before! | Eben Smith, U. 8. master in chan- | it boxing contest echeduled |C#TY. In the Sullivan will case, that off in the vicinity of Se.| Miss Marie Carram told him the day| to be a lively one, | after Mr. Sullivan's death, that Sul- Joe” Gregg will go with |ltvan had verbally willed all his watt for 29 rounds and the Property to her, in the presence of Undoubtedly be a good one, her family. Father Sweere stated | ve reasons for fighting that he thereupon consulted Dan- | to get at each oth- fel Kelleher and was informed by Indian knocked Wyatt out | him that a nuncupative will was not | a 880, but the latter feels! Valid fn this state. Mr. Kelleher} ls now in better condition testified that he had met Father | and will consequently Sweere at the entrance to the Bailey | BS tetter showing. There ig| building and given him that opin- money up on the match, | !on. Strictly on the square. The wied to come off at! T *ee | | i who was thrown down | | ju! od | Sitempt to get a match with » Will probably take up| ge of Mike Donovan for P Be Atgeies Retity looks T, and the sports| yw r ABHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 21.—| ae eat * eatin “288% |The commissioner has granted the Phil will Probably accompany following Washington pensions: Jas, M. White, Spokane, $3; J. C. Bur- nett (war with Spain), Tacoma, 6; | Andrew J. Stark, New Whatcom, $10; Joseph B. Long, Wayside, $10; Mar- tha Currington, Black Diamond, $8; Mary KE. Brown, Spokane, $8; Ernes- tine Deutsch, Anacortes, $4; James Brewster, Seattle, $6; Daniel D. Lindsley, Conway, $12; Edward Wood, Marshall, $12; German Algeo, dead , Spokane, $12; Mary Algeo, Spokane, %%; Robert Weedin, Green Lake, $6; Hawson 8. Cochran, Pa louse, $12; Alfred M, Connor, Sout Luet ee Bend, $10; Nellie A. Delaney (wdr . hes ch, of the battleship! with Spain), Spokane, $12; Chas. H challenged Fred Wyatt|@insabough, Tacoma, $8; Joseph C. Meier's tight with Indian |Bly, Hocktord, $10; Mary J. Wicker. 8? will be for $100 u wide, |sham, Buckley, $8; Albert Henry, D-ron: ~ Spokane, $10; Edward T. McClana Dal g Peed contest be-| han, Palouse, $6; David G. Le Sourd, Protericky iii . le 1 prob Match with De y 4 ch. ‘This will be one of oe 8988 Of the seas mand will me off in an up-town . . cae and Bob Mullin are we, & match to come off totus ey Bome time in the We. Dick is decided y the ly pull y some nd Pp is 07 and Perry|Tacoma, $3; Mary A. Vansickle, tact me of cee ooing events. | Blaine, ¢4; Walter Wilber, North but the ey ek, Yet been! port, $6; Wm. L. Wilkin, Seattle, me thine re be pulled }§i2;’ John H. Brandow, Seattle, $4: munict Alonzo Jack, Kllensbure, wheg ok Pub # |Glazebrook, Mondovi, #8. $10; John Wagner's Band i } | On Sunday afternoon the last con- | » in @ | cert will be given by Wagner's band jat the Grand Rossini's “William |Tell” and Paderewski's Minuet will LMT sworn tw be played oe» On talk of a match be Marry Gleason and Kid Fred Fhete boys have 1 ight | Went another match. sonineeseniine Ladies’ Cc. C, Berg, 1418 Third ave, Ry submit- | the company, is well and favorably | men who known in Seattle, as well as to aj is on the still hunt. Furs made anda oes © years and over. Where are my | Whiskers?” of bed the colonel surveyed himecif in the mirror, There was a cute tit Ue hairy obtuse angie left, but the | representatives as a petition from the | goatee proper was gone. He searched | | the bed clothes; he looked under the | pillows, but not a vestige of the miss- | ing goatee was there. Worse Thaa Burglary “This ts worse than a burglary. It's larceny from the person,” he mused. “How can I ever dare to face the world again without my goatee?” He went over to the farther corner of the roors and wept bitterly. Hunger compelied him to seek the dining room, He was barely seated when « voice from snother table re- marked: “Bay, colonel, I'm told you've turned out to be a@ great coffee drinker?" “Coffee drinker!” quoth the colonel, wondering what new evil was now about to befall him. “Yea, they say you're so fond of coffee that you can't go-tea.” And Then Ke Swooned + “Goatee,” ejaculated the colonel as! | Auction Slaughter Sale he swooned in his chair, the tableau. The colonel That was hurried from the breakfast table to a barber shop, where he & nice, new goatee blocked it. To this day Colonel Davis knows not the bad, wicked ole bis whiskers, but he Colonel Davia is keeping house on Thirteenth avenue, near Pike street, and he regrete exceedingly that a business call detained him at a downtown hotel over night—and such a memorable night. Klondike Theatricals Mra. W. W. Bittner, wife of the actor-manager who has many times | played in local theaters, arrived in the city yesterday from Omaha with @ trunkfull of theatrical manu- scripts. These she is taking to her husband at Dawson, where the plays will be produced in rapid succession —--—_*#— Reichert Bros. pianos, 116 Union. ee Go to Spinning for bicycle repairs. | Fifteen acres’ of very choice water front on route of Sound steamers between Seattle and Tacoma. Land slopes géntiy back from beach; one-quarter mile from postoffice and steam- er landing. Other Choice Locations for Summer Homes Herbert S. Upper 12 and 13 Schewerman Block First Avenue and Cherry St. Royal Crown Port Fre e HOW 10 GET IT Royal Crown Port is the best wine obtainable; is the healthies beverage and a sure preventive on dyspepsia, and always sold for b0c per bi Keystone Club nounced by medical profession to be best Whiskey for medicina! pur poses obtainable and is sold at $1,00 per bottle. On presentation of this properly signed, both may be cured for $1.00, coupon, pro- Address «+++ J. ARONSON 109 Columbia St. ®el., Pink A751, A sad fate has overtaken Col. 0. | They had vamoosed. Jumping out | = The Quaker Drug Co. 3 ‘ 1013-1015 First Avenue. Whiskey is pro | 7 TONNESON ) } scissors may have stolen it for a! waa the / FREE “THE QUAKER” ONE OF THE CELEBRATED PICTURES FREE © TO EVERY PURCHASER SOLD IN ART STORES EVERYWHERE FOR 25 CENTS YOUR CHOICE YOUR CHOICE Of Twelve Beautiful Pictures. | | g i, ¢, | The | Great Mechanics’ | Clothing Company 109 OCCIDENTAL AVE. Between Yesler and Wash- Will . Positively Close This Week As the receiver and pro- prietors are coming to a final settlement and the sale will end. Daily sales 10:30 a. m. and 2:30 p. m. JOE MARTIN, Auctioneer E. H. GILMORE, Receiver FITTING GLASSES | Is r exclusive tf, business, Our | work is making 1% PSO) wore, ing | day, One satis | fea patron always brings | We guarantee our glas jeyes, THE EVERSOLE j J0., 708 Becond avenue, another. to fit the OPTICAL LAY. COME AT ONCE, for the Supply is Limited. 6 PER CENT TWENTY-YEAR Gold Bonds | ‘THIS COMPANY offer for pubifc eubscription, at par, with }@ stock bonus, « limited ammount of the authoried immue of $400,000 20- | year 6 per cent. first mortguge Gold Bonds. These Bonds are se- i cured by @ first mortgage on all franchiees, property tolls and | earnings owned and to be acquired by the Northwest Telephone and Telegraph Company, and held In trust by the American Sav- | ings Bank and Trust Co, of Seattle, Wash., trustees. | The company owns 50-year franchises in Snohomish, Skagit | and Whatcom counties, and in all the principal cities north of Be- | attle, including Everett and Whatcom. The Everett exchange is now in course of construction. Until further notice there bonds now offered *¢ accompanied by stock of equal value, thus each subscriber to*a $10¢.00 Bond receives also a certificate of stock of the par value of $100.00. All | subscriptions must be accompanied by $10.00 per Bond, balance | to be paid in nine monthly payments of $10.00 each, The right ts reserved to reject or reduce the amount of any subscription. All orders must be accompanied by bank draft, post- i office or express money order, payable to | NOTICE—STOCK BONUS WILL NOT BE GIVEN AFTER MARCH 6, 1902. Northwest Telephone and Telegraph Company } 703-4 New York Block, Seattle. Phone Main 674. Mf It Ie Sporting Goods of Any Kind Seo Us GOING NORTHRUP 00., 804 First Ave. GRAND init « STATI THEATRE) 909,00 sc. Pann wan Mow kas THE LEADING THEATRE Powe Mongl | aig THIS WEEK | Matinee Saturday. Ralph Stuart and Company in Their Fifth Success, “Men and Women” es, 26¢, 60c and ts one week in advance Week—All the AMUSEMENT Phone, Main 65, T—Saturday Mat- and Night. Kirke La Shelle Opera Co, In the Merry Musical Suc- cess, the “Princess Chic” An Elaborate Opera Comique, Prices—$1.50, $1.00, 7 and 2c. Comforts of | Seats now on sale, GRAN John Cort, Mer. | Next Hor (THIRD AVENUE THEATER W. M. Russell, Mgr, Phone, Main 667, Seattle's Only Up-Town Theater, A High-Class Family Resort, Prices—200, 300, 400, 60c, TONIGHT Kovery Night This Week. Saturday Matinee K. J. CARPENTER'S Big Scenic Production of FOR HER SAKE A Thrilling Story of Far Away OPERA Seattle's HOUSE ‘neater Phone Main 66, Sunday Afternoon 2:30 LAST CONCERT BY Wagner’s Band Mrs. Homer H. Craven SOLOIST 2c to all parts of the house ta, B0c, Russia | — | NEXT WEEK Bonney & Stewari Funeral Directors and Kmbaimers. OPENING SUNDAY MATINER. Third avenve and Columbia Mt Walter BE. Perkins’ Comedians, ne Main 18. Beattie, Wash. Presenting The Wian From Mexico By H. A. Du Souchet, author of “My Friend From India.” n estab lished laughing success from Maine to California, Cast of su porier merit, ' Soeattio Transter Co, STORAGE Tol, Main 41-69 Office, 623 tet Ava, WOR, wee Just the Thing for Framing for Your Home. DON’T DEs Phone Main 1240 $400,000 \NEW YORK DENTAL i PARLORS 614 First Avenue method. Ne using agents cocaine, These are ny pariore im Genttie that have the patent Sppiiamess and ax fl and apply gold crowns by | crowns, undetectable from mati teeth, and warranted for 10 ithut The tenet partiole of pain,” Gold crowns and teeth withoat Slaten, pol filings and af other work painlessly and by | NO PLATES 1 | Set Gold Crowns, $5; Full | Teeth, $5; Bridgework, $5, |Gold Fillings, $1 up; Silver Fill- | ings, 50c, New York Dental Parlors 6i4 Filtol AVE, SEATTLE Second Moor, Moward building; oppe- | site Mutual Life building. Main office, Portland, Or.; oMes, fan Francisca, Cal. Hours, 6 to 8; Sunday, Wted Ladle in attendance, CLINE’S PIANO HOUSE For Reliable Goode Cor. Second and Union COLLINS SHEL JAN FOLEY Ci UNDERTAKERS | FUNERAL DIRECHILE SAND ENBALMERS 1407 FIRST Ave BTAR PIKE ANO UNION Se. 1e ASH. SEATTLE’S largest and only first-class European plan HOTEL Examination Free All Work Guaranteed F. BE. ELLIOTT, Refracting Optician 11-12 Heussy Building, Third Avenue and Pike Street, 3000 all-wool Watch Caps; nothing better tor this cold weather, KIRK, 1209 First Ave. Dr. Sim’s | Dyspepsia | Tablets Are a positive cure for dyspepsia, indigestion and all troubles arising from imperfeot digestion, 24 ave, anu Columbia, Tel. Main 19% “ al m rey is \ sis | inhe ney Vv. rea’ lia

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