The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 5, 1902, Page 1

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igenire do not know what to d Rye e order. Many theories|and hazard layouts also kept | be good reasons, but we do not know fTeesday, the day of the munic- do so comes from me. Just when that Troops 6 Boers, inctuding Fieid Cals 0 out and Biv- Midtiel and Both: chief +t -=Central Labor Union |“**" ere run into the barns and a was cut down and removed and | winds, and alt efforts of the trac the bay. Troops were ordered | Henry's special train passed through | qu; the power plant; where then nea | here at 9 o'clock this FEA mesting of the Central Labor | Which t Against Railway (sre "i%ec xny Gambling Houses Are Suddenly Closed by Orders of the Chief of Police, Causing a Great Sensation in the Tenderloin---What Does It Mean? Epawimtanding the fact that] trolled by H, B. Kennedy, started {ts | the gamblers were neutral, He ij Humes has been elected) games. Shortly before 11 o'clock | marked "payenet Beattie te succeed himself, | Detective Jack Barck was sent down Gamblers should not attempt to Seattle i} to close up the houses, T | © open up| no explanations. First the Totem) citigens should do that, We were not ® were/run the politics of the city. ‘The | etive sent] closed its doors and the California! to be closed out, no matter which Iquarters econ] followed soon after, Neither one of | candidate w elected, so we had no andstit!) and! the two big houses, the and- | Kick. , Toan may, how: ¢ gamblers ard and the Union, dared to op nm it8) that I do not know why we are % The smaller black-Jack games| closed down, Of course, there may Dut nothing Is deft fetertain is that something| Chief Sullivan will not give out! up order was only for election day, | ly wrong somewhere. The | any cause for the order. He sald: | but I found out differently.” were notified Monday to| “I ordered the houses closed and Gamblers Didn't Help a ey will no’ tt ler to iibetr houses the next day—that | they will not open unttl the order Selicthann diniita bith ane baad Nothing was said of! will be I cannot say. Further than at the time, as it was con-| that I am not in @ position to say fl merely an election day close- | anything.” order came In such a man- ae hs Must Take Bedictne | i# the cause of the shut-down. to open again would re- permission of Chief of Po-| George U. Piper, Mayor Humew' | :nat ie starting opp @ the Dexter- oming ang the houses are | nothing about the close-up. ‘The meneral theory accepted ts that | generally accepted ‘Thay Open Up | the gamblers failed to help out the ik this morning the Totem campaign fund and must now take position to know when it will open fetrolied by Argyle and his their medicine | witt give out that Information. The Opened up. At about the) H. B. Kennedy of the California the California club, con-| club says that In the past campaign at pen, / The Ballard council lnat night or- il dered all gambling houses closed. | Two weeks ago the order wae te at move the games u re. A Chiet Turner now has another com mand, which is to close the places. It Is beileved that the present a ministration intends t trol gam bilng as it is done in Seattle, which |means police supervision, with a [monthly fine paid into the city a by each proprietor of « — Street Gar Ser Rervice Is|"™ ‘Eastern and Southern Abandoned, Property | CAPTURED | States Again Suffer Destroyed Damage onet | Midtiel and Botha's chief telearaph Street Traffic in New York tacked in Power-House Sear steynetor’, in Eantera Frans| and Many Other Cities jadly Retarded | LONDON, March 5.—A_ Pretoria dispatch received today states that se” LOOKS AT. |“ oR PITTSBURG, March 5.—Although Ay ~ bebop srve | Pennsylvania haa barely recovered fee tery grave and ircabies have from the most disastrous floods in a terrific snowstorm pre $e Rireth, taking « phase of today over all sections of the wo bmg hele rahe |dotng more damage and working a seo Gor Ss penditan sa these whe wees mabe AEE Henry Puts in horaelena by @vertiowing rivers. jers, street car traffic Is badly retard Jed by drifts, forming under high : Were torn out and thrown| CLEVELAND, ©., March 6.—Prince | companies to epproschs & fairly ade- yed from all directions and bloc is threatened. sec. ‘Uuriwe toe) Usual Busy Day more than a mile of trolley ning. It | are aring |e en five-minute ¢ prince lett Was held tant evening, where | table to go to th boyeott waa declared | Where he acknov the street railway company,|& immense ion to this the matter was| There were no formal it up before ¢ excitement was ked. made New York Sufters NEW YORK, March 5.—A fierce snow and wind storm broke over th ity this morning, Street car tra or oeones frantic efforts of a middle-aged | ! fed and threatened wi aur 2 to f the}man to board ain, Secrot ser-|t It promises from weather He urged and finally oe. Vice men threw him back, but as the| to equal the last gree prince caught sight of him he said 1 iy et that man come up.” The mar Gas iieered inl (he bethee'y press} Extends Southward promp’ reg {ence and talked 1h several] NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 5. a? @ special committe minutes. He proved to be Peter | Tt € ureau here ix in re. ” Dp, who waa opr * i #0 | cols from Virginia, Ken ceed ars ag k irginia and all por ating he Prince Views Magara ae on Nt go | BUFFALO, N. ¥ arch 6.—T) ny of the ator tions thie | special train be Hen are suffering damage, The visitors we t ‘The formalities were brief, net -| A logging train of the Columbia and Puget found rm Syracuse Plans into a Northern F SYRACUBE, N. Mar this morning about 8 o'clock, where WASHINGTON, 1 March 5.—| Prince Henry will ested jn | the tracks of the two companies cross | sw MS expected 1). arrival here this evening yor |0” Dearborn street and Ratiroad ave m. The lerkrans Singing so Two of the Northern Pacific train W in, att . z Fiemroir " Dibble, y that they lence hos the c ‘The F e injured so to be moved to Pr 1 at wi * Their injurie mostly in » , ed by t with electric lights #o|ing thr ss the car ortunity of | Th Northern Pact {fi train waa knocked 10 feet from track, and turne Its y aplin the ©. ed to Alfred Booth, ed while the 1 h Packing Co., 8. eaboc fish and oyster of | ed th truc claim: ATTLE WEDNESDAY EVENING HE Only Paper in Seattle That _K Dares to Print the News # e » MARCI | JAS HUMES ABANDONED REPUBLICANS ELECT HIS WIDE-OPEN POLICY? | Seventh ward , WITH ONE EXCEPTION ALL THEIR CANDIDATES Thomas J, Humes Falls a Thousand Votes Short of Calculation--Sev- eral Surprises All Along the Line--Tommy Navin Loses in the First and Murphy, a Lone Democrat, Wins in the Ninth --Municipal Lighting Project Carries With Tremen- dous Majority--Five Charter Amendments Carry Easily--One Is Defeated - THOMAS J, HUMES JOHN KIPLINGER ¥¢ | Mullen, ad of Mullen, f the city was over] 11,008, peveral hundred larger than at | *E) idential election A. KISTLER closed. hem, I thought the original close-| JAMES A. JAMES ELLIS MORRUSC was carried Ferterday by & Vote of more than 6 to 1 clock this afte WILLIAM MURPHY precincts yet to be heard fr for the propor! Several |@ tion and 1461 against it the reason for the close-down. “Or! the sticklers for morality. couse, the gamblers 4 elp mblers did not help out » red doubtiens, were In that cat @ Boyle (DD... . @occoccoooosoooosoe|osees = eye!) war the campaign fund, that ts now a} and about 2000 for 1 well known fact, I cannot say what|the Frank Paul voted fair,|was a very hi the disagrees aid hie friends who for the nominath but those Who rto beat H win for the same pury Wilson's Knife the campaign the known Wilson rved a thunderow weather, rain falling throughout the | ony © boat of order prevailed no trouble being an stewardship. jrather a close cal contains an element ment for hia fr ¢ Humes had ‘There is some talk of the house! The permission has not manager, says he knows absolutely | Horton bank belng responsible for |that his majority would ta |than 1000 behind that o: the trouble, but that theory is not | his ticket. At 2 o’olock te agreed by every ~ from all but four that the mayor's support would larg | ting of his vote by Re The town ts closed, and no one in|{s ‘the wurprise of a Crichton (R.) me 2. © (dD) 1 s pee Ninth ward eae Double closed |Lund CR.) Damaged Damask, [Murphy (D.)" 10 +2. 208) Towels, 1.35 | | At ‘Tomor- day official returna| row, prec in » Se. 5Ve. precinete show that arrying by more than Did Not Carry Amendment No. 8, which provided plumped for » sawed neveral aticks 0: the entire Republican tt 1d against the asseas might be cha majority of the sporting element is Mas for und 396 ont Manicipal Light at Lonely William hi gg ogi complete official William Murphy, counct! the Ninth, is the sole sury wreck of Democratic new administration he Will be the! only Democrat the last of the Mohicans, ppoaition was | amendment also tn vanes of an raanieed | KK CASE OF HE ERDACHE APTER ELECTION Saying of Montaigne ost Manifest Sign of Wisdom Is Slow Counting pi as Byers in the way crashed |Gill by cific coal train |co id {t was thought mplete count w In the lower precinots this proved tru tricts the ballots in the bottom of the 4 of his ticket ¢ Humes lost o than 1500 aheo n counted first, sev Fourth ward wed that Humes Kighth ward ix-up, | vote Know Yt All Day One | Riplinger’s majority, Corporation Counsel lay that Hur 25 CENTS A MONTIL ed a ntl 1 WEATHER FORECAST Fourth ward... baslite aud. Vidi acunEn ed qe th ‘ Pifth ward . 1 Tonight 1 ‘Thu im sixth ward ADAMS & BLANCHARD Eighth ward 1 719 Second Ave., Hinckley F Ninth ward... yess. 678 Tr asurer iran 1 | Gormley Winship | Fir t werd 1,136 ond ward a) “40 | hird ward : ri a9 Fourth ward... . 5 Fifth ward 1,060 ‘ Beventh ward 1s ; IF IT IS Eighth w 1 , Ninth ward + teeeree GOT "" _A QUESTION & HATS mete ethane 4 Come in and talk it over. We have the agency for | fablican’ Democrat the Youmans Hat—none better in the market—and | Rude Mullen vey Kuties| the handsomest hat worn by man. HAR ed foal le: i The Oxford Hat at $3.50 and the Cheltenham at PR A i $2.50 offer exceptional values at the price. | Bixth ward | 6a The Partouris h ward 6,935 rei ” $2.50 and $3.50 vale A DAMS& BLANCHARD First ward | Fitzpatrick (R) ........1,077 437] 749 Second Ave., Hinckley Block Navin (D) aa?) | — eeueee: — Kistler (R.) ob Fitts (D.) . 490 Third ward Gil CR.) Byers (D.) Our prescription department is un a “iu Prescriptions Fourth ward equaled for the care and sk 2 (R) 880 404 which our prescriptions are com- ‘ailiwan (D.) . . 46 pounded from pure and fresh dru Fifth ward: Deliveries made anywhere in the city, rR) 1,043 Nt > c phaaine iD) . Open All Night. PHC MAIN Sixth ward— Rinehart CR) . 2 Stewart & Holmes Drug Co. S 627 First Avenue POSOHOOOOSS OOF OOOO OOOOOD |Redward (h.) |Christopher (D.) . Elghth ward SAN FRANCISCO, March 5.—The Notice aFew of the Many Bargains for Peru of the Pacific Mall Steamship for Mantia today, in pursuance of an | agreement entered into between that DRESS GOODS LADIES’ UNDERWEAR. ¥ and the Occidental and Ori- |] Heavy Wool Pialds, excellent for } In ecru, fleece lined and sill fin- 4 Toyo Ki i: school wear, wrappers, etc., all ish, regular tomor- ay wikde canal orp cargerns mae good dark colorings, 60e value row, only 206 wohdonape tomorrow, only, per yard..19¢ belonging to the three lines shall call CHILDREN'S UNDERWEAR. once & month at Manila. It is be- y e nee f, SAS Se anee. 2 le be- i DRAPERIES. | he Many different kinds, values up: ie ter the new service by | Heavy Draperies, in single anc Homes Goawts fnrowing atmmech business in the double face, ali new suring Date Pee selling as 26c Value; tomorrow, per ~“yortors bani y 10¢ ‘We have three tables full of all FLANNELETTES Bee non he ee three lines as is p 1b) busiest otion Tables in the In light and dark patterns, To 2 country— value, tomorrow, only, Dar 10c Corset Steels . Aye jead penells for ...., le 10c Can Openers - Mee 2c Blacking Brush, with Y dobver ts TOWELING. Reavy All-lAnen Dark Brown Crash Toweling, 12%¢ value, to- § 18¢ Hard Brush . fe morr nly, per yard 20e Electric Hair Brush .... Microbine Versus Piles Come and get a sample. It $ will cure Interna] and external, also Pruritis (itching). 1401 Third Ave., Corner Union TelephoneMain 584 anteed, or money back Steel Rang BUSINESS 's Breaking All Past Records Never before has a spring Season opened so auspiciousty as this. Our great vi me of trade in cast cook oves has nearly doubled, an: we are breaking all records ir selling ef OHIO STEEL | RANGES * ¢ is simply result of cause and effect. We guar- ability of every range we sell and when our prices are i with those of other stores the economy of buying here Is +l OSC 5CCCCOISOS0RTSTS900_ s2ga0nase cS Continued Cheerfulness,’* ROBBED WASHI oN, Indj, March The First National bank of Mont gomery, Ind., was burglarized some time during the early hours of this morning. The vaults were blown open with dynamite and $4000 in g eecesocscocses tecesce THE LARGE and currency carried awe It | belleved the cracksmen escaped on prseback. The robbery was not discovered until the bank was this morning NOT EVEN [LL ROSTON, March 6.—The rum: culated last night and sent out as a dispatch by a pr association that Julia Ward Howe was dead is with: | out foundation, Mrs. Howe is not even itl | WEATHER FORECAST tle and vicinity—Toni e I establishes 189 tablished 1890 0 Four th Near P ck \ NO MORE BAD-FITTING SHIRTS i WE have just installed the latest machine for ironing men’s shirts. Removes all fullness from he bosom, and makes a perfect | " [tio thet lew than halt come fron Dhird, Seventh, Kighth and Ninth, POOR WHEE 6 ayy Thursday, occasional rain; fresh to] bale Renlaees ariade, litting neck band Phone Main 953

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