The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 1, 1905, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

The Pioneer One Cent Paper of the Northwest STAR’S CRUSADE auToisT BRYANT FINED $15 IN POLICE COURT — CHAUFFEUR RACE THROUGH THE STREETS—-MORE ARRESTS WILL FOL. Low Oe ee ee ed THE SONG OF THE AUTOMANIAC. « Clear the street, here comes a bubble! Clear the street, or you'll have trauble Paying up your doctor bill Run, you sucker, or you will Use- your face the ground to till! Don't you smell the gasoline? Can't you see the clouds of steam? Whiss! Bang! Zip! Brrr Ra-rip! Skip, dong-gone you, skip! Note the look of each chauffeur, Of the law he has no fear— No horn, no bell Sounds warning knell. Says gay chauffeur, “Ob, what the h-——1I!" “Here comes a gent with rheumatiz TH make him hop--I'll fix his biz!" Bang. Whirr! Bump! “The darned old chump! He ought to ‘ve bad the sense to hump!” “A baby cart! Ob, what a chanc Just see the funny woman dance! Hey, look out! Wateh out! Watch out! J grazed ‘em by an inch about!” “That news kid there, a target fair— TU give bim just a little scare! A dash—a crash— An awful smash “That kid came near changing to hash!”* Oh, there's nothing deearer to my heart With hoop and a whee, and a fiying That 2 whirl around Thie dinged old town! A safe piace? Get out on the Sound! DLROEEER haat teseeeesesessess Sa Metadata Metadata de tetededetetatedetade dete teda tenets tet token tate tetededtendd Oe ee ee eee eee eee eee eee Accident....Run over by auto. : P. BE Fisher. Fourth and Pik . Sunday, 6:45 p. m. 25 and costs. * * * * of Auto Mr.and #! Dr. Bryant wo * * * * the first aut | manias to be arrested since The Sta: began ite cruspde against the reck * * Fisher, Dr. and Mrs. * RARER AREER chauffeurs. “devil wagon” added an- its Het of nm by an automobile Cus fn at 6-45, while |B awbreakers > ol at Fourth and °) ' * ® Contestant tt ‘President of the Pacific | race—Josiah p Ropar .. mpany, crashed into» Backus, Fred 3. Stimson ing him violently to! @ Winner—Impoasible to judge u ae ® Course—Pirst avenue, be- ¢ | & tween Virginia and Roy streetd car bad passed over hiv legs,/@ Time—é:40 p. m., Sunday bim. } |® Spectators—James A. Moore Popped bis machine | w (in an automobile) and 40 ‘ auto, which was driven by P. lodgings at 1415 a * avenue, where the owner Of ge ththehetehtnee fummned a physician. seen Monday morning Bar- Upper First avenue served as an Wes in great pain. Both of his! automobile racing course Sunday were y swollen and it i* afternoon. whether will ever be) Fred S. Stomson, vice president of ‘walk normally again. the Washington Trust company. doctor, and it is unde: the lodge will at one La Connor Trading & Transport Uon company, were the contestant | what he lacked in advantage of po | aes SAUARHA RHRAAN| ction he made up in speed ) May 1—Lieuten- Halking and 60 members of Eighth Illinois National were placed on guard at the works of the Inter- Salt company this The police made a upon the soldiers, took uns away and arrested who resisted. @ racing mood, but he was going |zed by the othe “Bie ‘em!” and flew on. iwi an informal affair | Queen Anne car going in eeeeete eee eee 5 hs dndndede eee oS ERY AT N ASSELT The car was soon left won the race. paratively clear at the time. 8 Were broken into and Monday morning, the the third since the ee ae zene The robbers, ng @ regular pirate eeeer | ties, looked like the proverbial tor Duwamish river and pt | tise. Some of the passengers est first went to the Northern & set of tools, with the store and powtottice | she pene. the store they secured $75|they mt Merchandise; from the postot- | the they netted about $40 in monay |and there amps, Among the plunder’ making a sate and quiet “get away, RUNS DOWN A MAN ON PIKE STREET—RECKLESS DRIVERS iting guests. : th a BREESE EERE EEE HEE De FA Bryant, the automobul- ist was arrested Wednesday _& Vietim ...... Gus Barrow. # | ine: violating the «peed ordi- nance, pleaded guilty to the charge jwhen arraigned in police court, Monday afternoon, and was fined jless time-annihilating stunts per- }formed by auto-owners and their Patrolman Kent arrested Dr. Bry- R,! Beattie vie- jane at the corner of Seventh avenue a Union fod street after the latter . a working man and |" made « 20-mile-ng-hour dash | Barrow. jes, {UP Union street in a big tonneau coated aoe SOF SOT one, te The Weare victory over SERENE RR ER Bee sian Baltic Settee ee ee Barrow, taking him!» passengers on Queen Anne car. & Row under the treatment of and Josiah Green, president of tit» to “see Barrow| M. F. Backus, president of the | Yashington National bank, also | James A. Moore appeared to be in | hos been ove ‘an opposite direction. As he whiz- he merely said| The try-ont took place at 6:40. It but none the less interesting. Passengers on TSING TAL |same direction were able to see 4 | Pacific part of the fun. The motorman | turned on the “juice” until the car was clipping along at the rate of 20. miles an hour between stops, but the street car looked like a Chinese go-cart beside the flying motors. a cloud of dust, but a majority of the passen- gers figured that Green must have Fortunately the street was com- The boundary of the $-mile limit lon First avenue is Virginia street. | Levy, the chief counsel for Nan F [T¥8 tore of Gash & Teachnor, at | North of that the spook Iimit ie 12 | *. - miles an hour. Just how fast the peal, and the Van Assalt | tutes were going it was, of course, impossible to accurately determine. It is certain taht the street cars. which have never been marked for | their lack of speed-making quali- | mated that the autos were making Metion howe, and, breaking |25 Miles an hour, and not a few reckoned that the machines were they effected an entrance | POMNding out at least 356 miles to “aired at the store was a Sad a quantity of dry goods | wheelbarrow, in which they wheeled swag’ down to the river bank loaded it into a boat, | du evidence that sh The Seattle Star “Hoodoo” Ship Minnesota BRINGS RESULTS . Under Another Bad Cloud “STRI The brewery strike ts on. ed Detective Phillips spent a busy morning Monday with a tape Hne and-his tneeparable ye sheet.” The number of feet on First between Blanchard and Bell streets were measured by the sleuth for the purpose of deter mining tho exact speed of the automobiles “spotted” by Phil lips last Saturday As Detective Phillips haa the time made by each machine traversing the block, it looks as if he bas a clear case in each instance. Due to a stress of business, City Prosecutor DeBruler postponed the Issuance of war rants againet the lawbreakers until Tuesd : a ia itn dint an tated MANUFACTURERS BANQUET The annual banquet and election of officers of the Manufacturers’ as sociation at the W day night was well attended by the local manufacturers and many A report of the busi ness for the last year was read and showed @ wonderful last year, The board of trustees was elected as follows: ©. T. Erickson, of the Erickson-Wyman company; W Bernard, of the W. J. Bernard com pany; George James, Variety Ir Works; |. Hulme, the Vulcan fron Works, and A. J. Buhts, the Fre mont Barrel company ARR RAHA RRR : The Weather - Spotter ee te tee eed Showers, warmer; Tues y, Showers, Fresh to B Southerly Winds. HONGKONG, May 1.—The Rua» fleet has not been heard from since it was sighted off Kong: kot bay on Friday and It is believed | that an effort is betrg made to pass Formosa, where it can effect a junc- tion with the second fleet The whereabouts of the Japanese feet is still a mystery some rumors afloat that has actually begun. It is reported that a squadron of lapanese cruisers have been sighted cruising in the Chinese sea north of Luzon. LONDON, May 1—It is stated y- took a hand, but he was so bad! © m Would not state whether | handicapped at the start-off that here that the whole of the second take action against Fisher | could not see the scorchers with | whom he was competin. However, and third Russian fleets will effect 4 junction on May 5, unless they encounter the Japanese before that time. The fifth native loan of $50,000,000 r-subscribed five times. 10 |The money will be used for the completion of the Central railway through Japan and of Hainan. ST. PETERSBURG, May 1 Four men were shot by the police in a riot at Lodz today ABOUT ENDED NEW YORK, May 1.--Abraham terson, began his summing up of the levidence for the defense in Re- corder ffs court this morning. The court was crowded for what may be the iast day of the trial Attorney Levy anid: “If th ecution does not prove that J. Mor |wdn Smith bought the pix t the duty of the y at he did not. If the prose failed to prove motive for the kill ing of Young, the defense is not called upon to prove that a motive | did not exist Levy charged that if Young se- the defendant, that it was no TWENTY SEVEN HUNDRED BREWERY EMPLOYES IN THE) NORTHW! ST WALK OUT BECAUSE EMPLOYERS REFUGE TO SIGN AGREEMENTS—STRIKE BREAKER LS HERE FROM | THE EAGT—NO VIOLENCE ANTICIPATED announcement morning at » Brewery engin called off at no Drewertes trind te ol other employes than the en- gineers to work the request wae de- nied by the un That We why, according the man who is In line for the job nyntem demanded by ry of the union Malting company, which is a power in wo ready to wage brewerles the w would have no n Oe ee eee 2 ee ee Ss ful Org niaation, |ly strug@ie for that monopoly The yardme beontiee ite goods will be boy~ anctsoo, where the That was practi ' with the Brewery Workmen's union. A union brewer called at The Star morning and xeee eee E RRR EES Mopday afternoon » Joint moeting of the unions concerned will he held h Beattie to formally deel Welk Out in Beattie Tue: | the statement tion of a strike was left to the bership of the unio oumber of men nortinwebt will be 2,700 are willing to to the] the indrenmed wages demanded. }enuse Gf al) the trouble is the qus- | instead of to Brewing & Maltiig fngton Satur | would be none. Hans Puttrich, secretary of union, sald Mon vis |which bids fair to give Mt disturbane ands that in the empl members sh: that there wi “The brewery owners have been a chance to fight and we are going Our main conten- jtion te that we should be paid $21 instead of $20 per week. neers are striking for eight hours’ | work instead of nine. jthe brewery this morning increase over | presetitean be discharged, accordin } to tie cBitract now tn force with: 6008 AB sufficient breWerlde want the right them a chance. k strikes in New York |return to Japa agh they are will- In Spokane the Amer \ing I> gthpioy union men exctunively. bably be put to w brewertes here wanted and we are prepared to give them battle.” eeteeee eee | ment OF whe on, | brewertes nd establish the Old men whe have been of the breweries for then be discharged STRIKE AT EVERETT. years Would aim EVERETT, May ere struck today because they w because they as they are satisfied with long Wbetibve th a @t work ob and pufficient as long as t etrimental to Hochstadter thinks he can employ | ke the places of who walked out ) At @rement when the seatetary of the union designates Filsh leanings of the higher officials soreness on the part of prominent Ame: who threaten to retaliate by boycot- ting the Hill steamers and trading | B04” Of Joseph Jeffervon was bartels entirely via San Franci There are fighting tance men and dud determination to destroy the team- 500 | inte Shantung Peninsula Ching, May 1.—It is reported that lthe Russian second Pacific sq the | ron, together with the F squadron, are near the FUNERAL OF LEE HELD WASHINGTON neral of General CHICAGO, May Farley arriv Strike-break 4 from New York and had a conference with the resentatives of the employers lis understood to be plac strike breaker won the subway strike in New York and the railway strike strike breakers who ar- rived from 8t barns of the employers and teaming companies without be- The arrested men nasian third lived here this morning i of the Chicago Federated labot called a meeting today of ihe | Joint, strike form a pérmanent offensive and d fensi¥é alliance Fitzhugh Lee was | held this morning at the Church of | A brilliant gathering of resentatives and officials circles paid their respects. services and mon read by Randolph McKim. the remains were The meeting will be held tonight leadership of F- well known strik guarded by 40 weil armed ¢ negtoed who had been sworn in as deputy) United tates mgrshals nt ($2.50 ger day driving wagons. They pe awill breakers employed \companies went morning to enforce the demand fot sand $4 for help- The remains will reach $5 a day for driv The increase was f the men returned to work when the interment will take place case where ‘cute in avery The contempt of violating tional teamsters struck one ts found, The largest body of them was dria and Fredericks burg en route to | | Richmond j f injunctions. spread to the Sergeapt Richard was rth down, by a union teanist died this morning }thousand workmen streets shouting “Viva Russian, rev | indicted byt j April grand jury . While passing the wagons of the Forbes T pany and the Sprague-Warner com- | develope continue the etruggle to the there are no signe of con. 4x Oe REESE RRS city hall, elev BIRMINGHAM two agents of the sian government sailed Saturday the United States to pur rails for double track Siberian railway. of eggs filled with acid wes untrue to him. | revolvers, but before they could fire who are relentless here, entombed 13 m The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News - ~ 5 CEN®S PER MONTH RADICAL ENGLISH “SNOBBISHNESS” BY BRITISH OFFICIALS CAUSED REBELLION AMONG OF- FICERS—AMERICAN SHIPPERS IN ORIENT AF- FRONTED BY SLIGHTS FROM HIGH OFFICIALS RO HTK hh hk GUBJECTS WHO GAVE GEATTLE A * * “ZING EDWARD’ * BLACK EYE Commanding the Minnesota. ‘Traffic Mer. G. N. 8. 8. Co. Captain Rinder . G. T, Sutherlen FAVORS ENGLISH RULE. J, D. Farrell cssececsseceees President G. N. 8. 8. Co. RESULT, Four Officers Leave the Boat American Shippers in Orient Incensed. Detriment to Seattle's Bhipping Interests SSeS ee eee eee eee JI itt eee eee eee ee ee es Pro-English sentiment op the part|the apartment and immediately ore ot the « Northern Steamship] dered the shipper and his guests to officials haw caused a) leave the boat. tempest in a commercial teacup| “Get that launch away from here,* he ordered In vain did the American attempt As 4 result, it is strongly rume to explain that he was invited to that George T. Sutherland, general| view the boat by none other than traffic manager of the steamship! President James J. Hill himself, who company, has been forced to retire| had written him @ personal letter from his present position and will| warmly asking him to go aboard the hin old post boat when she touched t Rumor also has it that most of No explanation wanted,” © an officers on board the | ordered Captain Rinder. “You mus® a a Fee. Chet iauteh away.” : SRARHRAERAERRAH HE! 1 ts commonly known that the American whom Captain Rinder se peremptorily ordered from the Min~ naota is one of the largest shipper” in the Orient. He was heard to remark after- wards that rather tham ship any= thing on the Minnesota he would” throw the goods into the hariier, | J. D. Farrell has always beee known as anything but a rue hearted American, and he haw al- ways favored Englishmen in his ap- pointments, which Is plainly shown in his selection of Mr. Sutherland and Captain Rinder, both of whom black eye with Oriental tr When seen by a Star report- er this morning, J. D. Farrell would not deny the report of Mr. Sutherland's transfer. Neither would he deny the story that the big American shippers in the Orient are up in arms against the Great North ern Steamship company. eee EEE * RRR eee ———_—_— Minnesota have left her and that their places will be filled with Brit- inh subjects are decidedly English nerican office inene} “Fe men, have already returned their|“<t_ the Dad effect caused by the billets are casting about for | "9stishman th charge of bis mart- time interests ix not known. Mr. Hill, himaelf, is a Canadian by birth, but whether he will allow his busi- ness to suffer through sentiment re- maing to be seen. One thing is certain,” remarked one of the Minnesota's officers, “if | they want to offer such affronts to Americans on board our ship, they'll Wve to get a different crew, from the first officer down to the men in the coal bunkers.” ether places, while a large number | ‘of janior officers and men have quit | the big ship. “We don't mind working under an Engtieh captain and an English traffic manager as long as they don't insist on craraming the British flag down our throats three times a day,” in what one of the officers 1m marked “But when we get English a la Rinder for breakfast, Engiieh a la Sutherland fer dinner and Hnglish a la Farrell for supper then we've got a stomach full!” Mt ie said that the very pro-En- an interests in the Orient.! poggaRivg BAY. May 1.—The b Sunday at Bayview cemetery at © boats. | Sandwich, The funeral services “As an incident,” said one of the | were impressive and their simplicity Minnesota's officers, whose name! suggested the character of the dis wil not be mentioned as he ts still} connected with the ship, “I will tell) “Mir Jefferson's five . you of yy lawt trip which will give you an idea! op more villagers st ae how our English superiors are act-| the grave. eer, an ing, Ino Sutherland gave a dinver in honor of the arrival ot the boat. He tia] AE COLLD NOT BLY not Invi ed bis guests fr men, none of whom was even a ship-! ssonday mormiag by J. 0. Secord, tinguished actor, je that occurred on our! of intimate frignds, and a hundred of the big ports Mr. one America ot- m & lot of English- According to a statement made but se! per. They were a bunch of remit-|broprietor of the Yesler bar-at 40% Yesier way, Mike Maloney, who re- American consul was !g-| ported to the police that he was nored, as were the prominent Amer- | given knockout drops in the Yesler ican shippers, among whom were! bar, was refised drinks by Secord wealthy and influential men repre-! and his bartenders, Maloney was senting the enormous Standard Oil] grunk when he came into the place ts | and insisted on Patrolman Carleton You can imagine how they felt| and a- number of others in the sa- about the slight loon to take drinks with him. After Another of the officers gave an] he left the place he fell on the Interesting account of how Captain | street and was picked up by City Rinder treats the Americans in the! Detective Easson. One hundred and Ortent, ten dollars and twenty cents was A well known American shipper.|found on him. Secord says that in company with his wife and two|he was not given anything in his other lades, visited the Minnesota in| piace. Maloney was released after the Americun's own private launch. | he had sobered up and told to buy i the big Hill vessel and/a@ ticket to his home in the east smoking room, w here | before he drank the rest of hie jean ordered some refresh- | wealth up. BURIED ALIVE — eee eee aR RAR AR Ke Whom will probably be recovered » alive. ENTOMBED MINERS. | It will take several days to recov- B. F. Steiner, foreman; Mike * | er the bodies. Wynn, Ralph Fisher, Ben The men went into the mine on Smith, William Atkinson, C the midnight shift. Early in the Golden, Joe Morino, all whites morning a terrific explosion - oc- and Gus Philips, Knox Lynch, curred; heavy timbers were torn J. D. Byrd, Mike Davall, R. F- assunder and jgade of dirt piled Cales and William Edward, into the 800-foot shaft, colored, * Within a few minutes aftir the * shock a crew Of Tescuers began Ree REA KE KK) Work, and at amearly today it ts - | thought that it will be necessary to WILBURTON, Okla.. May 1-An | ppimease the mine. In this event, +e ee tee for | explosion Sunday in the Missourt, the bedies will net be exhumed un- 40,000 ' Kansas & Texas Coal compsny's tif Wednesday or Thursday, mine No, 19, four mires we ul + need miners declare thag » are dead, ‘

Other pages from this issue: