The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 22, 1905, Page 1

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A BARREL OF TONIC good AS SqiGHT EDITION % List OF CASUALTIES emicaco, May 2.—The failure ee wrentinicns in the final Jends & sinister aspect to the Strike today. Both state qoanty authorities are prepar increase to & vastly larger of men the forces which are qedeavoring to keep peace, fo the imminent er of re Fidlence and spread of dis force now numbers 3,500 and HB wadle to cope with the pres- disturbances. all negotiations for have Been deciared off, and sidte are adjusting themselves even more determined strug- Barrett and Mayor Dunne their determination to call the moment the county forces are unable to quell first movement toward a Of the strike came this when 100 teamsters of the Hies Lumber company because severa) of their num- discharged for refusing to material to the “unfair” de~ This is thought to COMMANDER OF SALV “YE: iG WOMAN (BY NAN BYXBEE.) Eva Booth, daughter of Booth. and commander in the Salvation Army in is not averse to matri- Much the handsome young confessed at the Wash- hotel Monday morning. there were stipulations. Booth will not marry until comes who will mot ouly B her individual taste, bot he be willing. as well, to devote fe life to the great work of ‘Which the Booth fantity Up, and to allow his wife the life work she sas out for herself. @ Man. Miss Booth says, she yet failed to come across, she has had many pro- have all wanted me to my work,’ ” said she, “and would be selfish. This work has come to me as a ‘and I cannot lightly put it though through it { Miss that sweetest of all in heritages—wifehood and Commander in chief of all the in America bad not Propped up with a Lmountain of pillows and with pink shaw! thrown shoulders she was busy and stationary and a up with some tallends the explained. “Now, 60 and put it in the paper sick and rob me of the T am don’t you say that I am I am just tired, and way I combine rest and I fast got in from Portland and tonight we will be 6 Wing again, «© I am snatch- y bit of rest I can get.” ~ Snowy whiteness of iss Booth's great mass brown hair made a pretty for the strong, handsome of the woman who is the in America of the system of simple, wholesom: 8nd practical charity that in palace and hovel allke over. Vivid pink and the creamy Of her coloring. lighted by oe es of the clearest the flash of pearly teeth as she talked, suggested QWestion—-for despite the ugly boanet of dull blue with its ode and despite the serious that Eva Booth, com Sebder in chiet of the Saivation WMy, has taken up for humanity Serra —the attractiveness of Booth, the woman, must have to &@ portion of humanity gender in particular ¥OU ever intend to marry?” I owas” Tepested Miss Booth ROW, you know that is not ATTERFIELD CARTOON 18 AS ——_— OTH IS NOT THAT WHEN THE RIGHT MAN ASKS HER SHE wihke “POKE BONNET” LEADER IS A CHARMING |all of the with looking for to-| ff} --__The Seattl “You Can Have State Troops in Two Hours!” a i ) ested for ¢ conce Uf unis EXECUTIVE AND MAYOR DUNNE ARRANGE FOR Alp [un [OF carrying concealed weap OF MILITIA UNLESS STRIKE CONDITIONS CHANGE—Po. Frank Voelker, press feeder, was shot and badly wounded d ing the LICE AND DEPUTIES UNABLETO COPE WITH SITUATION— | Diht as a result of an encounter with Special Deputy Sheriff Fite gerald In the contempt hearing before oral Judge Kohlsaat the injune tional cases were again continued this morning, pending the closing be the beginning of a movement] UP of the preliminary hearing be } which is likely to tle up all build-| fore Master in Chancery Sherman ing operations in Chicago, which is expected this afternoon |. Thirty teamsters of the Ritten Mayor Dun today talk with house bree Lumber company| Governor Deneen by telephone 4 j alm walked out rather than to/#ald the governor assured the jmake deliveries to the boycotted| mayor that he would ¢ but two concerns. © state troops in the Barly trains brought 150 addt after the mayor tional strike breakers from Indian-| made the request Spotis and Cincinnati. Another con The appointment of 200 mor signment is expected this evening Joseph C. Viola, who was mistak en for a strike-breaker, while on his made an attempt thie aft way to work this morning, was as- | ernoon » bodily harm to Marry saulted on Jackson and Jefferson} Thompaon, a union teany who and severely injured, His aasailants| accidentally ran down Mra, Netile took $76 from him, Six suspects| McCarthy, on Adama atreet have been arrested. The police rescued Thompson Levy Mayer, attorney for the em-| from the mob, which thought he ployers, consulted his clients this! was a strike breaker. morning and decided to push the! At the conclusion of the confer- Prosecution of union officials in the| ence, the mayor announced that a federal courts. committee of five would be appoint- Detectives are investigating thej}ed for the teamaters’ council to- origin of seven fires started in the | night act with Shea and Reed in yards of the Rittenhouse Embree | conducting negotiations for a nettle- Lumber company during the night.| ment. The committee will meet the The police believe they were ignit mayor tonight, Reed said he had ed by strike sympathizers. submitted a new proposition to the Justice Caverly announced this| mayor and that he considered the morning he will fine every man ar-! prospects for peace to be very good. ape. by al policen mad f O'Nell A of we AVERSE TO MARRIAGE ATION ARMY TELLS NAN BYX- t Fletcher bay om May 17 by K. Sakamota, Coroner Sponogie has summa ned men to be presen at Pleasant Beach on Tuesday. Kinaa Uyshara, proprietor of the logging camp at Pletcher bay in the eS Prosecuting witness, WRECK exactly the right word to use. Peo- ple don't intend such things. They BAD just happen. I cannot say that [| have any intentions in regard to matrimony, but I will say that I | Bove no personal prejudice against } it, even though I am engaged in a serfous work. If the right man | happens to ask me, and if he is | willing to allow me to continue in| NEW YORK. May 22.—A south | my work and help me with it, why, | bound elevated train on the Third | then, of course I shall marry. Why |®¥@nue line at 1 o'clock this after- not? But so far the right man |"00M crashed into the rear of an- hasn't come along. I have had a | ther train waiting for the Harlem number of opportunities, bat they |"¥er drawbridge to close, and al- }all want me to leave my wort, | which, of course, I couldn't do. |T!¥er. Thirty passengers were in- When I marry I must continue in |J¢*4, some seriously the work. As @ matter of personal BOB UP SERE x | happiness, I should like ever so Ee ee much to be happily married, and| The proposition to grant a license | t@ Found out my own personal life |for a saloon at Third and Union in just the way God intended a/will probably be taken up by the woman's life to be rounded out. license committee Monday after- | However, it fs as the Lord wills.|noon. A continued fight hax been | As it is, I have my own little adopt- | made against the granting of the jed daughter with me, and I can/license by the congregation of the | vent my great store of affection | First M. KB. church and other in- jupon her. She is a dear little |terested property owners, but after thing, and she helps me so much |each defeat the applicants have re in my meetings. Oh, Pearl,” she|turned to the council bright and calied, “come here!” smiling Little Pearl, who sings to Eva The applicatién will probably be Booth's harp accompaniment, came |given a fatal chill by the city dancing into the room. She is now | fathers this time. 9 years old. When she was only ee es ee three days old Miss Booth took her trom tie arma of ber dying mother | QUARANTINE im a New York tenement. OW «L”’ Booth, putting an arm about the sturdy little form that stood beside the bed. Pearl smiled and put a finger to ‘The board of health Monday aft- her mouth diffidently, but there |ernoon took under advisement the was no hesitancy in the answer she |quarantining of all people afflicted gave. | With tuberculosis “The best mamma in the world W. V. Rinehart, former said she. “God was good to give | man, appeared before the t you to me for a mamma when my |“ woman who claimed that real one went to heaven.” daughter caught the white plu antine consum *s, the move will United States. COLUMBUS, May 23~Beven SUIT WALKED OFF men were killed and many build-| Peter Tocco, a taflor, 41 ings damaged by an explosion of | way, left his shop for a few minu the boiler of Hocking Valley en-| this morning and neglected to cle gine No, 145 this afternoon at the) door. When he returne Mound street shops. The engine | suit had come to life and }had just come tn for repairs off. | Foreman Grunley and six hostlers |were working around it. Aside |from the foreman the identified | bodies are those of Willlam Brown, CHICAGO, May 22—A_ report from Port Arthur says a Japan force of 100 men seized the Russian steamer Kazan on Saturday in Port Arthur harbor on the ground that she {8 & war vessel. The Kazan was used by the Russians as a hos |pital ship during the siege. The | Fred Schudiley and Bake Davis. |The names of the other victims are not learned, WILL HOLD INQUEST s of M. Yamanapa, murdered thur will leave there tomorrow most knocked the rear car into the oft mimne fam eat ses, =~» CONSUMPTIVES! Miss Booth speaks Monday night |from a girl employe in a box fac- at the Auditoriam, Fourth between | tory. Pike and Pine. In case the bo: decides to quar- | be one of the most drastic and sen- | 7 sational one ever ever inaugurated by a health body anywhere in the (THERE ANY OTHER GEATTLE PAPER THAT DARES TO BUCK THE GAS OCTOPUST ‘Epidemic Threatens 300 Seattle “Helo” Girls » THAT “DOPE GHEET” OF LEN H UNT’S GENERALLY HITS THE MARK, EH? The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News } ! * . ee ee es av yard « | years. er Celebration meeting SRT RRR + The Weather Spotter Tonight and Tuesday, Show - Nome Brisk Seuth to West Winds, ed * * FIRST JOBS OF SEATILEITES “My fret job of importance was | mitking the cows on The local | Pngiand farm. ing down @ politica! job. of bed on those chilly winter morn- and 1 had to mitk old New hold 1 war out It waan't Ike RRR ings at 4 o'clock steadily inti) 6:39. tire- Many persotia have wondered at the large sine of ny wrists and hands. of militing developed those muscles.” James A. Moore. affects the freight trade. While lreports have been given out that * * EXTRA! * Late Monday afternoon the *® city was visited by a startling phenomenon which by thousands of awe- stricken people. spot appeared the sky for at onds and radiated what were to be sunbeams. Years neased A believed At pandemonium preme. Weather Observer Salisbury adjusted took a determined the scintillating spot, and then fell in a swoon When words were “It was Information fied againet H Prosee@ut ing a King county jury a few days ago. The poltee picked This time the prosecuting attorney has oarefully was—the sun! up again. RRR HAS A NEW POS? (Special to The Star.) BREMERTON, May 22 See ee eee eee eee ee eee eee his evidence | thoroughly his wagon load of them was i FE VERE rT by the police, who took the names returning If released) BVERETT, May beleinoff, non-union longshoreman n So far the police have! was badly beaten last night by four over 5® canes to file again the al- unionists who today refus leged thief. Chief of Police patrolmen and united to send Henkhel to the|¢rom Tacoma to load the Pegasus again Henkhel will immediat mandant of the Puget Sound nav from the navy ‘ashington today to be detached from serv ice at Bremerton and is to be placed in command of the Columbia, flagship of the yport ‘aptain Bleecker has been at the Bremerton received nott department that he | EMPRESS BADLY HURT will leave for his powt as soon as he can arrange his affairs at his pre Empress Augusta serious than APPLETON, Wis plant of the Riverside An inquest is to be held upon the last Russian wounded at Port Ar-| per company was totally di by fire this morning, lows $ sulphit and an injury 2 wound In the head. Nan Patterson spent her first. evenitig at Washington, after her return from the Tombs at New York, old friends at the Rathakeller.-News Item. |to be most jif diphtheria or other dines Jists. One of the suspicious cases| Manager Corcoran, of the Sun- | ready been obliged to stop work STARTLING DISCOVERY MADE BY BOARD OF HEALTH IN IN- VESTIGATION OF TELEPHONE OPERATORS’ THROATS— IMMEDIATE STEPS WILL BE TAKEN TO PREVENT SPREAD OF MALIGNANT DISEASE AMONG EMPLOYES pendent Tele= be inspected tative measures ployed by the In en by the board of | phone company w Prompt p are being alth to check what threatens to| It is n operators employed | board for the operators to breathe phone company. | constantly the air that has ng the 300 by the Sunset Last night Miss King, one of the from the lungs, the tranemit- operators, went home ill with spping the exhalation until it what in feared to be an attack of | is inbaled again, This causes the tonailitis or diphtheria. Four cases | respiratory organs, particularly the of diphtheria among the operators | throat, to become inflamed, a con~ have been reported to the health | dition which is conducive to the board within the last two months. | lodgement of disease germs The physicians comprising the} To make conditions worse, the health board are still engaged in | operators are continually changing the work of examining the throata| from one transmitter to another, of the girls. It has been found|so that one sick person is liable that the throat of nearly every op- | to transmute infectious diseases to erator is inflame A actentific | scores of others. culture bas been made of the sput All transmitters are disinfected, um in 12 of the cases that appear | it is sald, once a week, but it is suspicious to ascertain | claimed that this {s not frequent se ex- | enough was that of Miss King, who has al- | set company, was asked this morn ing what other previntative meas- Further discoveries of the pres-| ures, if any, were employed, but ence of disease are expected. refused to discuss the matter ex- ‘As soon as all the operators of | cept to say that the company would the Sunset Telephone company |do anything required by the board have been examined, the girls em-/ of health REE EEE EERE EE EERERR AREER EEE RES WE LEAD; OTHERS FOLLOW The Kernel announced, Sunday, in his own sweet, freckled language, that hereafter The Times would issue two early edi- tions at ONE CENT A COPY. And thereby hangs a tale. Shortly after the famous Tracy hunt, three years ago, Star began issuing a noon edition. #” shen wrecks later the Times followed, but could sell no papers. A few weeks later The Star forced the Times TO SELL ITS IN EDITION FOR ONE CENT. ana OF pot The Star has forced the dear old Kernel to put out another edition for One Cent. * Talk about playing “Me Too! H gy The Star doesn't mean to insinuate that the Ker- net made an ass of himself, Sunday, by stating editorially that one-cent publications were “crumbs from the table,” and then snnouncing on PAGE ONE that he was going to sell two of his three editions FOR ONE CENT! Consistency is, indeed, a rate jewel. TRU CPPCC PPC CET ALLS Eee ele as The The Kernel has ‘em all SSS EEE EEE EEE Ee EEE eX eee eRe eee ee ee Steamship Companies Up Against Poor Prospects | Low wages, modern machinery and high transportation rates have % | caused the laboring man to forsake ® Nome. Nome, according to local | authorities, is now a feeding place ~ | for none but the capitalists, the | mine owner who in able to operate % | independent by transportation com- | SERRE EEE EEE EH ® | panics and the business men of the | ed a good business. | northern country are complaining of the lack of bus ineas from the laboring class for | the Nome district. There is hardly a steerage berth booked on any of the steamers scheduled to sail for Nome on or about June 1 Never in the history of the Nome trade bas there been experienced such conditions as are now prevail- ing. The fact that Nome ts no poor man’s country is being deeply im- pressed upon the minds of the steamship men. They also say that the absence of the laboring man in the northern country materially | there was a shortage in Nome ton- nage, the men on the inside state been | that now it is a case of a shortage an al-/ in freight, Before the preparations Assistant | for the sailing of the vessels and Vandeveer. | the actual booking of freight took Henkhel waa tried but released by | piace the steamship men anticipat- TROUBLE AT “Henry Gib- i to pay | Jabor |season’s work. Out of this sum |risk of not securing a job and pay | miners as they rett but did not make a disturbance. COMPLAIN OF LACK OF BUSINESS—HARDLY A STEERAGE BERTH BOOKED FOR JUNE 1—MANY STEAMSHIP MEN SELL OUT THEIR INTERESTS—NO ME NOT POOR MAN’S LAND ———— prefer to seek work in other re- Men who, during the early spring. | gions steamship companies | believed there would be a heavy| It is reported along the water |demand for tonnage, chartered | front that many of the steamship large vessels for Nome, have now | operators are seeking to get rid of turned over their interests to other | vessels now on their hands. The parties. Laboring men who have | Northwestern Steamship company, worked in the northern country say | it is said, has purchased the steam- they cannot afford to waste a whole | ships Oregon and Ohio. The vessels summer in the north for the small | will operate this year on the Nome remuneration secured for their | route Another statement made Satur- One hundred shifts, at $3 per |day by a prominent steamship man shift, constitute a good season's |.was to the effect that unless busi- work, acording to statements made | ness increased materially during by those familiar with the situa-|the year it was a question as to |tion. This, with the transportation | where the vessels would be operat- rates of $40 each way, leaves the | ed during the season of 1906. The laborer with but $22@ for a whole | poor showing of the Fairbanks dis- trict is also greatly harassing the there Is also to be taken his wash- | steamship men. At the present time ing, tobacco and living expenses | there are hundreds of men out of while waiting for vessels both at | work, many of whom, reduced to | Seattle and Nome to sail. The la- | desperation, have resorted to baunt- boring men, rather than run the|ing the highways and holding up mn from the the large sum for transportation, | creeks with their du ty-three union sailors arrived this] Standard, In order to accomplish morning from Seattle to load the| this it is believed that Garfield will Shasta at the E. K. W are believed to be armed and are some of the the recent Tacoma riot. A gang of| BAO xd mill They! recommend that congress declare | pipe lines to be common carriers. FIRE AT YAKIMA } NORTH YAKIMA, May 22.—A ls re which broke out in the Famous Clothing store in the Wilson block WILL HELP THE on Saturday night, destro $25,000 worth of property, the John H. Weigel Clothing store and the lodg- © who took part in| longshoremen was at the wharf, pee non dd fines and went to jail. Yesterday | SMALL CONSUMER house above, belonging to Mrs, 12 non-unionists were shipped here iy Date Watee ‘waltaa’ che. a Bere 3 | the store in which the fire originat- at Weyerhaeuser mill. Unionists (By Scripps News Ass'n.) }ed. A portion of the loss is cov- attempted to get them to leave town 1 rad et eamarehon and five consented. Gibelhoft re WASHINGTON, May 22.—Com- | ; Berliner | fused and wanted to fight, and it is| missioner James R. Garfield began WINONA LAKE, Ind. - sustained |alleged the unionists accommodated | Work on his report’ of the oil in-| Rev, M. A, Matthews, of . in Victoria when | him. The Pegasus is not being load-| Vestigation, It is understood that|a fic.y speech before the Presby- Welsbaden |ed on account of lack of men, and | the commissioner terlan assembly this morning, de- at| further trouble is looked for, Union| is that be oi! business shall in the | clared that the work of missionaries declares|men say the non-unionists are| future be entirely open and that Far West was retarded, be- right armed, small producers shall be allowed the church sings the wrong AP, the advantages of transportation |} f music, He characterised the BELLINGHAM, May 22.—Twen- at the same price as is accorded the 1 hymns as ragtime, ary in talking through | me an epidemic of diphtheria |the transmitters at the switch-*

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