The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 24, 1905, Page 1

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JOIN THE DOLLAR CLUB. “HUMAN INTEREST EDITORIAL 8” 3 WATCH THE STAR'S SPORTING PAGE FOR { I'S WORTH THE MONEY! ARE SHORT AND REACH THE 8 POT REAL LIVE NEWS OF 8PORTDOM eit gt VOL 126, 190: (SEATTLEITES ANGRY FARRELL LOSES JOB AT KOMURA’S SLIGHT ASSTAR PREDICTE The Pioneer One Cent } } A ‘N - we @ } The Only Paper in £eattle} | », Paper of the Northwest h eC Y Cal ttl os Sony ta i That Dares to Print the News NIGHT EDITION. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, JULY NTS PER MONTH RANGED BOR HIM IM SEATT LE, BUT HE HAD PLENTY OF | | j - j PREGIDENT OF THE GREAT NORTHERN STEAMSHIP COMPAN TIME TO BE 'WINED AND DINED IN CHACIGO—REPRESENT HIS ASHES | SWEEN) DOES 4 ¥ 16 REMOVED BECAUSE OF POLITICAL BLUNDERS—HIS RE- ATIVES. @F THE LOCAL ENTERTAINMK..1 COMMITTEE NOT GIVE UP LEASE 1S A PART OF HILL'S PLAN TO COMPLETELY REOR- CAN'T UNDERSTAND HIS ACTIONS | GANIZE HIS PACIFIC COAST MANAGEMENT — LOUIS HILL | : - Judge Hanford, in the federal cou recently jenied the ition | ys e CHICAGO, Joly 4.—Raron Ko- well known Seattleites who bad in * poe re on 1 ponte | MAY SUCCEED FARRELL aura, the Japanese peace envoy, | terested themselves in the proposed | THE REMAINS OF PAUL JONES B Saute tar ck iemnoches venous; Bi ' f © ,arrived In Chicago at / local banquet, that th ould not} = a . a 0 ‘ and his suite arrived | teago at anque hat they wou | ARE PLACED IN A VAULT AT ng the striking brewers from inter-|gwpamk heheheh Rawk ww! It will b membered thet when 0 o'clock this morning in the pri-/credit the report of the Chicago af- | Ra ering with the company's proporty |e " Hed wate car of President Hill, of the| fair at first | ANNAPOLIS Jand affairs, on the ground that t * ee ae % | The Bis ved the brazen-taced Great Northern, He was met by a| “We can’t understand It,” is the} HUMBLE, Tex. July 24.—As a th the vidinity fled, leaving behind | made the unions defendants in the|® — y 1p. Farrel! will be f od bpeegy vend Pres Ares -ncenratice! arms local Japanese committee and citi-) gene statement heard in this city, | _ al result of a lightning bolt which{all of thelr possessions, which were|muit, but that the unions had no iy , syne tponie de hint Saye i * ed by Farrell and G ena appointed by the acting mayor. | Naturally, the local men whom the| ANNAPOLIS, Md., July 24—At 10 /8track an earthen tank owned by |destroyefte. Humble in crowed with | corporate existence. Monday morn-\y aoniiies’ ot af lathientiak wesai ‘The visitors were driven to the Au-| baron disappointed do not care to/ o'clock this morning the body of {he Texas Oi! company, Ii tanks | refugeed Who have lost their all. By-|ing the company filed a new suit * of influential business Gitortum hotel, where a rest of a) openly express their chagrin at the | pau) Jones was brought ashore and | have #0 far been dostroyed by fire |erything ponsible is being done to| naming in their bill every one of! y July 25, 1905 ns th ape PntPrigg Soames few houre was taken before the de-| treatment they experienced at the tn e vault In the naval | @d the flames are still beyond con- | ald them. the striking brewers, and making|, rh on 190) *! og Mi neoota, it was parture for the east on the Pennayl- | hands of the peace envoy, but one of my grounds. ‘The almple cer-|trol. Several mon are LA each = party defendant to the suit.|5 Git wire rom toe | Predicted by this paper at the time Vania limited this afternoon. them said | cupied but 40 minutes burr eath and the ¢ ‘The fire now ere 0 square wite| There are 142 of the strikers, but ire wrthern, # | that Sutherland's bead would fall. The former minister to Mexico! “Considering the manner in which | tae admaivel's i ox $ When th of the pk district, Three mi the entire list is incorporated four 4 J. D. FARRELL. at AND IT DID! and state head of the baron’s staff|}the baron treated us Seattleites by the shore batteries, the cas. | '98 stre he first tank barrels Of oll have beer naumed.| times in the petition, in order to | @id the talking {0 behalf of the en | compared with the way he cottoned containing the main ning loston followed, and the/It ie «ald 10 white workmen were nate on be in the matter PPP HR EREREHBHEH! The gene traffic manager hands prk- | Caught By burn in his resignation only a few Voy. He said the people of Japan) up to the Windy City gentlemen, It) lowered from the Brook! to flames leaped high in the air, W ng oll and pertehed ‘Were not over-anxious for peace un-| looks to me as if ho Is not exhibit | deck of the t Standish, where a | ™en tried to stop the spread of the nh are miksing and 60 were badly |S * eR ERR BREESE 1 dnys after the » wtional expose tess the terms were entirely satis-|ing much diplomacy on his trip * } detachment of marines from the fire, but were forced to flee Forty |injured.! Phe fire haw reached the|*® ee 4 wie t which stirred up the steamship factory. The appointment of M,| far!” | Magship sur fed it as a guard|™tles confined in a paddock near! Guffey, tan ontaining 6,000,000/% ATTENDANCE AT PORT- & ot | world of the Pacific coast to a F Witte as plenipotentiary was very| §. Takahashi, of the Oriental | o¢ honor, In the meantime ev the tank were burned to death barrels of ofl, which In now threat-|* LAND FAIR * | Great rkuble extent popular in Japan DA phn is per ‘Tedd gompeny, and a —— Javailable sailor and * ei Fifty families who live in tents enod&k * vow AND, Ore ay A 23 ; ¥ P | ‘ is ve ougly conversant wit e problems! member Japanese aasoriation | oon: ashore in amall boats to f ere | bie showing the o ars Whahinasa | he resignation o| C. Eden wa to be discussed, The actual work |of this city, when asked Monday aft peyton ye the anti” ficial turnstile record of at- x |°"y) Wianingte another surprise to the transporta- = the — a does ae! frig Md seems himeelf regarding | Te French cruiser LaGrabrere * ten -~ ” up to and including : us published a _, orld. Mr bos was western gin until August |the matter, said | did Hkeew! turday nigh baton = ata ic manager of the road. The party. was entertained at| “T do not understand why Raron|Wwion the Standish arrived at the & First week, June 1-7.... 99,275 «|i! was about “all lupeheon at the Auditorium hotel by| Komura should have attended &| ..ciatly constructed float. the cas # Becond week, June 8-14. 100,724 @ | Tomienation wa On top of this comes the rett Mayor Dunne and a party of offi-/ banquet ts Chicago. 1 think og Te. | ket was transferred to the sea wal * Third we a june 1 2 6.842 * ent of Farrell a cials, port to that effect is a mistake. ¢ honorary pallbearers took # Fourth wook, June 22-28 $9,916 Mar # are rife concerning { At 2:45 the party loft for Now| told me when he was here that he “cee tigre: “yy ne hearse in| * Fifth w June July * the probable successor of Farrell, York. was going straight to Washington. hich casket laced. Sait -3® 141,415 & | Amor * mentioned is Howard Probably Komura will proceed] without any stops, such being his | yu'ch jin ciate ee ea the hearse © Sixth week, Duly 612. .111504 & Peace ea on ase @irect to Oyster Bay to meet Presi-| instructions from the mikado. to the temporary vault, where a hol- | & Seventh week, July 13 * Steasmabip Mr. Hill's line dent Roosevelt | “Edo not know how he ob nanan low square waa formed, while * 104,601 * : “g on the Great pin the time to attend the Chicago ban- | oor service was read by Cha ae peice: t 5 July 20 0,906 & ar ough a young Beattie feels that it has been/ quet, if he did, but I am quite post-| ro. and the customary - al, July 24.--An {ton a@idetermine the extent of her! # July * ne of the most capable slighted by Baron Komura, the Jap-|tive he did not have the leisure) 2k" “loi. vault was being closed | offleial rep made up by thé of | ‘njurtest The wa in th ® July 28,309 & officials in the mid- gnese peace envoy, who recently |time while here to attend such &/ 0°) ior began to sound tape | feers « ennington this morn-|ningtan'® hold in now in p * * est and has established an en- passed through this city, en route | function.” ing, shows at at the hour of the| contrel and it is now bel *# Grand total l* record for b elf during his to Washington. | Judge Thomas Burke, chairman of | The ceremonies were witnessed by explosion there were 187 men on the | infUri@e miosily consist of Ureaks in| @ * tion with the Great Northern, He enjoys the confidence of the Northern's president and is h « the plum, 2 change here of Mr. Hill's po- Seattle and the # is not a pol- ntire connection thern and its ine # never dabbled In polie ‘And it looks as if Seattle is per-|the committee appointed by the | 10,000 peop ship's rol). Of thease, are inden- | pives had valves. wee * us Ufied as dead, four are missing, cor a fectly justified in showing a little| Asiatic association of this city to r § r knew what ft was talk- indignation. receive Baron Komura upon his ar- | — tonnes responding WA! pur unidenti- | f the “Jim Hi When the baron arrived in Seat-| rival here. sald ace D S$ ed, 46 are in’ th pital, one is i + \' bou' knew that Farrell's} If Mr. Jame tle, elaborate preparations had been| “I do not believe that Baron Ko a og eason * . erted, and 91 are on] : 98 ereent..0f -B8r. ae x mura could have attended a very | | ‘ luring the last sexsion | in the mar t made to honor him in every way) ] | . o, He — t . we a possible. A banquet had been plan-| elaborate banquet in Chica I H ee cay mel ; ned by the most prominent Ameri-| was there only two or three hours $s ere 3 m - rex Gee abiiened. eas deicthun: nate Prag ths > es ean and Japanese in the city, at} while making connection with the | ie) ‘ atared besbad rec Paul and his man; that the which such well known men as/| Pennsylvania road. The reports re- ognition. One the lant four was , é t creasing estimation Mayor Ballinger, J. D. Farrell, C.| garding the extensivences of his re ‘The mad dog season te here hen out from the engine rooms, | mity ‘T. Takahashi. president of the Jap-| ception there may be ennapetated ,. | of Captain N 1. Rogers land had a great gash to his side vote “right” on elecs, fhese association: Judge Thomas| “However, Chicago had the ad-) Georgia Romers, the *T \and was suspended by hie heels, Ris] Jehin Ferguson, bartender, « Ferguson swore vengeance mer tion days. In case of his promotion, Burke, representing the Asiatic as-| vantage of having three days’ notice |i, the first vt foot baying caught in eahes | dently made vicious by the loes of | cause, as Sanders ® he bh is c lential political manager will sociation; F. B. Clarke, represent-|of his arrival by reason of ees e P| While vis he residence of | of the t aoe |hal Selvend inability to secure a saaniee Sbhahen paying t “it fing Jas. J. Hill personally; Consnt| across the continent ‘ee is os Captain A. P. Spa ? o ke is now in general | Other, Saturday ing wa 1 All day F h y t has It that Louis Hisamidzu, and others were to pre-| knew the exact aint teat he} Anne, Sunday afternoon, st @9 | char a8 appointed a com-|8%4 brittally beat C. P. Sande for Ba *, but did not t edocs will take up thet sent their compliments would arrive and probably bad) severely bitten by a small dog owned i eonelnthtar of Dire manager of the McVay | ntil § , nk few | few by Farrell's des . | ta mM. ce sting of Surgeon k arrell’s a To the dismay of the delegation | everything rd bout the condi a. ee sees Se oe Ensign Sale nm Smith, of | Lumber company's wood yard. 1 be yoken wh } Hill is a son of rr tat to “| know nothing ab or sides in the nefght s} ~ o 1 rt 24 fa: buow tn gee meee pre bh ony ore seunder which M, Komura dr te fo not thought that the dey |tn®. mate le avy yard, as a| Three months ago Fergus “ A “wan na | truth nd is k nas as Boro mee, a ee here, and, fm fact. | board to Investigate the condition | chased a idad of wood and | roi ‘ I He is the Mat informed them that he could | clined the banquet here, and. tm fs. | way mad, but erday's hot weath- | OPM. ort to him. | ting wp @ hard luck story, i y kicked him in th a! in the Greatt not attend the spread | was ‘iy cognizant tha 18." | or nad unfortunately disagreed w On receiv report, he with | ée “d in 2 0 fort be outside of ¢ PE Ge Gancar tes dboatenct Sites y Sh wo boty = degen | or le led pean mating "| be sent to the Mare Island hospital.| yard wan te go to—, and th re him to leave as abandoned | eapactt ad nol c is in dange " ‘ ‘ od t t aek * Paul to take nis entertainment. His entertatr report of the fenee The ing ause | didn't thtend to pay \ : “ ion See of this eomses o thegram | hi - the hands of oth . 3 . je Commander| Thurtday the ex-bartender ‘ r rtant duties from Chicago that, notwithstanding | ment here was in the hands ' t poller . | H t an k Farr ir tances on Lieutenants | dered ay er jond of woo errell his apparent haste and stress of ers, who know the circumsta ort <i ee cont c outa va “ap Be yeernlls _ : business, the baron found time to| better than L” | vestix * 6 ne hair nenuht in LLL Waiba. Pile Griver, act pronent a weak blow wh tr ‘ s son here, Se- act as guest of honor at a banquet} ens | headed gp bee 1 Pay lan “ ‘ f ttle may co: reeif lucky. i , by Mayor Dunne and other miral ¢ ich will determine ax tol unde — instructions e lucky. Ls en, on LONDON, July 24.—H. L. Doherty the necessity of cfficial taairy(aaeEibeine we " t hom » W. Hill is one brigthteat ‘aia / prominen icagoans j hen a ay tar are ph . bie of America’s railroad This, in face of the fact that the| won the match with W. A. Larned,} ee TE sis dy i deaddial | Mae Gare, Hie ane a nti! at large, a ‘ withstanding the fact that bein ese envoy «pent only a few be store shit is packed | Sere 20 Reon ¥ aad a “sg st iw i fee me : hours In the Windy City. American. in singles for the Davis her will bring & diver tessa aod arenes = t lb n of hie father” hae maisertans t Wimbledon toda: a © tO examine the Renning- to the . rning . 7 e im in rapidly advanes So astonished were some of thei cup a iv. i. naeted . tag trom a.snther udeewentaee f the most im- in the railroad es not owe his posi- ess to his father. The Gun Artists to Compete ter hak tS rit wont ay | nier-Grand » : ‘ oe fis strict and exacting | narrow . i de sons as he is with an Tho deputies in the sheriffs of-, Five men are to be selected from | the wheels of tt ed ve Oe redit an 4 oe tas tend ke ae fice are nervously fingering their each office, and the clerks inslet| i tne time | Ls) examr this can be quoted an in- trusty six-shooters these days. Not | that all must be actual employes Of) patrolman Percy F. Looker] st ide pyrotechnical Because of any approach of desper- | the office aml no “ringers.” The! a. sned to the we from the curb eae ‘ fy ter Hill. He w ate characters, but because they | clerks have chosen their team, | stone $ arabbed the child almost | to p ago in one have received a challenge from the| Which will comprise O. A. Case, M.| /, wheels of the swift 4 ne rtments, gun artists in the county clerk's of. W Thompson, Bert Taylor, Frank | ly . | . ' f getting down fice for a shoot on August 1 Frew and O. H. Springer. The sher @ were startled t ate in th When “jacked j ifts are out practicing ach after © " t t head of the department, The county clerks accompanied noon and have not on thelr | atroimar Monday afternoe Se he simply laughed. As soon as James their challenge with a statement | team yet that the hack sat cr Mad J. heard of his son's conduct, he that they would skin the sheriffs) There will be three events A five! igon and « dow 2 laconically instructed the latter's @ mile and give them extra shots to| shot rapid fire shoot 25 yards at| enue at pee wiley Poo fef to “fire him. We only weit Spare So every man in Lou Smith's a man target; a five-shot slow fire! ritied to see th 4 al good men,” ig what the president re- Office has been polishing his revol- at bullseye at 25 ya and @ ten-| parently } in eu H marked. ver, resting over barrels and stump, shot siow fire at bullseye at 50) hack to the pavement clone James J. Hill depends absolutely fences in continual practice, and! yards. Losers to pay for supper for) gone Blectr npany’s tracks i e Louis when the former is away, getting the kinks out of their vision. | the crowd. | He picked the b up and carried ¥ a 4 and turns over almost all of the ex- him t arria her i pe ~ ecutive work to the young 1 claiming to t er, th an.8 v In addition to his remarkable suc. r 1 seh ' 8 a tarffic executive, Louis has made about th wrt The ing closes hia desk for the Jat} ma, 1 fortune In fron, He is | child was b py” owes his job abso- | nea sted in other mining | sata would get med attend is that f ghout the northwest, ar imme b f ve ' atated ’ ticular attention to | think that it m bh be at He er, th pe he be ted as the suc- * tempt to kidnap t hild and tb ple wh - Farrell, Louis will prove the boy was tryin meas towa at | ¢ of the most respected and a aac | ‘The supposed 5 well pt eg tly of Senttle’s citizens. Quiet, CHICAGO MAN TRIES TO MURDER WHOLE FAMILY AND THEN pseyge a bgt grah athe = ad r ft Itrap sit akpspaieay ‘Neaaent Gane The St th h all due KILLS HIMSELF—MOTIVE UNKNOWN pa about § * | scaaees aa Marsala “cedin — # and democratic, be will prove THE PEACE ENVOY CANCELLED ALL SOCIAL FUNCTIONS AR- — . | Lemsrmpg gare ) end his| bearing man who now represents i pub and 8 Mr. Hill on the-Pactfic coast HEINZE LOST Fy —pealhem would NEW Yo J y 24.—Judge CHICAGO, July 24—Having shot, His 2-year-old niec And Farrell goes! otneon at tape epoeta a And killed his sister and 2-year-old| Injured | n of I is but |day granted the motion of Attorney lece Rn rg De ae. ws < ee Pe his father, will HELE} July 24.—The u- | tep in a con- | Hill for a stay of execution of Albert Yeat Twelfth street, today shot and | probably di preme today decided ty { Mr. H ing t T. Pat the ground of import- seriously wounded his father and| Mrs. Eliza Griffin, aged 18,| {the most important mining cases in | ar te reorganisation of abd inset majority sister-in-law pd then shot him-| his sister-in the history of the in fayor of | Hill representation n affirming the judg- self The motive for the crime is not | the gamat against the | 1 ' of the Great tion at the rehearing, The dead are learned I . ich is known as | Northerr mship company's ex- Timothy Dooling. The police say Dooling was in-}the “Nipper.” ecutive officers: arava Mrs. J. Griffin, aged 23, sister sane | Heinze claimed the right to go Notwithstanding th fact ee ee FAR SRS Ae 3 wz e =x under the Aconda Never Sweat with each mes a long, | * nO the sich! peo wisi the Bt ocean BANK CLEARINGS. * t nt in tallyhos. Races were | ties of the amated. The in Seattle, whereby the r ot- |* * 1 you oid and \er court he that Heinze ‘had ficer | At t p J 190) $1,174, * fat ¢ and childrer right, but upreme court, in A he 1 the pea { w July 24, 1904 645 * taste : & race for the portly ladiee being unanimou ion, reverses this 2 it i ainly kable|¥ seal 2 - wing . bre pan a dow inding @ orders a new trial on ' . r b h . as n, to use pr “ i left untouched several grounds, the chief of which >" > ie a ? r “= pect: y wie. 9 $ 528,959.97 & vat elaborate t-} ad « f the guests fai toils that the evidence does r > a — i} * * k a I k Monday morning port the findings waar reapit/o ° Q tay lf a z : ’ RRR REE EK

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