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

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dee i ALL THE NEWS THAT'S nee A WILL BE FOUND IN THE ST The Pioneer One ‘Cont Paper of the Northwest SIGHT EDITION DRAMA IN REAL LIFE AT FASHIONABLE HOTEL “AVANT!” SAYS ADDISON ARCHER REED TO PRETTY WIFE, WHEN LATTER YEARNS FOR STAGE-—AFTER A_ FIERCE QUARREL, REED 1S THROWN OUT OF HOTEL LINCOLN better » wanted.” Mr. and Mrs, Reed, it ts o quarreled over the latter's ambition A@aison Archer Reed. known by me of “Allen Welt.” whe his pen & makes a specialty of] to bee a leading lad gelling advertising gold-bricks tol Th penser of ity gold Bullibie newspaper publishers, is “up| bricks does not care for the stage against it | He does not have tread the 4, whore articles in an after-| boards in order to get his name in hoon newsp under the caption) print of “Successful Advertising,” have! been made a feature of that sh for some days, should study up some en “successful hods of holding when he learned that Mra inning to show a de dd wan beg leaning toward the y st of her tir ein she spent a home. ading the Clipper and attending On Tuesday night Reed was un atinees at the Third Aver ceremoniously hustled out of the|ter, he decided to give her a touch of the drama in real life. < upying Mote! Lincoln, pack He was told that “his and baggage room Ww ents ove artments on BOYS, ARMED TO Easnensoss COMMIT BOLD HOLD-UP ™ Pain Fireworks Crowd ee the muzzle of one of the guns, and | jthen two of them held him while |‘ years of age and armed to the teeth |the third went through his pockets. | | They could not find anything of| | values except an expensive poc Three boys not more than held up and robbed Joseph Higgins at|knife of Oriental design, they took from him & husky young man residing 213% First south, at 10 Wednesday o'clock j}home and keep quiet, which he dtd front. He recognized one of the youth jful criminals as a boy who has They picked out a dark corner! picked up a little money now and near Pier A for the place to com-|then by singing rag-time melodies mit the crime, waylaying Higgins on (he boats running to Alki point night on the water on his way to his lodgings. They} A similar holdup was reported] « gt. Pot arg dispatch, says w/ “lt Out Of $750 per day by falling to! conneetion with their show,” said first gave Higgins, who was not |several days ago, when a mam W#S!@ that Count Lamedonff has ao. @| pay tts Heer a proviaed for by} tar. Eee much older than they and badly |robbed of $5 by boys at the Fiver] thorized the statement. that | Ordinance, the Pain fireworks out ad @tbatter of fact the Bike here| scared, an opportunity to look down | dock Russia under no cireumstances # | fit has the b etfrontery Je-| are mo more Interested in the ‘Fal — —- —--— —— will pay an indemnity directly @ Mberately deceive the pubtic of Pompeli’ than are any other per tly, nor make any #| take money under fale preten sone, delivery wagon, in which she was riding. Henry was the driv ene. Burglars entered the home of Ed- ward Brady, the attorney, 906 Th teenth north, Thursday night, and after making a thorough overhaul ing, took away everything they con sidered of value. Mr. Brady was away Normenson, her husband of th wagon, and was riding on the} mt seat with him. While coming | down Irving street from Thirty-ee ond south to Thirty-fifth, the wa struck a stone and started to jturn to the left. Immediately the at the time | YM" Jumped out of the wagon to over- Northern passenger coach between this city and Everett Burglars entered the room of M. Kbioto, in the Kokohama house, on 4 Sith and King, and took three $10} @iamond stick pins, a gold ring, $6 An cash and a razor siicl DE Burgiars also plundered a suit NORFOLK, Va.. menson leaves two little children. cane in JJ. W. Adistin’s room at 224 Virginia, taking $2 in cash and other valuables. A man who does not give his name reports that he was t6o late to pr Aug 24.—Cap ket}; and this] we m The § Higgine was then ordered to €0/ Count Okumwa, former prime min | | demands for | bursement FIRST ON THE GTRERT WITH THE LATEST NEWS 18 ONE_OF THE STAR'S POLICI ~The Seattle Star SEATTL HUREDAY AUGU 190. Peeeeerrirerrerr et iter et tre r es * : AME OL : * o * * * Every t soandal crops out in @orperation, government, * * state or municipality, the little fellow gets it in the neck, * * Not that he doesn't d * * He most always does, * - But— |* He is invariably seen in therele of the “fall guy,” who pute * |* his head on the block for decapitation, while the real sinners, the * * men whe are guilty of the big offenses, scramble into a tub of * i tac: te 3 ,|% whitewash and bob up serenely * aids te & . la Othell * This is the case of the recent Police Clerk # uesday nleht which beggare de-|* Walter Easton, who was forced to leave the Beattle police dee # puriot |* partment because of several unsavory des he had become * * ead eh foated over! ® tangled up in. * the tran the stentorian t * Easeon's forced retirement was deserved. Of this there is * et the leading man. “Get thee to al|® %° éeuune * nunnery—not to the sick and busktn, | * But— * Deo you think I watt to count ties! * What about the big fellows? + for a living and be known as a|* What about the men whose misdemeanors, compared with * leading woman's ‘feeder | the char against the police clerk, are akin to the mountain * I don't care what you say, Ad-|* and mole hill proposition? - Pm Apeher' Sask.” Gak' sentenes | * Easson was the little fellow, * caalivery weice i'm going on|* He got it in the top rung ef the vertebr: * the eas Allleen M awe ¢ ba * And the big fish, who ewim unmolested in the graft-tainted * ida tulonte: * waters of this city, are allowed to go right ahead, willy nilly. - M Reed | b * The Star tru that this Easson case is but the forerunner * who locked himsett & Of @ general cleaning out of Seattic’ pol) force — including * 1. no the guests say,|® beth the detective department and the hob-nailed patreimen on * hake off hia coll of|@ the etreste * * it trusts thet the mayor and chief of police will not be sat. * ES 5 ea o * isfied with the exit of an erring minnow, but will hook onto * on persuaded Reed to ® SMe of the big-mawed sharks whose frenzied finance methods * sod then lost. no ® Stagger even the most sophisticate: . ie has ae dane een The retirement of Basson can be compared with the result of # % the Bennington investigation, where an unknown little fellow—a ® & beardicss ensign, shoulders all the blame. *. * Come— * * Quit your fooling! 7 * GO AFTER THE BIG FELLOWS! * * * tt. tee ee eee eee ee ee ee eee 2 oy Tries a New Form of “Bunco” Game VERSATILE PRESS AGENT ANNOUNCE “ELK NIGHT" WITH- OUT AUTHORIZATION AND LOCAL LODGE 16 UP IN ARMS os OVER THE MALICIOUS NEWSPAPER FABRICATION eee ee ee * LONDON, Aus. %4.—The #| No’ Reuter to Japan of $ The proposed indemnity 000,000,000 wouldn't meet the of the war. I do not like the] attitude of the Russians, and if| Russia maintains her present atti de it is doubtful if there be peace. t fight for lasting peace imbun is the organ of ster, and this expression is regard: ed as Okuma’s t satiatied with buncol « the! “The Pain people had absolutely Telegra no authority to use our h company, in ® name in one of territory what- @| According to the over. & dvertisements ee prettily w I consider it a cane of cast-iron the Pains, who] nerve on the part of the show peo ing a fireworks display on the) pie, and I want every local Pik te is, Thursday night will| know that he te not eee eee ee eee PORTSMOUTH, Aug. 24—tIt is Elke and the “Beat Peo-| of good by going out to the circus inderstod that M. Witte wants Jap-| ple on F will be out in fall} grounds to help swell the gate re an to wipe gut unconditionally the) f celpte indemnity reim ye advertising a Then Russia could poiat| of t Milwaukee regation of 0 a victory of diplomacy and feet! fire producers, in charge of a local ¢ bad not surrendered her prin 1 press notices | or It loGke jike getting mo’ se ptetenses Wednesday night, accor Pains, Was “Ragies’ night ney under ling to the although newspaper reporter, lead one to be- }the right, ste ano » . nnd when he got heme he found the = ay o on ye r= 4 aking Then Japan could later] lieve that the local lodge of Elks has| it is impessible to find a member of kitchen door open, entrance having} 0) Oey “acing inatanthy sit p the items of the cost of| consented to lend tts ¢ to the! that fraternity in Seattle who knows been effected with a pans key | s « | War and care of prisoners and un-| occa and that all Elka | by whmt authority the show used the | Her husband remained tn the] g b ; } There were several other bur-| 0001, and was thrown to the « der the different ctrcumstances| should be present | order's name -mlaries on Thursday night. A suit | MegD Bud was thrown to the op. |stand more of a chance of reaching| But | In addition to bu: the city. cane belonging to P. H. Sullivan, 313 | jor pad, Dut was not) an agreement | The best laid plans sometimes go the kk Ages and ‘Third south, was taken froma Great/ esisew her husband, Mrs. Nor- wrong. All might ably have rbitant prices, the Pains putttr of entertainment ke even a sche ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 24.—The| been well with thin foreign office announces that the|h outlook for peace is brighter. Meyer hold-up game d not the Paine footiabty selected | tiele thelr “Elke” night” the date or up an ar wiated to oy suffer from is making daily visits to consult the | which the local lodge holds its r ennel czar. ular meeting. | Laeal Bike are particularly tr ssi Now comes George N. Smith, sec-| censed at a Seattle morning paper WASHINGTON, D. Aug. 24.—| retary of the Seattle lodge of Kiks,| whieh devoted « quarter of a colur Meyer's report of ¢ ree-hour | with the following notice to the fact that thie will be “Elks onference with the czar has been Notice is hereby given that the| night” at the fireworks show arded to President Roonevelt.| published statement, t tonight! It seems that the press agent of e state department this morning | will be Elke’ night at the Pain ‘Last| the Pains, who ts also drasnatic erit bathorioed the following Days of Pompeii, was not author-| te op an afternoon paper, succeeded Aur wador Meyer has b ew. io a oe ot tal nact-| ized by the Order, and that Seattie|in Bypnotizing the 1 Ing paper vent the theft of a gold watch from | Wireinia oe pA, otha at Ing under Instructions direct from| lodge No. 92 fe in no way interested | into the belief that his “dope” was the top of « bureau in # hotel. He|-o%on murdered Maud Robinson, | ‘%* President in the manipulation of | in the exhibition | news and was hewn etrictly to Sew the thief stick his arm through | 664 23 almost severing her head | the St Petersburg end of his effort] “There will be a regular session! facts. window and take it, could | to bring about peace at the Ports-| of the lodge in our hall tn the Alaska} ‘The focal lodge een compelle ths window and take it, but could |Ho'nsed the same razor to cut his| ‘©, Prine about pea the Ports le the lodge hall tn the Alaska} ‘The focal lodge has been compelled Br y own throat from ear to ear. Jeal-| math conterence puilding tonight at # o'clock, and all| to spend $25 or $30 in advertising E membere of the Order are earneats | in the loca re in order to coun was the ousy was the cause. | PORTSMOUTH, N. H, Aug. 24.—|19 requested to attend teract the influence TrTTTTTT errr T TT FATAL * * BAKERSFIELD, Cal, Aug. ® ACCIDENT & 24.—The entire family of A. M. & ® McRae was killed by a dyna- # ® mite explosion in a mine in the #| a * Toll Gate canyon, Amalie dis- Mrs. Katherine Normensen was) trict, this morning. * Instantly killed on Wednesday atter-| _ pot noon in an aceident to a Bon BRRBEREMEMENENE NOTHING DOING AT PORTSMOUTH PEACE ENVOYS ENJOY A DAY OF REST AND SIGHTSEEING, WHILE WORLD WAITS PATIENTLY FOR DEVELOPMENTS i kkk kx Rte tk Kt Kl recelved by cablegram from his| * ® | paper to the effect that Japan will & «ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 24. ®|not view with favor any modifica-| #& —Twenty-two soldiers and one *|tion of the peace demands that in-| % trainman were instantly killed ® | clude a sale of part of Saghalin or] % in a wreck on the Siberian rail- s the waiving of the claim for retm % road today. bursement of war expense, says * ;| “aghalin is of vital necessity t Prrrrrrerrere re. am Japanese people and cannot ty rigger’ divided. “Forty-five years ago Rue PORTSMOUTH, N. H., Aug. 24.—|sla proposed to divide the {sland Ishikwa, editor of the Hochi Shim-' but Japan would mot consent and bun, Tokio, in answer to an inquiry declared the whole of it belonged | hundred | tors were reported at the firing line of the malicious Today ana day of rest an seeing for the peace er belligerent bea 1 night- voys of both nations. The day was iful, the heat of the past few ke having beer freshing rains. Minis Baron Roser an automobile trip to Magnolia, the beautiful summer home of Ambas sador Rosen. The Japanese envoys remained at the short strolls this a Tomorrow Takahtra ar will take a trip to Mar H., to vinit the y hu there, which a is anxious to see GEO. N. SMITH, Secretary.” | fabrication. lepelled by re r Wit “LITTLE FILIPINO MAID” he @rank lots in the tropics Mrs. Lytle ts a typical old south ard, ern “Mammy,” and she sald that in Manila Captain Taggart was tel, taking only 1 want to be a soldier factories! And with the soldiers stand Against a lovely ai A cocktail in my hand want to mix the highball« And serve the claret punch it was on account of the t an army post potillion servant, Augustina’ The This seems the proper hunch and Augostina w She saw them sit very clove together in the hall She never saw Mre Taggart drink or smoke. One night Mra. Taggart cam Lioutenant ptain It is generally conceded that the| y 1 by the Jap-| 1 by R Filipinc captain » very intimate r WOOSTER, 0. Aug. 24.—T le Miss Anna aewart She derct read in the T erry HENNE ROR REED - , #1 ing # DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 23. #| use this morr ‘ortescue when th grabbed her and Taggart as “ir ish and de shouted eA Of yellow fever was #|Titadle. pe 1” M words at her. He then struck % discovered in Ottawa county, #| Berry's father, ex-congressman and|her, pulled her hair and tore her we near Grand Rapids. Godfrey | POW 4 Judge, also testified by dep lothes off % Lindberg, lineman, who left #| #it nd said “Captain Tagg The nurse testified she saw the % New Orleans a week ago, is #| or, T never saw him | ain summon al uatina from * the patient 4 a s ibe os ped on the port en route . He rigs ie "| to Manila by poking her in the side sda dain dindindindindindadntindindndn dt de) rip oth | with a cane. On cross examination = # conducted herself a# a 144¥ | ghe gaid she had not actually seen SEAGIRT, N. J., Aug. 24.—Six| of refineme Taggart, but sald the cane looked nd fifty-seven Mrs, Taggart, it i# expected, willl iixe his testify Saturday Mra, Emma Lytle for nine years nurse or cook in the Taggart household, testified that competi and she had suppc Taggart must be at the othe i that end of the military shooting tournament today. Conditions required the en try of at leant 36, and no one ex-| much Hquor was kept in the house pected such a large amount of in-! Taggart did not drink much, she terest. eaid, at Manila, but she WEATHER FORECAST Tonight and Friday fair; light to declared fresh west winds. doing us a bit! "CAPT. TAGGART LOVED HIS cross at bis wife. She thought that! home late with) THE BTAR PRINTS iT DOES NOT SUPP THE News. £59 IT The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News 5 OF THIS STATE IN THIS ISSUE OF THE STAR Politics Interfere With Water Rate Reduction iciiman Daulton introduced the The fire and water co nmittee did, counell would postpone the reduc ti | tion of water rates so that the water, who however, i and has hot meet Wednesday night to take! receipin could be used to gen-| fought steadily for its pass will le penne: ot be given credit fe An up the long suffering water rate re- | ©"! expenses. ® « any 4 d . A desperate effort is being made! effort will be made to show that duction bill. to give the G. O. P., and incident-|the reduction could not have been Back of this delay there is a mo-|ally most of the members of the| made w first propose tive, and the motive is to put off| council who are on the ‘med edge It all a matter of politics, and the matter as long ae pousible. of defeat at the next election, a) the water consumers will be soaked Unless the pressure becomes too| big boom at the time previous to! until such a time the solons be- the reduction will be to political prose severe in the meantime, the com | tb e election that it will hay nittee is not going to pass the bill|effect. It in badly needed. Tt until a few months before election, | duction of water rates is almost perity political effect being dewired uniformly popular. ‘The counol!l| The | There t# also some anxiety to see! has made everybody ashamed of it | is go guble to which the counell w standpipes ng to constr 0 jhow the tax levy rate will come |by turning down the Moore-Gilman | all over the city may originate im out. The rate will have to be fixed| franchise, but {t hopes to put itself a desire to provide an excuse te within a few weeks, Rather than! in good standing again by reducing keep the rate where they are a lite _water rates Gs nile longer. lallow the ra go too high, the” Ho, All Ye Nimrods Better Have a Care Game Warden H. Rief is a busy ;\GAME WARDEN RIEF 18 ISSUING LICENSES BY THE SCORE man there days. AND HE GIVES SOME OFFICIAL, AS WELL AS KINDLY, AD- The ‘ots of King county ave} VICE TO THOSE WHO HANKER FOR THE SMELL OF getting ready to shoot grouse. | More than 500 hunting licenses| SMOKE AND THE JOY OF A WELL-FILLED GAME BAG have been issued already, and before | | the close of the year, Mr. Rief os timates, King county will have/{f you can find them, between Sep taken in 000 silver dollars for as! tember 15 and December 15 You may sho many license Antelope, mountain sheep and| swan, sandhill Last year 3,552 licenses were sold.| goat are legitimat er fowl |In 1963 the number was 2,436. By|tween September m-jany time from |this ratio of increase the game war-| ber 1 March 1 to the end of the year all the ducks, ranes, snipe and you can round up eptember 1 to \d figured the 1905 total should) The quail season does not and Brant are legitimate reach 6,000, until October 1 and is open three| except in May, June, July and Auge | “There are more licenses sol4| months. ing birds out of season for | shipment, having the same in cold storage, or to be apprehended with umage or skins in one’s pose on will subject one to prosecu= tion the same as if one were guilty of the actual killing of the birds, Jevery season in King county,” said) On August 15 the three-month |Mr. Rief Thursday morning, “than | season opened for grouse, partridge are rold in all the other counties of| prairie chickens, sage hens, native the state put together, and seven-| pheasant and ptarmigan east of the eighths of King county's licenses! Cascades. In Kittitas county y Jare bought by residents of Seattle.””|may shoot chickens (wild), from Warden Rief wants to give fair) September 10 to October 1 warning. The grouse season, west of th Only boats propelled by hand | Here are some pointers he Cascades, does not open until Sep permitted as hunting boats, and vines all hunters to follow, on pain| tember 1 to disturb the eggs or nest of any, f being “pinched” and fined round-| Shooting Mongolian pheasant and bird out of saeson is unlawful y Jquail is prohibited east of th Don't let the warden catch you Don't shoot elk or moose—both| mountains until 1908. jare on the prohibited list until 1915.) Chinese pheasant, male birds only | pay shoot deer and caribou,/are legitimate game from October carrying a gun about the woods, without a license, even if you are only out after tin cans. JUDGE HANFORD FAVORS | CASE OF “KID” WHITE j | ATTORNEYS OF YOUTHFUL MURDERER ELATED OVER ACTION OF FEDERAL JUDGE IN REFERRING CASE TO HIGHER TRI- if Friday were not the last day on show is to be giver BUNAL that the production sem | er attraction ts so palpably fie- a us that it Is not worthy of con= ‘| "Kid" White is more cheerful) said over telephone on Th sian. tn ehewing, he eae . to be given under the Gra |than ever day aftern Re ae ua f canis denon sciuntte uaa house license. the city offi tale hunch,” said the 19-year-old mur- |40n most encouraging for my client,| 0'C QU Cunt & FAN Bieal—nolia Jerer through the bare of his cell on ;#Nd I do not see how it could possi- | ‘EM ; s | Judge Hanford didn't send] hopes. Instead of denying the merit | “Vin Provided 10 tines as mud feral deputy to turn me|f our contention, Judge Hanford, ir user ‘or one-third of the ice charged by the North Seattle t I got turned down on that} says that he considers the |?! | bition, pi 00 a day foi ral court proceeding. Why 4 so very serious that st pred sh day te the Honford did was to say he didn’t| he himself does not wish to assume « coming here and many do not think that was Pain's spectacle does not pay a cent. The circuses may try to work the same gag next year, and exhibit under the Grand opera house e the| the responsibility dectding ther | He prefers, instead, to pass the mat- |ter on up to the reme court of | ntealities look just as good now as|the United States for decision | bett ing Attorney Mackintosh, who said Not much, I'm not going to give] the new legal move to save "Kid Jur hope. I'm just going to keep a] White's neck from the hangman's stiff upper lip and try to get out was a joke, would probably jor here, so I can lead the right kind | find it a very grave matter instead of @ life I ought to. at certain technical we | any too good in my lifetime, in the prosecuting attorr | have any juriadiction to deci points put up to him, He passes it} up to »ther court, and my tech- The managers of Pain's spectacle must be commended, however, for t far-sightedness and skill In buncoing the city officials, and Ma’ ager John Cort must be equally mmended for his generosity im ling them his theater license, { course there was no bill om Grand this week and Cort nly afford to lend out ar-a-month theater l= a while. nooe I haven't been and I with the] anh te ng of the case might prove than cohtemplated to sw square seriou depended 1 n soul into eternit Kid” White tapped the gilt cross ie ¥ on his litte Ca le with his} [trigger finger | “I didn't mean to shoot poor old |man Murphy,” he sald; “honest to God I didn't, and I don’t want to t . . hung for it. This little sign here PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. The 8 of the Pacific Coas' on thie little book, it's going to be Ticials of the Pacific Coast league panliypond agg dmne Ie bag are meeting here today, The appll- a cation of Spokane for admittance | rete” Whee Seinat no alerenpant was refused, The magnates will, he aus ae poe this afternoon, ratify the agreement, gilt crucifix he « between Portland, Seattle, Tacoma tly. tam tyler te be 0 ened Cathe and California cities for another o¢| three years concluded “Kid,” as he] Thanks to the peculis % pointed out the Comptroller Riplinger in regard to] SANTA CRUZ the Madona that adorn the walls of| following the city ordinances in| The grand council se for TURN DOWN SPOKAN spoke ear lie now Cal, Aug. 24.— of the Young various pictures of his cell, “and I believe the father] licensing the Pain production on the| en's institute this morning voted is koing to be able to make a good| North Seattle circus grounds, and/thanks to the grand officers, clergy man out of me, I will have several] the careful and brainy supervision 1 press. Fifty councils are on the years, at least three or four, before| of the license and. re mmit-| coast, 3,800 members, and there is my appeals will be completed, even| tee over such matters, the promot-| 20.960 in the if they turn me down, During those| ers of the “Last Days of Pomp three or four years I am going to| Will leave the city with 1 treasury. The elece tion of officers {s on this afternoon, e than] anda banquet this evening. have the right thoughts in my mind, | $3,000 that should be snugly tucked atoms and my heart is going to full of | awe in the city trea y i ST. PETERSBURG Aug. 24-——- love for my Creator Notwithstanding the exposure of|/General Linevitch reports that | William Connor, of Connor ‘&|the deal made by The Star, no ac-| fighting has occurred near Railoun Booth, who represent “Kid” White] tive steps have yet been taken to|Chou and that he repulsed the Jap- Jin the ingenious legal contortion] Cut off the graft, although se after a hard struggle. He which “Kid" White now from the gallows, members of the council would pri ably take the matter in their hands three ays he has repulsed attacks in places in Korea, through hopes to escape a OD EE EET EY CE es aa 7 4 i ere Oe

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