The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 5, 1905, Page 2

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AN EXCLUSIVE ARTICLE BY MAY BUTTON, WORLD'S WOMAN TENNIS CHAMPION, IN THE STAR SOON. The Pioneer One Cen® Paper of the Northwest “NIGHT EDITYON. “SHAKE!” SAYS LITTLE BROWN MAN TO BURLY, WHISKERED RUSSIAN THE STAR 18 ETRIVING AT ALL TIMES TO GIVE ITS READERS SOMETHING A LITTLE DETTER THAN THEY GET IN ANY O.HER NEWSPAPER The Seattle SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1905. = ; BELL ALMOST FAINTED © Peace Treaty Signed AT THOMSON'S STORY AT 3:46 P.M, TUESDAY THE FAMOUS DOCUMENT RECEIVED | copies the treaty covered with a black alligator portfolio, Dr, Maar THE SIGNATURES OF JAPANESE AND RUSSIAN ENVOYS [ions who ts feeling Indisposed NOW AWAITS ROYAL ENDORSEMENTS OF THE CZAR AND | fom the strain of the treaty draft ing, was the only one of the suite] THE MIKABO who did not go to the mavy yard.| He will attend the thankagiving| service at the church, however, | Bishop and Mrs. Potter arrived and iT ” will attend the church services, Th Japanese, except Sato, who went in a cab, entered automobiles on af — ter the Russians and speeded to ward the conference room As soon as the treaty was signed & messenger jumped from the win dow and waved his hand. Imm diately a salute of 19 guns was be gun by the battery stationed near by for the purpose. Amerioan, Russiqn and Japanese flags were run to jthe flagstaff of the building. Se retary Peirce at once communicated the news to the president by te Shake!" says General Linevitoh, To Oyarwa, wily Jap And now I don’t mind saying, You're a spumky little chap." Put ‘er there, old Liney'” Replied the small brown man, “Once more I'll rush the growler— But this time in a can.” phone, a special wire having been SEE EEE EE EE EE EH HH) Mowslons OF southern Saghalin prepared for the purpose President * * Kleven—Russia grants =f ve | Roo: it expressed his gratifica * PORTSMOUTH, N. H,, Sept. ®| rig *® 6-—The treaty was signed at *®) 7 ® 3:45 o'clock, ®) new commercta * ¥)| Thirteen—Both agree to - SPEER EEE REE ES * when onses for their! PORTSMOUTH Sept S.—The paid |peace commissioners and suites Fourteen—The treaty to be in| went to the navy yard in carriages. | a summary of the! Prench and English. The civilian members. wore frock} be signed by | coats and silk hate while the paval ye after and military attaches were in full] dress uniforms. }tion and requested Peirce to extend his hearty congratulations to each | of the envoys restore | ng hewn ngage to re PORTSMOUTH, N. Hi, Sept. 5} Following is peace treaty Article 1—Stipulates the re-eatab Nahment of friendship Tweo--Russta recognt ponderant influence of Korea. Three—It is agreed that Manchu- ria will be simultaneously evacuat ea by doth. Four—Rights accruing to Russia by thelr ieases at Port Arthur and! PORTSMOUTH, Sept. 5 Dainy pass entirely to Japan; rights | voys, suites and guests gathered at | of private persons remaining inteet. the navy yard this afternoon at Five—Both promise to put no ob-| about 2.30. The first business will! 8ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 5.—A stacles In the way of China's de- be the perussl, acceptance and stgn-| Sumber of liberal manufacturers | velopment of Manchuria | ing of the protocol of last Tuesday's | 8re planning & great reception for | Six—Manchuria raiiway to be op-| meeting. It is expected It will be M. Witte, showing thelr apprecia-| erated jointly at Kuang-Tcheng-|4 before the treaty is signed. Ko- tion of his efforts in making peace. | ‘Tee, Japan acquiring the mi con+| mura and staff go to Boston to- The avenue leading to the Troisky} nected with her branch. night and will visit Harvard to-| bridge and Witte’s house was 60) Beven—Contract to make junction) morrow. Takahira, Sato and minor named in honor of the envoy. A ‘of the two a Branch. Japanese go tomorrow to join K feature of the reception will be a ‘Wight—Roads shall work without! mura, and proceed to New York, call by the representatives of thou Fifteen—Treaty sh both sovereigns with ols Two other articles provide that 0 the envo: the pre-| Japan ts be completed) CHR TANIA, Sept. 5.—The In that the | ternational Law association, in see halves of/sion here, has led President arked | Roosevelt thanks for his efforta to | ward peace, particularly congratu- lating him upon the successful out ome of the Portsmouth conference. he evacua ah within 18 months and boundary between the Baghalin shail be definitely by the The en obstruction. | The Russians go to New York on a | sands of women, giving thanks for Nine—Russia ce. the southern | special train. the ending of the war, so that their half of Saghatin. The Russians went into automo-| husbands aud sons can come home| freedom of|biles to luncheon carrying. two! from the army. Ten—Provides for under the feet of the horses and one of the animals was standing on hin] when rescued by passengers from | the car. He was badly bruised and! hin face looked like a piece of beet- | ateak # SAVORS OF DAYS OF CAP (epertnenacnnmensomns * * * TAIN KIDD. * * * eee ee ee VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. 5 The schooner Carmencita. the Through the criminal! carelessness | inevitable, did not have the pree- pirate craft which has been and utter lack of presence of mind | ence of mind to release the cable | # raiding the seal islands under on the part of a gripman on th nd apply the brakes or even ring |} @ command of Alex McLean, of Madison street cable line a serious | the gong to warn the teameter @ the Sea Wolf, reached Clayo. accident was caused at 11:45 Toes- “When I saw that we were going | @ quot, west coast of Vancouver @ay mornin at the mouth of the | to strike the wagon and that at nerd hd island, on Sunday, with 279 alley between Sixth and Seventh | speed. I wouldn't have given one) ®@ skins. This was the port from mear the Providence hospital, in| cent for my life.” he said, when seen | which she sailed on her fa which three people were injured; a| in the ward at the Provitence hos-/@ mous voyage. After landing car badly damaged, a team of horses | pital. “Just before we hit, a worma®/® her hunters and transferring uiaimed and a wagon completely | sitting next to me on the long seat \* ber ek to the steamer Queen wrecked 7 of the car, made a move/w City for transshipment to In bound Madison car No. 50, in| as if » ed to jump, #0 I) w Victoria, it is alleged she wad charge of Conductor McCourt and | caught hold of the post in front watered and revictualed and Gripman Jarvison, was traveling} ber with my hand to prevent | # then stood to sea again for an along at the usual rate of speed| because tt would have meant In-/|# unknown destination past the old Central high school | stant death to have Jumped into the | & when Teamster G. N. Johnston | wreckage at that pint The Oy eee eee eee eee ee drove out wth a load of dirt fro warning that was given to the ad a at the er \* i* Pee eee eee eee eee eee a lot near Sixth and Madison and/|teamster was when the gripman WEATHER FORECAST. started to cross the car tracks. At)| shouted before the collision. the place where he drove out of the The gon was complet over-| Fair tonight and Wednesdey; to see the] light west wind: alley there is a steep grade down| turned and I expected bill towards the car line, and he) driver mashed und saw that it would be impossible to| wheels. The gripman did not stop) stop his wagon without leaving tho| the car until he had reached Fifth} horses standing on the track. Mean- ue. It is miraculous that I was] while the car had stopped at the killed, a nun of heavy corner, 80 Johnston started to drive s and beams were jammed Ir FROM CAR across the track, thinking he had | or sides of me.” an abundance of time, as the car| Towns Is a newspaper man from Was more than 50 yarda distant. It D., and in making « tour was impossible for him to have | of th try. His left leg turned down the left side on ac-| was badly skinned and It is thought westerr count of the narrowness of the| bis knee is fractured. Because of what ts te have street. | A woman, who gave her name 4%) been the carelessness ¢ ' | ‘According to the statement of/ Mrs. Thomas, was removed to the| man on a Capitol Hl Mrs s. tle General hospita George L. Towns, who was the fore- most passenger on the aide of the| was found that b left « nkle W8S | injured at Pike apd Second, at 8:30 car that was most badly damaged, | sprained 4 she was bruised and | yeor night the gripman started the car up at | was suffering from a nervous shock.| she started to alight from the the corner with unusual speed and, | She was sent home in a carriage. tet belere ahe renahed the. green when he saw that the accident was| Johnston, the driver, was thrown| tne mortorman started the con win a jerk. Mre. Bush ts a b woman and she was thrown to the pave- moned and the wom an taken to Mra. Bush is the wife an Bush, of Tacoma. was ir of Poll If Jacob Furth considers it pru- will fall t to openly renew bis fight for] Ho Ma . GsJusive franchises on Second and] City Engineer Thomson are {actors * Westlake, the ordinances will come|to be reckoned with. Both these|* SAN! ae, up before the council ‘. nesday night. | offictaly are known to be opposed to| * Sept. 5, 1905 ..... -$1,148,170.18 Mullen, Benjamin, Zbinden, Gill| the exclusive grants. It was Thom-|* | September 6, 1904, was Le , * * inger and ZePPeeseesevese BANK CLEARINGS Bre ready to vote for them. Rude] son who put the bug in Ballinger's \* bor day Wij] yote for the Second avenuel| car that resulted in the veto of the) Tritchine, but against the Weatlake| endiess chain franchise for :he Fort] **** *R&XA AAR He RH franchise on the ground that Sec-| Lawton line, by which the Seattle CHECK WAS BAD ond, unlike Westlake, is not a car company had hoped to gain yon route, the pfoposed regrade 0 step In Galuing a perpetual ‘bird and Fourth leaving a w fed agers J BF ! ne victim, af a} 4n on those thoroughfares i¢ wt Accomplish just as good |buncos man. Monday fight we Murphy and Bowen are fel {results in the present emergency shed a ok $80, whieh} opposed to them. Jokhston is said| He is known to consider the oxelu-| proved te be fiotitious, It was mad to be, too, but hé and Cole, Conwa franchises as being an outrage| out to John G. We d Burnett are straddling the fe inst the but has not pub-| John A. Watker Very awkwardly as yet, and it | tely expressed himself out of defer Witttam G@: Still difficult to tel) which way they | ence to the corporations committee, fraudulent, signed by | a a by! t. ‘Fhe signotuces ware | between City Engineer Thomeon smelled “ piractors’ combination at the meeting of the board of works Tuesday morning, and as @ result) the niragt for paving Columbla| streat between First and Second) Was nol awarded There were only five bids, and they were all so nearly alike that| they looked suspict The Seat tle Btone company, Sparger Con crete company, James Markey an the Barber Asphalt company made Vide #0 close to $4, that they might as well have been the same Bell & Price bid $4,698, which was the lowest Acting upon the suggestion of Water Superintendent Youngs, the board Also took Seattle's notor ly slow contractors to task fo uniform procrastination. Youngs sald he was tired of granting ex tensions of time for trifling ex cuses, and that he favored giving the contractors more time in the first place, and then holding them jto the contract Assistant Engineer Jeffrey wuld it would be @ plant to make the contractor# ask for their extension some time previous to the expirn ion of the pilotied time, so that the matter gould be adjusted before it war too late. When Mr. Beil, of Bell & Price made a whem for an extension of time on the Forty-seventh avenue water main, abecriing that neces sary repairs to the wooden pipe had delayed the work, Engineer Thomson took him off his feet “Why didn't you put {t together right In the first piace?” he d making wae Of sone of the point ers he had gained = abro In London I saw a wooden pipe that had been Ial@ in 1513, and was not removed until 1899. It was efill in pretty goed condition Bell almont fainted HER ALASKA’S WOMAN MINER Lena Walton, the hustling woman miner of Alaska, is in town again. busily hurrying back and forth from Tacoma, She says she has @ big deal on hand and that she cati not stop to draw a long breath until she gets through 1 am going to swing things into shape to build a big smelter over Tacoma and Steilaceo! said Miss Walton last night 1 need a smelter in my business There are several of us up nerth who have tin holdings and other properties which need a good big ameliter in connection with th a in order to get the best run for the Raprewonting Philadelphia enpi talists, James D. Hoge, af this city Sand John §. Bukar, of Tacema, have filed at Glympim artiches of in thon for & enw (dlephone em W. J. Herwig, Spokane, a] 9 eye : placed in charge of the Spokane] whe . | work of the Washington Anti-| scene of the murder of Phillip Ros Saloon league in the northeaster and his wife, who were, it Is thought, : : ‘ 1 before their bodies were burn. nstruction of attle It is gaid that the ec a long, che oe line between § [amd Kortland f ntemplated, and thet toe mee capital have in view the ¢ truetion of a trolley ve tw b » cities Mr, Hoge was asked to make a | SUMMER HARVEST 1] business A BHORT STORY FROM THE BEST WRITERS OF FICTION WILL e., The Only Paper in Seattle t a r That Dares to Print the News VOL. 7. NO. 164 Seattle Has Beaten "Em all in Growth [SS THE STAR HAS COMPILED | Ot tte! "IGURES GBHOWING THE REMARK- ABLE INCREASE I POPULATION OF THE CITY, AS * \* * com- pe eee Se are a: PARED WITH 18 O| \ER IMPORTANT CITIES IN VARIOUS & Becaune he continually prayed # PARTS OF THE COUNTRY—SPOKANE AND TACOMA CLOSE fw and ate + aurage, William w} # Heder, » German, 31, wes ar- &; BEHIND *® rested on harge of Insanity, #/ —— = *# and committed Tuesday morn- ®# on - * ine the: insane asylum at @| “?* oo % Btellaccors * Beattle o* + 165,000 & Heder suffered under the de- ® | portinnd ‘ ses.ate # luston, also, that it wa t Olen ee » ee & necessary f m to work any # | scokane as + ® longer the would #| Chicas : oe & be pre by divine ® stinnenpol : ayy *® benef I be taken ® | Goins eed * to Btell Wednesday & 0 ing * * * ee ee ed + 823. w +o S184 uo 43,289 16 180,000 2 470,000 mM 42,406 “4 ‘The Star has secured the latest servative and give no cha for estimates of the population of Be-, other cities of the stete to yell “pad- attle and 18 other leading cities of | Ging. The Star accepts the eati- mate made by the publishers of the directory for Seattle within its pre- ane oa in the | scribed city Iimits. ‘This estimate ie A most remarkable showing 1e| 166,000. Therefore the percentage of, by Seattle, more remarkable|inerease in the last five years is that of any other city in Amer- | 106, tea In all other t as remarkable is the ber of names in the city directories de by the two other! ts simply multiplied by 2% and the of this state, Spokane! increase obtained by comparing with | the federal census of 1900. ting the present popula The next best showing is made by tion, The Btar has used the multiple Spokane, an increase of an even 100 2% in all Instances except in Seattle, | per cent and were this multiple used, the! Tacoma come population of Greater Seattle would | crease of 98 per cent have shown a much more marvelous! other important ¢ growth in the past five years than| west, showed an increase of a scant it does. 23 per cent, falling away behind The population of Seattle, accord-| many of the already densely popu- ing to the censug of 1900, was 80,671, | lated cities of the east and middie while the number of names in the| west city directory this year is 75,623.| Chicago's growth is noteworthy, That of course includes Seattle's! also. It gained $8 per cent. the United States, based on the number of ¥ ances, the nume third with an ine Portiand, the of the nerth- urbs, but other cities include! » other section of the United them in estimated population. So) States, as is plain from these fig- that the population of Greater Se-| ures can boast of such splendid attle on this basis would be 189,107.| growth as the cities of our own show ‘ashing to _ | AFTER RECALL ACT The circulation of a petition to; 25 per cent of the number of voters casting their ballots for an official the council asking for the submis-| a+ the previous election being pre- sion to the voters at the municipal| sented to the council, that body election in March of an amendment | must give the people a chance to providing for the recall of coum-| vote for a successor. The official milmen and other officials bas be-| whose removal is sought must also gun be a candidate, and if a new candi- W. B er and other wel known citizens, and members of the Civic union, are behind the move-| office ment. The copies of the petition! Corporation Counsel Calhoun has have only been in cireulation for} notified City Comptroller Riplinger two days, but 200 signatures, chiefly| that the proposed amendment is among the university fraternity, | legal bave already been procure Many If 15 per cept of the voters at business men have offered their| the last election sign the present tion in the work of | petitic the couneil will be com- to submit the proposed t to the voters next date receives more votes than he, he shall be deemed removed from amendment pro Girl Wife of Christopher m going to build the nd has already been Receives a One Year Sen‘ence money, and I jamelter, Tt jdonated by Henry Hewitt, jr. and | have formed a company with a cap ital of $100,000 pledged for the en Guilty!” moments the girl-wife was allowed Jterprise. We are going to get the} With this one word, spok lt stand at the foot of the uncon- jer way just as soon as|iow and trembling voice, Levisa| scious jail-breaker’s bed she cheers and things will liven up|Christopher, alias Chesterfi fully gave up a year of her t acoom way when we| Tuesday afternoon before Ju liberty, which is to be served out jRet going full speed. I've been hus |tling like a house afire for six inched her pecul je with Sheriff Lou at Walla Walla behind prison walls, Smith! She was sentenced to one year in Jmonthe to get my northern prop-| several weeks ago. | the penitentiary in shape to go on with de At that time sh reed to con Mrs. Chesterfield wept bitterly ment, and now I see daylight |fess that she had carried to her| when she was sentenced big smelter is one of| husband's cell the dynamite with I thought that all I would get my pét schemes, and now that I| which he blew out the ceiling of his| would be a month or two,” she Jhave the money all ribed I] cell if allowed to see her criminal | said jam sure of getting it through. We'll] husband for only a moment while| The sheriff's office has not noti- ibe able of men put a good large force}he lay in a dying condition at the| fied Chesterfie work, and the smelter] Wayside Emergency hospital. The ven up things a bit|bargain was mad f Alaska of his wife's sen- He is a dangerous man, even t_weak conditiot on the re Jor undo ef valve inthe borthern TO FIGH? RYE INQUEST the controllin interest In the rich es ¢ | Sea Level mine at Ketchikan IN SPOKANE Deputy Coroner Wiltsie and Sher- ff Lou th leave at 4 o'clock on n fs Kerrystown, st will held at the has b part of the state, Superintendent om announced the appoint: | Herwig has been 4 with the saloon over which they Cherri lived ment Tuesday, Mr me of the active workers in the eague for more than a year | e Louse,” suspicion of of the murderers, is still He refuses sted ¢ ystematizing the work, A man ander the direction of the tatement regarding the ma uperintendent will be placed in] CHICAGO, Ser Tuesday morning, but declined to] charge of each section, Rev. J. W.] pack reveal the plans of the company xt | Frescoln, of Be am, has been | in the present time. He denied the appointed to take charge in that} r affatr The indicted and offictals of the pack« rvanies appeared by attor- fore Judge Humphrey, of the working port that the company was organ. | vicinity and appointments wil i surt this morning and ask- ized to fight the Sunset Teley made at Tacoma 1 W nee were given company Walla, | r er 18 FOUND ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR EVERY DAY,

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