The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1905, Page 1

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A TIP-TOP STORY ABOUT WICKED NEW YORK WILL SOON BE READY FOR STAR READERS The Pioneer One Cent Paper 6f the Northwest “NIGHT EDITION. a Disastrous Double Wreck On Southern Pacific Road ONE KILLED AND 50 INJURED IN © NEVADA—TWO FREIGHTS born street, Clleago; Mrs, ‘T. Maw ton, Tauleburg, No J.) Mra, ‘Thoman COLLIDE AND TWO PASSENGER TRAINS FOLLOW QUICKLY | anuinil, math, Mes HM. C. Brawn Chicago; b. A. Griffin, Lom Angeles: IN COLLISION head injured; R. L. Hider, Tahama. Bakerafield, Cal. shoulder Myrtle @ult of a double wreck on the So m Reno] fyrne, Haywards, Cal, head and Mm Pacific at Harney, Nev of the shoulde Mrs, William Berry, Los clock last night, one ix de it | Angeies, head; Mere. Marry Buller Thomas Mason, of Taulsburg, N in the wreck} J. K. Bang, 815 Harrison street, Oak ¥.. died at Reno, where he was u | 1, shoulder and head; W.C, Beal taken following the wre | tockton, Cal, head; A. Matt The fi wreck was t erm City, Cal: Wy A. Price Mt full speed 1 Pisemen stopped the second » Senith Hon of the westbound pa. 2 ®, Ban time avoid wreck, but had not Jen » stop the third # 1, Los Passenger, which crashed fu fate the coaches of the secc fon. completely demolishing fare and an engine. Engineer Ross and Pireman Lin Ville, of the third section, were bad Dentist Charged With Tapping Gas Pipe . A peculiar complaint was filed, is With the prosecuting attorney Wed-| tween September 9 and September Resday when Danie! Barnes asserted | 13 that M. A. Winningham, a dentist in the Eitel building, had tapped bis gas supply before it entered a meter Imstalled by the Seattle Lighting company A system of espionage resulted in She issuance of warrant for Win- Bingham's arrest. He is charged With petty larceny. The “tapping DIVEKEEPER’S VICTIM alleged to have occurred be Doctor Winningham stated post tively that the charge was utterly without foundation, “A man came and put the meter in a few and part did not ahead of the meter. You that I will fight the case, an #0) EVA BOND KELLY—17-YEAR-OLD WITNESS AGAINST JOE MAR- CELLE, WON'T SKIP AGAIN days ago and part of the gas registered | I wish to deny | the statement that I tapped the pipe |p. yi }tion on Againat AUTOISTS UP the part of the shippers Alaskan ports was tabled pobile owners will have to Prevail upon the city council to pass an amendment to the present gasoline ordinance if they desire to | longer able to run their car riages Fire Marshal Kellogg Wednesday issued an ultimatum that at the ex piration of 60 days he would not al low autos to be stored in wooden buildings, This means that the autos cannot be used. The fire marshal does not desire work a hardship on the chauf rs, but he considers it his duty [to enforce the present ordinance. which prohibits the storage of quantities of gasoline In excess of jone gation in any wooden buildings It applies, therefore, to all gasoline automobiles, which carry 10 and 12 gallons o: ‘he fuel. Mr, Kellogg bai cement of the ordi meantime. WALKED INTO AGAINST IT ir A EVERETT TRUE HAS MADE A 8'G HET WITH OUR READERS. sass HE WILL FURNISH SOME ENTERTAIMING STUNTS IN THE NEAR FUTURE The Seattle Star WASHINGTON, WEDNESDAY, SE EMBER 20, 1905 YOU WERE READY FOR THE JOB | AND, WERE TOLD TO TAKE A NICK, LONG VACATION | LET ‘ER Go ” AND FRIE CHUMMY WITH OLD iD8 FAR AWAY PRESIDENTS ND THE ANOTHER FELLOW GOT PRESIDENTIAL ITCH AND LAUNCH FINE STYL D HI8 BOOM IN | AND YOU GOT BACK TO BE RUN OVER MACHINE. IN Graft Ran Riot In | | | John A. McCall of the New York} attend: | PRESIDENT M’CALL, ON THE WIth postponed enfc nance for 60 days with the under standing that the auto drivers get | y busy with the councilmen in the| N. Y. Life Company STAND RELUCTANTLY a chance to get corporation money Witness said that during the cam GIVES A HINT OR TWO OF QUESTIONABLE HANDLING OF Pa he was frequently impor- tuned by Parker managers for con pis tributions, which became an annoy- a ance He said many who were buay lately denouncing the com SW YORK, Sept. 20. —President; the com y. He anid that Hamilton | pany contributing to polities were to legislation in various |those who sought contributions in SPECIAL FEATURES OF INTEREST TO ITS FEMININE READERS ARE TO BE FOUND IN EVERY ISSUE OF THIS NEWSPAPER. The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News VOL, 7. NO. -ENTS PER MONTH 177 WIFE'S SISTER HAD TOO MANY GALLERS 80 SAYS C. FOR DIVORCE ED AND EXTRAVAGANT The household of C. A the well known restau r Worne stili—the tresning stor of the rending in being aired in th Jivorce courts Home days ago Mra. Anna Bensor filed #uit for dive: King var un acts of cruelty, inadequate pir behavior on the part of her b band, C. A, Ber h | Benson from di “of @ restau nt which she ih bou from drawing funds m the bank herein whe alleged he had therr Wear ne CAF | did o itt and ir « ny t and ar ired hin ¢ ’ int. He mid that his r his | tite nin cetving y ing them u He alte nd ho lowed his wife that she rent unehold exp $6 a week pin-m wae extravagant and un ney | A. BENGON IN ANSWER TO MRS. BENSON'S PLEA CHARGES WIFE WITH BEING COLD-HEART- | re mab and n hing but Ine duatric th ly told him hated all rm would yet upbraided him because he would | not take her driving and stay away from his work; that before he had married her she was working in a and that had kept her in a manner far more luxurious t he had 1 before her mr ge, but that Instead of grow fie he had only r k of apr tion. I , egation that he had 1 some of the furniture that had belonged to her before #he had married hin neon raid that b mitted did have plano, a Japanese center table and r jock—all worth not to ex. i ents, and that he had taken one of the two canary birds that they that the court divide their cut-h nd silver wedding enents between them and that, if ix to support her, she be required , p the house in which he nays whe and her family are Iving, nd take less expensive lodgings. He *weare he hae no property left, | through her extravagance, and that her injunction was unr | he had nothing to sell ecesmary, as Merry Fight Over ——— Telephone Franchise As a result of the merry fight now in progress in Columbia over th granting of a telephone franchise, application has been made to the superior court for a writ of manda- mus to compel the mayor of the sub- urb to sign the ordinance. Although the ordinance bas been passed by a majority of the council by a vote of 3 to 2, Mayor W. W. Phalen refuses to sign it. His main contention is that the term of the franchise should be no more than 30 years, whereas a term of 50 years is Rainier valley, connecting with the Independent Telephone company’s system. They claim that this com- pany is not bebind their application, however. The Sunset Telephone company already bas a system at Columbia. Back of Mayor Phalen’s refusal to sign the franchise is a personal | dispute between him and Mr. Ni- |chols, according to friends of the | applicants. | In the election at Columbia city | last fall there arose a dispute as to j lite testified this morning that bis) states and that the company had no | the last campaign. j control of the company’s money wag) vouchers to show what he did with! MeCall sald he was not a million- —— He admitted making ad-|the money. Hughes asked if any|aire. He declared if he dies his vances of $100,000 once and $75,000| money given Hamilton had gone to! estate would consist mainly of life Wheo James Martin alighted from | !ater to Andrew Hamilton on real| influence legislation and MeCal!|tnsurance. He paid $25,000 annual asked. The Citizens’ Telephone company is the name of the new concern, which is not yet incorporated. The) whether D. W. Brown or F. C. Thompson had been elected to the council. The man whom the mayor wanted to see elected received three § * Eva Bond-Kelly, the 17-year-old) When taken before Judge Griffin t complaining witness against Joe| Wednomday morning the girl seemed Marcetie, the notorious dive-keeper,| very penitent, but the court sald who is to be tried soon, will not/that to make sure of having the} pplicants fe © F again be permitted to get out of the| wayward witness at the trial hela passenger train at the Union de. | estate transactions. He could not} hastily enawered: “Not at all,” He! ly to his company in premiums and Rie D. Bae manne A alan a gd oni yyy mag bs 4 country. would make the bond so heavy ne} pot at & o'clock Wednesday morn- | ¢*plain why Hamilton's balance in| spoke with all solemnity, and on | added that he never participated in and Van R. Pierson. It is said that feated man and succeeded in having She was Wednesday morning put | that she would be compelled to stay/ing he walked Into the arms of ye bank was only $176. He sald|oath declared that Hamilton had/1 cent of any syndicate or sold se- local capital is backing them in the| him placed in office by proving that under $10,000 bonds to appear in the| in custody, and fixed the amount at he did not know what Hai | ion did| never spoken to him about with the money. He also admitted! ments to jegisiators. Bes other advances, McCall got excited) MeCall sald that Hamilton was) CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Policy hold- and said the money was safe as hel employed to attend to the real e#-| ore of the Western Life Indemnity was responstble if Hamilton couldn't/ tate department tn various parts of |company held a stormy meeting to ~ —_— refund it. He said he thanked God) the country and that his salary was| day and demanded that the officers | he contributed to the campaign fund | $10,000 a year, and $100,000 yearly|tell all the details of the proposed McCall raid that the Hamilton] MeCall stated that Alton B. Par-|to other companies, They were told D yunts were never audited since | ker, when chairman of the demo-|they would be told when the time | the beginning of bis connection with! cratic state committee, never missed | comes. Patrolman ace curities to the company. fo charge has been placed against Martin yet. He is a Martin took bis arrest coolly and ed to discuss his trov pay- some votes cast for him which had been thrown out were legal. BIG CROWD BIDS — “DAKOTA” GODSPEED enterprise. They plan to construct lines throughout Columbia and the case, and is now under strict watch | $10,000. Im the hands of the police matron. Detectives Hubbard and Freeman eq William Kelly, the young man for| went to Victoria and induced the whom the girl jumped her §200 bond | gir! and her new husband to return, and fled to Vancouver, B. C., to be-)as they could not have compelled come his bride, is under arrest on| them to come back while on British charge of removing a witness from/soil. The girl is also charged with the jurisdiction of the court. _ PATRONS OF THE PIKE” |... contempt of court. telegram was received ARE FINALLY AVENGED <2 It Will Be a Good Thing j | diplomat would be out by the latter part of this week. The w At 11 o'clock Wednesday morning, ter attending the meetin, of the was not definitely de what route Ko said that it leided as yet over midst great cheering and waving of American Board of Commissioners e rons of the now defunct (few months ago. perpetrated the | sions, held in this The pat f th det f h it p a ther. id to J H handke fs to departing friends inl _ Hungarian organization upon the| ™4r8 would go to Japan over, He re e K frienes | city recently. Five insular employes ik hose big electric si will start from Washington some and relatives, the Great Northern P “Pike” cafe, whose big electric sign} pupitc. The management imported ' i wie ‘ 4 Steamship company’s big liner, Da-| 0" thelr way to Manila were also f -Seintiliaten no more by night over|the bunch, under contract, from Chi-| time during the latter part of nex kota one of the luraeat freight boata| ®MOns the passengers. 7 the Bite! bufiding, corner Second) cago, advancing $395.50 for railroad| *°* f are « mats | - o- shine and Pike, ARE AVENGED. fare and incidental expenses, $150 ~ seas ae jin existence, slipped her cables at 2 a | p THE NEW RAILROAD ALONG THE NORTH BANK OF THE CO- = : the Great Northern docks at Smiths They are avenged upon the cruel|of which It was up to the flute-tor C | | St d . ‘ove and backed slowby out on her Hungarian orchestra, which was|turers, viol-grinders and catgut-ex-| WOION@ ands LUMBIA RIVER WILL BE OF GREAT BENEFIT TO SEATTLE ¥ » to the Orie f = Wont to do such excruciating things |cruciators to pay back imm: nee Serene oon jo such excruct eruciators to pay bac ediate " whe bur is tad an A XQ eran is ae Woe coment] By Soldiers, *¥2 wis A.s0 neve THe eAsTaRn pant oF THE STATE BL ig For the rvd-trousered, biue-coated,| the rate uf $10 per week. The ag MATERIALLY Eugene Deatherage, a traveling | relatives and sightseers, and until 70 BLAME tri-color-capped aggregation of noise | gregation had paid back almost the | salesmar ax standing on the | sh fore 11 o'clock the crowds makers, who used to commit such{entire debt at the time the cafe] MONTERKY, Cal., Sept. 20.—Col.| onhbinngs rear of « Northern coach on | were allowed to go aboard and roam | crimes in the name of music while) went bankrupt—but it had very lit-l| ward, of the Fifteenth infantry Monday e thrown over- will. One of the officers | _-—_ frequenters of the place took stimu-| tle left. enters an official protest against the| The construction of the proposed) of reeky The most difficult plece| poard and tr the foot of | estimated that In all there was at] “oroner W lants and feebly drew them through| Now it is on its uppers brutal beating fore in fail by | | of warlewill be at Cape Horn, wher etre n crush of| least 2.500 people on board the big| iment scone er tha tae: enter view Mraws afier each outburst—wili| And those who once dined and|Constables Hinkland and ¢ i the autawill be extremely passengers who were trying to|ship during the morning. Pepe Remy d hiomgege Gobo probably HAVE TO WALK BACK| lemonaded at “The Pike” are chuck nds the tm be In many ways the road will not! alight. His cries for help were heard | 7 1 asenet Moore Holt Jonmson, 12, was hilles P ements ‘ ik r x very cabin passenger ¢ by falling down an elevator shaft, HOME. i] Hite ultant chuckles ° r str , meet the-eame difficulties as h » ' . . te! e Fi ing x nF an k nken officials The trial will difficult. pie of : by « trainman and he was promptly | accommodation was taken lo stated on Tuesday afternoon that no When “The Pike” opened up a] They are AVENGED! be held Tuesday | ntemplated tale riage & Navig ation com: | rescued |fore sailing time. Besides the cab-|} nest, would ba. bead, 1 Olas te : on template pang, Which occupies the south | tn peanenanen the t carried a big | "2" ‘oul held, ef A small blaze that promised the Weat at th nt time. While | bank beenuse there is the absence 6 F hi pnd. parent that the boy merely lost his vce than 900 & steerage lst. Abe 2,000 tons Of| barence and fe “i deatroy ihe, stock, of the f ee cend Witt an 909 8 of underground gt clers, which ar as Franchise |eoneral merchandise, consigned to] bance and fell into the shaft, Shoe company a 20 o'clock ¥V ne e of constru a comstent menace to the road b ~ Abs . Chinas "Sian nesday was promptly nipped in the | tion I» prohibitive to any ott ” Bab the cofetruction of this re Not Considered 222. ete bud by the fire department. The | Pony except a great tran iment) will plage the Hill forces in a post- | hold. eck ot Hig Fos of Anee cause was crossed wires and the} al road. le yap compete with Harri ory 7 ro never ise: 1 y con ¥ an mereh {including large Jack Campbell, 20, charged with | of the Columbia River & et be | ingt@ny dn a section that Is now al-/gineer Thomson from the city, the! tion material, locomotives and cars — . as Take 6 ete on Hien | a oti ch ulwibat wcia want? yy gas franchise was not taken up by | 25,000 Lales of cotton domestics and | and stolen some knives, which he| drilled through an almost solid wall (Continued on Page Seven.) the corporations committee Wednes- | 2,500 tons of flour Japan were | YOUTHFUL THUG The bar association members who] heard from, expressing ve fer-| afterwards sold in a second-hand | . - e|day afternoon, the committe not| represented in the kota’s cargo. | are booming the proposed issuance] ent sentiments. They opp the] store, is on trial before Judge Grif a * " Iready | Meeting. | Among the passengers was How-| aaa court house, ran into a hornet’s nest| such measures were needed at pre PORTLAND, Ore. Sept. 20.—Ma — . a eee t to take up the mat era! manager of the Great North-| The 10-year-old son of Mra. L J. Bt the chamber of commerce meet-jsent, and that the school district! io. Rn Biggs and Van Gessner, co F. Meee eee Gatells ana {ia the city, as he io awattl: ern Steamship company, and his| Ne of 161 Valley, ts either very ing Wednesday afternoon, where the) would probably get the worst of the| [\an It. Mises and) in Tener on ck ge Mert? whe pos. (receipt of information regarding gas|famtly, Mr, James goes to tho| clever in the art of fabrication, or Matter was specially brought up|deal, as the court house was not) fea in the land frand trial. this | ae eet tied oe berty she poe | plants from Dresden and other Eu-|Orlent to look over his company's| be was the victim of a young high- and heatedly discussed jdeemed fitted for a schoo! building.| morning, denying the alleged con sonenet She filed an answer ying | Fo nan cities J interests there. | wayman, who beat and robbed him The question of selling the olt/ It might be, they sald, used later OW) giiracy. C. M. Baldwin testified to| Dell Renton, hs, 1S: Magy y eee! Cem reeicely nee x" | ‘Thomson may also recommend] Seven of the sight Japanese peace | of his el on Union, just in front court house to the schol ristrict for) as a manual training school the good character of the defend-| brought suit against Joseph John had little property “— ing A #e ebanges in the franchive for a spur| envoys who arrived in attle Mon-| of the Pub library, on Monday & school building, and of isauing| Architect ne was heard from] ants son for $5,000 alleged damages | 18 | on, te neh tne nad | track for which the Great Northern | day, were also passengers on the| evening. ‘The boy appeared at his bends to put up a new court house! in a neat little speech in which he| through breach of promise, was tats Taller noswny that Miss Reados (nae appited. on their way home, The|home with his clothing torn and on the Yesler triangle was intro-|eald that before the city should tie} WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Chair-| raigned on charge of perjury Wed a Bhgire ta be gpd ft vr. Mr. Ishiujf, leaves! bruises indicating a struggle; he duced by Joseph Shippen, represen-| itself up with a lot of as yet un-\|man Shonts and other members of|nesday morning and put under ap ae Stil soak ent ie PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 20.An| Wednesday night for Portland en| Was minus his wheel tative of the King County Fair asso-| needed school bonds, it should look |the canal commission, atcompanted | $1,000 bonds el gel . . hibition of the California women’s | route to Chicago, where he ts to be| He was able to give the police a ciation to the insuance of bonds for the pur pe board of consulting engin-| In her complaint Belle Readon, | drill corps. conferring grand decora- | the secretary te nsul escription of his assailant, who Several members of the bar aseo- | of park lands and public tm- eers! will sail September 28 in ac-| charged that Johnson had prom WEsTHER FORECAST. tion of chivalry tive team | there. Was several years older than him- ¢lation spoke in warm endorsement | prove: F ay the value of{cordance with the president's in-|ised to marry her and wronged her work was the sday of the] Among the passengers were 17 @f the proposition, but presently the} ng every minute structions to hold a quarterly meet-' at the Rochester hotel, Pike atre Showers tonight; cooler; Thurs- ‘thirty-first annual convention of| missionaries on thelr way to. th Jan reported the incident Gham ver of commerce members were The subject of alleged diserimina- ing on the canal site. and that shortly afterward she had day fa light west winds. Sovereign Grand Lodge |. O, O. F, respective stations In the Orient Tuesday morning. Pe 6 Oe

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