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NIGHT EDITION ee The Pioneer One Cent Paper of the Northwest you Witt FIND WHAT YOU WANT To KNOW TERSELY TOLD EVERY DAY IN THE BTAR ASSYRIAN KILLS Daughter NO NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE IN THE BIG CITIES OF THE CO The Seattle Star CATTLE, WASHINGTON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1905 Kidnaped His Had Rough Time ERIB, Pa, Oct Yury Schwartz, divorced from] p. Johnson and a ¢ his wife, secured possesion of bis | of the life saving ste in er little 4-year-old daughter Mabel on | (o signals of distress during : Saturday, under the pretext that he | )iple gale, late last night " inte } taking her to a mat! | steamer in the offing, put ¢ aid disappeared with b The |testh of the storm and he t re Mother of the little one t# prostrat-| turned up to noon today, They have 3 ed with grief at her home, 924 Thir %t reported anywhere on thi ty-firat .. No trace of the fugitive an o signs of a ship are : has as yet. been found. Mr ble gnals were heard unti}| E Sibwerts baye sbe will fight. for | srtor canight when they died away 4 her child in the courts and prose | aiiogether | P cute the father on the charge of kid-|""irhe tug picked up the life save paplog PP pet Phyo ments {and both escape by boat ‘ had ton Gk dante es: From statements made by friends! There is strong talk of lynching trouble. JOE P, FAYWAD, AN ASSYRIAN PEDDLER, IN A JEALOUS RAGE [of tho murdered woman, the police/ Piatt If he is caught among the ITEMS COST - suspect the existence of a deadly moms 8 of the ‘ py rian gettiomens ' SHOT LOTTIE NICHOLES, A WIDOW, WHO REFUS' oud, although Flatt apparently re-|and the cowardly murder in ¢ 7 t E t ! Th tne dine MEPUOED TO Mortals to murder, beraune his nt) blood te denounced by them ‘Extra! Extra! The ston ? 4 derer up Virginia to Battery and to |Hansons Move Again The police are watching the de-jan Assyrian store on First between Joe John Fayaad, an Assyrian} tim's husband died from the effects! pots and all boats to prevent Fiatt's/ Pike and Virginia, The detective : idler, shot and instantly kille of tuberculosis at Los Angeles.| escape, but it is belleved that tht/ arrived at t store very woon after @v Becrippe News Ase’n.d The Hanson family has moved ttie Nicholes, a widow, in the! Since that time the dead woman has| murderer has taken refuge in the) the murde had left ‘ ” smery Mc. |“oul® kitchen of her home, at been known by her maiden name. | woods and underbrush north of the} Armed with search warrants airman, Pomme, Oct, 86 — ~1 Bena And, as usual, the Hanson Bighth, shortly after Her mother, a peddler Black | city Adams went through three houses, | Lute. Ris pel ib we A ety 29 n the process by a Tuceday morning. Jealousy Diamond, has been notified, and| He has a father living in Port) but could not find the man. It te} toh Saltanting pomnn Pn sheriffs the cause, and the murder was; the remains will be held at th Townsend, and it ie thought that) b leved that friends ar hiding | ay He sa hi salary was $ 4 time by t of the y premeditated as| morgue pending funeral arrange-/ he may attempt to join him there/ Fayaad Ee eioad the tattures of tana ana the pe were, * + 1 fter assuring — himsel! Byte be og Hoa | Off the premines a South q the lla was ‘conke Bh oovorsrh % = tt osyeo Shy a ry new Thi about the seventh move walked out the back door and made / “ates bbe © after. | mad the Hansons under th his escape. Police headquarters re THE REAL THIN. é —- pac ween pervision of the she riffs office ceived. notification by phone, and eClintock explained at length | “et f moving the Hanac City Detectives Adams and Cor- thi dividend system. A committee- | Come to be regularly looked for bett were sent to hunt for the mur ial eskea hie | the jot depn ~ whe rene derer. Clitocks oe cel each ng to Chie The murderer roomed with Joha} Z cing stay | a dk Micheles, a friend of the dead dividends dropped icaieat,. an Woman, and Micheles is the only J conviction a one who can positively identify 4 per cent, w . idently figered nt the Fayaad, as he saw him leave the rear hone Mectlintock | comparative expense of moving an door shortly after he heard the adiiaed: “The jew: would nat [ot paring rent They can alway ‘woman's dying seream and the two mle 1." | Set he am atene » e sheriffs shots fired by the assassin. as. om office in moving free of charge, and | Peter Schwerdt, a shoemaker, was} dition Boston “ it doesn't cont mc bh On the her eating breakfast at the time, and EEE ut ce 6 bawontoer hand, paying rent is expensive saw the murderer pocket the smok . . | So the Hansons move ing revolver and walk aw Sibeteeeripn) “work being to |} The last time the Hanson’s moved Piekwerdt stated shortly after semainate “news” and combat the! iney were set out in the street near Y ev Infuence of the Inquiry, He! Vogler and Eighth. They, arranged murder that he could not the man. Sunday the woman and her a» gassin quarreled. That he was jeal ous is evinced by his actions on that day, as he became so obnoxious that she drove him out of the house ‘Bnd told him never to come back ‘The dead woman was engaged in Baking bread at the time, and sat *@2 @ low stool near the back door facing a smal! stove. Fayuad entered identity Volver an¢ fired two shots poin' at his victim from bebind | The wounds were mortal, as tho ‘Woman expired simost immediately B. Kodey, living upstairs, jemp- from his bed at the notse and in time to hear her dying “Joe, Joo,” were the only spoken. The body was re- to the Bonney-Watzon after the case had been in by Deputy. Coroner Ar t is believed that Fayaad boarded Lake car, and City Detect- Adams is working on a clew may land the murderer before the six months ago vie ‘The father or son? Who will be the victim of is vow to kill on sight will face a charge of mu ‘This is the question that Patrolman Cameron pedice department ron. 20, son of the po after having sworn to js own father on sight, was ted on Monday night inthe re district by Detective Phil , but effected a sensatiofial es. ) eape by leaping from the patrol = over the sleuth’s head and ig down a str outdistane the detective and several offi the and jer? con the of Philbrick succeeded im the desperate young man in ny © Gm the wagon. Arriving at police| aly #uceed in making way with bis jiarters, the detective alighted | father. ‘Gnd without warning drew his re-| | | | e SERRE Ree “Tl kill my father on sight!” “It's a case of one of us going!!’ J tfc eee eee eee eee ee eee ee pected. He leaped over the detec tive head od ran swiftly down); | Yesler way sappearing in an al-| ey } Some. time. age Cameron and bis | | | ‘ORTS TO F! INE STREET CAR HC IN SRAT ND A CHIVALROUS MAN, THE STAR SUCCEE eald be had received $4,000 from the Mutuad for Benken said semipated thr by eds fort) hin wervices the “news” was dis ch a news bureau line. The total cost of publication of an item some thas reached $5.0 © $4,000. He said this sort of news wan sent to 100 papers Financier of ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 24.--It le definitely announced that M. Witte 1D IN DIS- TLE jmen that continually loaf aroun the office in the hope of getting « job. The fashionable women who employ the girls do not hesitate to Jenter in order to make their wants LEO CAMERON PATROLMAN CAMERON. known, but not so with the servant , sirls.” And Mr. Grout is wondering what | he will do. first and ordered the prisoner to follow him. Young Cameron did, | but in a manner different t DEADLY RIOTS! gon engaged in a fight In front of a drug store on Second and Pike At tha’ the boy swore to kill} his father at the first opportunity The oficer requested that the boy be apprehended, and the arrest on Monday night in the restricted dis-| BUENOS AYRES, Oct. 24—A dis trict followed } patch says that 60 were killed and Young Cameron recently returned | 600 wounded in the recent rioting to Seattle on the steamer Santa|at Santiago, Chill, The disturb: | Ana, on which he was pantry boy. | ances continu all day yesterday night. A detach finally arrived and There were and far into the ment of troops had @ quieting effect many arrests. He has a bad record and the lo cal officers fear that he will eventu- Rather than cross Yesler way. Whe former “deadline,” and r with the men who congre- in front of the public employ- office, Seattle working girls re daily throwing aside scores of tunities to obtain employment. a ator Commissioner Grout re that since the employment ot- was removed to its temporary ers in the basement of the id Union hotel, southeast cor- Ber Yeoler and Fourth, applications for employment from women have fallen off considerably “They do not like to come down here,” he said Tuesday morning. “When the employment office was Girls Refuse to Vi it The New Gity Employment Office FIREIN HOTEL The Western hotel, 106 Washing ton, narrowly escaped destruction by fire on Tuesday afternoon when an alcohol lamp in Room 9, oceu- pied by Miss EB. M. Hill, was over- turned, setting fire to the carpet and other furnishing in the apart removed to its present location no one anticipated the peculiar psy- chological effect {t would have on Seattle's servant girls. The loc ~ ‘, tion was a poor one from a busi-| ment The fire department soon ness standpoint, and the council) 24° the Hames under contro! should have appropriated sufficient | "0m Was gutted. funds to rent more convenient rooms, but it was taken for grant- ed that any man or woman wanting a job would not hesitate to apply at a location less than half a block from the former site on Fourth and/ Yesler. is more expensive than the quality “There are separate entrances for | formerly used, it is advantageous to the men and women at the new) horses by reason of its edges being office, and it Is not even necessary | beveled, allowing them to secure a for the latter to pass the group & grip when hauling heavy loads. The board of public works, at its | meeting on Tuesday morning, is homson to specify that mulled brick be used in the future on all street pavements, While the brick Sensational Escape of Boy Who Swears to Kill Father will be appointed as minister of finance and General Durnovo as minister of the interior, in the pro posed new cabinet JAIL-BREAK SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., Oct. 24 —Harry Ward, serving six months for jall breaking; John Freech, six months for beating a board bill; Ed Walker, 100 days for larceny; Wee- ley Stewart, 20 days for carrying concenied weapons, sawed their way out of the county jail early this morning and escaped. They secured & saw left by workmen. Fifty oth et prisoners refused to escape. Old Time Rivals ew Cabinet To Meet Again instructions to City Hngineer | FEERERAPRERD EO ES : GROUND TO PIECES. #| SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct. 24 \& . PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 24.— #| Charlie Pollock, of Philadelphia * & F. Clyde, head of the Clyde @/ who is looking after the interests # Steamship company, fell in #| Of Jack O'Brien on the coast, re *% front of a train at the Fifty. | celved word this morning that & second street ation of the &| Young Corbett and Terry McGov # Pennsylvania road today. The #|@rn were today matched t fight * body waws ground to pieces. #| before the National Athletic club of * Clyde was about years old, &| Philadelphia next Monday night # and owner of the Goughacre @| The fight will be at catch weights # stable of running horses. A #| and is scheduled to go six rounds * few months ago he married & * Mrs. Bloomfield Mclivaine. # | Clyde was very wonithy +/Fireman Discharge * * eer errr er errr ae CUTTING FRAY Japan and China clashed in the restricted district on Monday night and, as usual, the little brown man came out victorious. S. Kawata ene on Ab Slag, Chinaman, the Celestial One Japanese is held as a witness. Rumor of Wreck oft Victoria used a knife and cut up along the the effect Steamship! Victoria had} A rumor circulated waterfront Tuesday that the Northwestern company’s steamship been wrecked at Nome, is denied by the officiais of the company Captain owbridge, manager of |the company, stated that no reports | of the veasel had been received since October 19. At that Shrie@he was still at Nome. A severe storm has been raging at Nome since October 10, The local} signal corps office states that no | megaages have been received by the office since the mornig of October | when the cable between Seattle Sitka broke down, | ‘The Grst to fall under the ban for breaking the rule of the fire department prohibiting the smoking of cigaretten on duty, was Fireman KR. C, Johnson, who was given his enyelope Monday by Chief Cook. Ir- regularity in reporting for duty Is algo sald to have had something te do. with Johnson's diamiasal Couldn’t Find Her Clothes Monday night was one of jollifi- cation for a number of Seattle's fallen women, as well as those visit ing from neighboring cities The reason for the celebrations is not known, but, as a result, several of the unfortunates were booked at the police station. Marjie Montell, proprietor of an Everett house of ill repute, was ar- rested for being Intoxica' When apprehended, she was but partially dressed and could not explain what had become of the reat of her cloth ing. Too much intoxicants had made her 1)l, and she was taken to the Wayside hospital. Belle Collins and Ellen Miller were also “pinched” for drunken- neds and put up $10 bail, MOSCOW, Oct. 24.—Btrikers dam od conduits today and some por- tlds of the city is without water, new ] | their household furniture and sat up housekeeping in the open, rémain ing there several days until, upon request of the city street commit the sheriff's deputies swooped own upon them once more. pieces impulse. VOL. 7. NO. 206 HAS AS CLEVER A CORPS OF SPECIAL WRITERS UNTRY AS THE STAR Tho Only Paper in f£eattle That Dares to Print the News + BEAUTIFUL CHICAGO WOMAN EMPLOYS SEATTLE LAWYER IN A REMARKABLELAW SUIT . agent neoge 2 the neigh “at MRS. MARY T. HILLYER MACOY ‘ ood, thinking the Hansons abused : ace Sad Melieviner thuen Guaresees in| Who Ig Suing the Same Man for Divorce and Breach of Promise, 5 pocket, expressed indignation and| talked of making up @ purse for the! houseless housekeepers, But the| W. F. Hays, a Seattle attorney,/ snd Attorney W. F. Hays, of Seate accidental display of a stockingful] 8 i tle, Wash, are behind the legal bate of valuables, including several gold | ¥!'» offices in the New York block. | teries which have been opened ui checked this has a finger in ® peculiar legal pi@/ the dashing printing magnate. Thi Pay Half Her Salary At a meeting Monday afternoon tr the Stanford of meno of the var. ious women's clubs of Beattie, it was cided that one-half of the $60 pro- vide ¢ salary of Mra. Jord court paid by the Federation of Women's club the other half ts paid by private subscript: The action of the Chamber if idered In relation to dn for children, but no ac tion Was taken. The next meeting will be on the fourth Monday in November, at the Stanford, Third and Marton. Sisters Arreste which is to be baked in the Chieago| claim that they will be able courts in the near future. He willl force the millionaire clubman leave for the windy city within the] disgorge handsomely to the bea next two weeks to assist in getting| ful woman he has so wronged, the oven hot. He has been retained that he may consider himself I lon the staff of attorneys which will i¢ he escapes prison walls represent Mrs. Mary T. Hillyer Ma-| sentence for bigamy. The | coy, one of Chicago's most beautiful | plaintiff avers that while he women, who has the novel distine-| his first wife the greater part tion of being plaintiff in one of the/the time in Europe or traveling lawsuits remarkable doubl ever filed. Mrs. Macoy ts rat in distant lands, that not infrequents |ly he risked allowing her to so contemporaneous! sourn for a few days in Chicago, ly suing the same man for divorce | and that the two wives must and for breach of pre The|times have narrowly escaped double defendant in this remarkable! tigion. Mrs. Macoy No. 1, combination of legal proceedings i8/ ing to the story of Mrs. Macoy agene Ma the well known! has been married to the mam’ Hionaire clubman and printing/of the alleged dual life since 1880,/ ane magnate of Chicago, and most) and that a daughter, now engaged to |ronsational developments are prom-| be married, and two sons are the ined at the approaching trial |ixeue of this marriage. ‘These chils| It is said that the troubles of the! dren, it 4s alleged, grew up on millionaire clubman are not all! spiendid farm which Macoy owas ied in even this remarkable) paw Paw Lake, Mich. combination of civil suits, for @! ‘The man against whom the seme jertminal action on the charge © | sational charges have been | bigamy Is not an un outcome. | is non-committal as to the truth: | With her divorce the beautiful! the beautiful plaintiff's statem | plaintiff asks the award of liberal| put says he will fight her charges sine. I H t I R id ee and in her action for!in the courts. n note BIG | vreach of promise she demands Five hundred thousand dollars of Pics Arn } $190,000 alleged damages. | the defondant’s property is now tt ee ae = ft , Mar combination of cir-|up by injunction, pending setth Se en, eae Barks mstances which makes the double! rent of the case In addition to hi hat “r with & man giving | suit possible began, the plaintiff! printing interests, Macoy is a hea n ame as R. O. Murray, we ar says, when, after a brief acquain-| investor in the First National rested at the Hotel George, on|tance with the man whom she 18/ of Chicago and is at the head of Sp —s between Becond and Third gc. he told her of his love/ American Amusement company, Ai pene tne |" rs ago and asked her to be-/theatrical organization with man; yen hipman made ¢ his wife, jtheatrical attractions traveling om raid, charging the man with living But he explained to me.” the) the road and offices in all the leads With disorderly women. Murray put|bandsome plaintiff avers, “that al ing cities of the united States. { up $100 b i wie the church wedding would not be ad. Mrs. Macoy No. 2, the plaintiff, wan released on $10 ball ly 8 his wealthy parents were| was a wit sh ‘The younger sister will be sent to} © oe ae tad | cet ries eunn ee Saree ee Pose ati te: ede —oatied by «ay 1 to his marrying, and had) the contract marriage with Macoy; plete wl j threa ten “lt > Mey a o t v nage and has a daughter of her own, aged st } 4 cent in case he should marry */11 years. Since being abandon: Van Adis is Here The first of the two vessels char tered by Barneson & Hibbard, for the Seattle-Vladivostok run, as told in The Star on October 2, arrived on the sound from Muroran, Japan Monday night The veasel will commence to load | her cargo of flour at the Centennial mill for Vladivostok, immediately She will carry about 4,000 tons. The Vanadis, which is the name of the steamer, has never before been on | Puget sound. She is owned b Michelson & Co., of Bergen, Nor-| way. Capt. Berentsen reports that the vessel experienced a terrible storm while en route from Japan to the! Pacific coast. The Vanadis ran into @ hurricane off the Japanese coast which nearly drowned two of her| sailors. The men were working on | the forecastle head when a heavy sea swept over her bows, carrying the men and all loose articles with it along the deck. The sailors were later picked up severely injured The Vanadis is expected to sail in about 10 days. VALLEJO, Cal., Oct. 24.—Judge Gear, counsel for Commander | Young, of the Bennington, was be- | fore the court-martial board at| Mare Island all morning, summing up the evidence and will likely con clude late tifis afternoon, He as-| serted that no evidence to show that Commander Young had neglected} his duty had been introduced, | hroposed that we be married under | she claims she has been compel the contrast marriage 1 the | to support herself and child unalds | state of I linols fe the ¢ e being. | ed. She alleges that Macoy has an jand that later, when his parents | income of y § should js ed, or after their ld quietly become feath, we r we sol RRR RRR ARR KR RR RR * jemnize our union in the Roma. * Catholic church. I agreed, and on|* VALLEJO, Cal, Oct. 23— # May 8, 1899, we entered into the}® The Russian cruiser Lena, in- # contract. We lived together for six} * terned at Mare Island for 13 ® years, and three children were born,|*® months, leaves at noon on ®& but all of them are dead. I strug-|* Thursday, where she will coal # gied with him and helped to up-|* and try to get away on Sunday. & build bis present fortune, | never|*® En route to Viadivostok she # once mistrusted him until one day | * Will make a fast trip and hopes © last September I spoke of his|* to reach that port before the promise to some day have the mar-| * ice forms. riage solemnized by chureh rites. | % He laughed, and said that he|/ ®***# eee ee eek earns was already married, Out of this| ce ' odd remark came to me the bitter| knowledge that for more than five! years I had been living with a man Collins Returns who already had a wife. Later Ij found that he had been maintaining) SaN FRANCISCO, Oct. 24—5 her in luxurious fashion in Europe, orge D. Collins, the alleged bigae and that he had kept her in ance of his union with me gnor- mous lawyer, returned this morning He had jin custody of an officer after an abs even introduced his own children,! gence of three months. He shows by this wife, to me, Too quict m@!no signs of physical collapse as @ in my rush of indignation when I| result of his strenuous fight to es- discovered how he had deceived me, | cape extradition my husband said that he would di-| arraignea bef vorce the other woman and have! opjected strenuo our marriage solemnized as ho bad} ment on the promised. But later he abandoned| had time to me and even refused to contribute] that Judge to my sapport. When I went. to] jurisdiction him in distress he characterized my pleadings as blackmal! him, and consulted my who have brought the me." Charles H. Aldrich, formerly Weltor general for the United § at Victoria, He was Judge Lennon, but sly to the arraigns i that he had not case and not have overruled gi HONOLULU, Ernest Reyer, Diamond re: ef floating, Oct 24 from Neweastle, is on The ship 80- with a good chan