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S-Last Edition WIGHT EDITION PDE ASS He | SPIRIT OF REVOLT SO STRONG IN RUSSIA THAT EVEN DE | FENDERS OF COUNTRY WAR AGAINST EACH OTHER KRONSTADT SCENE OF WILD RIOTS—CZAR IN RETREAT IN } PALACE BUT FEW MILES DISTANT — MOBS ORGANIZE TO | BUTCHER JEWS | } ‘ ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.--- It is reported that troops at Kronstadt are surrounded by 6,000 mutinous) | sailors. The troops are holding them| | in check. Gy Sertpos N Awan) and wounding a great number 7 , " { hundred sailors are still bh ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.—It} geainst the authorities ar | © fe reported that the “Black Hun-/ troops were called for to conquer | @red™ is planning a great mas them. | of Jews and inte or Fighting in the streets has ceased | } frday night. It is sald that all the| and the city is now comparatively Jews houses have been mark: quiet ,nithough an outbreak is ex- ‘crosses. pected at any time é — ST, PETERSRUF 1 Nebogatoff hi ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.—At Mianight tast night the covernor of Gronstadt telegraphed the general Stall that the mutiny of 3,00 Ore and a battalion of art Which took place yesterday subdued with the aid of 7 cks and a regiment of Impe-| subject to auch derision by his com Hal guards, who, with machine guns, | rades that he was forced to leave Miowed the mutineers down, Killing | the naval academy. in the sea of ¢ lives of 2,000 The admiral's son was ee ERR RRR RH = SAID JAKEY TO THE KERNEL % A. 3. Blethen, editor and owner of the Times, and Jacob Furth, president of the Puget Sound National bank and owner of « part of Seattle, were seated in the office of the latter Thurs~ ‘afternoon for more than four hours. it was an executive session. What the matter under discus- sion was, and it was 4 very heated discussion, ‘tis sald, nobody Knows, but it is supposed that it was concerning that little mat- ter of an exclusive Second ay. franchise, in which the Kernel Bupposed to be now greatly interested, as The Star awakened the People to the importance of the subject. Suid Jakey to the Kernel And that is why I have come to you. While you've been soundly sleeping The other paper's keeping A whacking till I'm almost black and blue. Now, Kernel, get a hump on Or else Fi have to jump on Your bank account down at the Puget Sound A speckled editorial, A sort of kind memorial, Is what I want your clarion volce to sound. Said the Kernel to Friend Jake, “I'm afraid I'l! have to fake; Of course ‘twould never do to tell the facts. So T'll softly sound. the praises Of your catUle-car-like chaises, And at the common people take some cracks. Til tell them of your service— Oh, dear me, “twill make me nervous To dish out such a bunch of tepid air— But I have one consoiation In the honore quotation, ‘That in The Crimes most anything ts fair.” PO ee eee ee ee eee eee TLL SLAP HiIlS FACE” tmaster Stewart “YUL EAT HIM UP" ; ---Scribe Toelin ——_-_-—- # SPREE EEE EE REESE EEE EEE EEE EE ee ee ASTER AND LOCAL NEWSPAPERMAN PASS TIME O'DAY AND NEARLY HAVE LIVELY SET-TO ys to eat fricaseed postmas BY sald August Toellner, a local per man, Friday as he loo! & convenient lamppost to lean nat. | , there's a whole lot in that of ye scribe | The man of the pad and the pil and ye heavyweight master the posts came together rather iy just after the adjourn Jast Monday night of the city} no," said the pencil = “You're another,” said Stewart, P. M., as be squared off and as fierce us he could through wise little eyes of his “7 slap you, and slap you real 4, too,” piped ye manly master the mails, as he extended his lady-like hands and pro igeeded to make a lunch counter feel f the face of the man who always Writes the truth. *Gwan wid ye I eat things like ,, every morning for breakfast,”| oe! Toeliner, as he sized the post-| +) Mraster up and down | [2 That's all there was to it. No E 6 struck, but a whole lot of ing and threats made because tmaster claimed that Toell published something about ien’t @ cannibal, GEORGE M. STEWART. Local Postmaster, Who Thirsts for kt orter’s Gore, soys he'll t Stewart yet-—that Is, all but the toupe@—he doesn't like imitation spinach for his; he always wants the real thing or nothing. The newspaperman is an ex-em ploye of the local postoffice, which may account for Stewart's anti- om 10,—Helen wae married to at Peraguims, An her bri the groom had prepared. Their no rance about the house in the morning caused in- quiry, and when their room was broken open the woman was found lying in a of blood before her dremer with & pistol in her hand and her brains oozing from the wound in her head. Johnson's wounds were in the left breast, the left temple and « grazing wound on the cheek. Hither of the first two wounds would have proved for the tragedy dai pistol in hi The Seattle SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER to, POOR, POOR KERWEL PEER ER EERE EERE ENE E EERE EEE EERE EERE EE EMME HENNEY HY * There should be no personal taxes against Colonel A, J, Bethe tever an The Times In- # *® vestment company owns all property in possensh f the Blethen family, even including the wear- ® ® ing apparel * * The auditor was #o notified, but, in spite of that fact, the property ts taxed against me * *® Extract from Blethen’s letter to the county treasure o * o * * SERRE EE RR RR RR Rm Excepting only the railroads and public service corporations, C clonel A.J, Blethen ts the most notorious tax-dodger in King county, In the recent personal letter to the county! treasurer, in which hi denies that elther he or any member of his family owns a thing, not EVEN THE SHIRTS ON THEIR BACKS, he allows the personal assesament of the contents of his Highland drive mansion to stand on the assessor's books as valued at only $21.77, while under osth he also claims that son Clarence’s home on Boylston ay. contains only six dollars’ worth of personal property. amd that the sum total of the value of the Times plant ts only $1,020. As for bis own bom on Highiiad drive, Colonel Blethen supports a coachman, owns several conveyances, adorns his home with — tapestries, furniture, paintings and cut glass and silverware It ts common knowledge that hen haa $2,500 worth of electric fixtures in hie home This, according to his own perjured statements, is worth but $21. As for “Baby Clarence's” false oath as to what he ia worth, everyone knows that be is only a spoiled child Those who know Clarence intimately tell how he uses several kinds of perfume for his baths; how he has a tooth brush for each tooth, and a nat! brash for each nail; a different cane to suck each day of the week; a different suit of clothes for every hour in the day; how his mansion fs resplendent with every luxurious appointment that a pampered child could wish for, and yet Clarence swears to the county assessor that he—or rather the Times Investment company—owns only six dollars worth of personal property in his Boyleston av. palace. But neither of these are Colonel Blethon’s greatest perjurtes. Swearing repeatedly to the assessor that his property in the Times building was worth only $1,020, he has repeatedly boasted in the editorial columns of his paper that hie three presses alone are worth $150,000, and that he has 1! linotype machines—which can't be bought elsewhere for less than $3,500 ¢ach, or a total of $38,500. Here in his composing room and press room be confesses to owning $188 600 worth of personal property, annd yet this, according to Blethen's own oath, together with all bis other personal property, is worth only $1,020, or, in other words, Colonel Blethen is assessed a great Geal leas than 1 per cent on his personal property, a rate infinitely less than @ven the lowest assessed inst any corporation In the state of Washington. Most of us will find it very hard to reconcile those ezcemic editorials in the colonel’s paper boost ing Seattle, and the personal letter the colonel sent to the county treasurer, There ts a ghastly simi arity to the famous story of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” To make the turpitude of the colonel all the more degrading, no assessor has had the temerity to in crease Blethen’s personal assessment, fearing blackmailing attacks In the Blethen paper. City Ownership | Issue in West Seattle “DIRTY DOZEN” WILL NOMINATE TICKET OPPOSED TO CITY | councilman of their own. They are waiting for further growth at Alki) STREET CAR LINE FRIDAY NIGHT —ANNEXATION OSTEN: |i nd other improvements. be SIBLE ISSUE force sanctioning any merger, #0) | that they can demand a councilman neeegeanionan Suse | {a cash of annexation, Went attle in In the throes of a/ fought out ostensibly on the ques-| municipal ownership campaign tion of annexation, municipal OWN-| Me RENEE EEE RE Ee At @ meeting, Friday night, in| ership is the real motive power } * * Slaughter's hall, the opponents of| hind the fight. The cit ersbi> | @& FAT WOMAN (¢ Sg ° * city ownership, known in the h- | advo: now in the ascend~| 4 WITH THE OCTOPUS * urb across the bay a the “Dirty| cattle put they gai Mab. Louise Platton, who al- # hee a: “| gerous being the Weet Seattle # leged that sho weighed 265 * Ed Diller t# sald to be the leade & Improve me P ® pounds, and that the Seattle * of the faction, which i# pledged to! mediate ann xation to & *% Blectric company did not use * annexation to Seattie at the first, the end of further munict | ® due_care in allowing her time * moment possible. The real object of ‘ership in West Seattle. Pe * to seat herself in one of its * Ditler nd his associates, it te Mm mt mean further, deveias m & chen deere’ months ago, wes claimed by the other party, is to, the municipal ownership idea n warded 7 of Beattle | $9,000 of bonds for a city light plant amag 1 ajury mpaign will be unique It is the smatlest efty in the world| *® * ways nth tickets will owning ite own car line, It ts pro-| @& @@ RRA RKR ARR pledged to ar ath to & posed next spring to tissue bonds for pan Etre as eee only differe’ being that th the construction of a city water sys-| wolidation, while the Cltize ticket | eral creeks, sald to be of the purest m [:] re. Jesires it only #0 woon as it can be| Water, and bring the liquid to town , . Gone with benefit. WANT OWN STEAMER, Olsen $ Surprise NAME ERSTWHILE ENEMY. | The municipal ownership adyo- The Citizene’ party rele its cates may even go so far as to out re candidates at 4 convention held q Thursday night. The ticket ts head | pa ed by Emil De Neuf, the architect, amer on the run across the The West Seattle Land & Because the Kitsap county divorce ment company, owner of the) mill refused to grind out a divorce yr who, strange as it may seem, was - . aoa eee oe terest onenies of the | Present ferry, promised to furnieh| for Mra. Yuro T. Olsen and free her izens’ At the last election, | better service next summer, but if/ from her husband, Hogan Olsen, she it does not, {t is proposed to put alcame to King county and has now city steamer on the run, placed her grist of troubles in the The supreme court has just de-|blg hopper of the King county di- cidod in favor of the city in the case] vored mill, brought to obtain possession of the] When, however, Mrs. Olsen's case wharf on the West Seattle side, Two|came up Friday morning the dis. vell on the fought with might a the iewuing of the b j West Seattle paid for her allwa treet De Neuf 41d not think that unc Ipat canurdnip could be succoustul, {Years ago West Seattle sought tolinayed plaintiff found a Kitsap Since the line has been In operation obtain from the council of Seattle| judge sitting on the bench and f-has proved beyond a doubt that | permission to let a steamer, which|calmly presiding over the mill, it will be a good investment, even | was put on the run in opposition to|Judge Yakey having taken the bench at the reasonable fare now charged. | the ferry and gave better service, at] of Judge Frater, who is {Il It only costa 6 cents for A ae aerom’ the city's fireboat dock Parry,| A pleturesque array of domestic fa et te tne Crichton and other — councilmen] tribulations 1s #et out in the plain- b turned down the request, and West} tiffs complaint, and these will be Seattle has been “sore” at them| thrashed out on Saturday, ever wince. —_—_-——- ADMITS MISTA | VICTORIA, B, C., Nov, 9.-—-The ‘THE STAR HAS FOUND A FEW CONSCIENTIOUS, FAITHFUL DOMESTICS IN ITS PRIZE CONTEST—ONE STAYED TWO VEARS IN ONE FAMILY, AND CAN PROVE IT. | The Only Paper in feattle That Dares to Print the News al 1905 VOL. 7. NO. 220 a5 CENTS PER MONTH ey S-s-s-s-h-h-h! What Did Jakey Furth Say to Kernel Blethen? S-s-s-s-h-h-h-h! And What Did Kernel Blethen Say to Jakey Furth When They Met Thursday? ‘MUTINOUS SAILORS SURROUND TROOPS ANOTHER MASSACRE OF JEWS PLANNED! Probing Election Frauds Has Begun in New York ELECTION JUDGES, POLICEMEN AND OTHER WITNESSES 8UB fforte will be made to indict some POENED—HEARST BOOSTS REWARD FOR CAPTURE OF OF- [°° )/)0 ‘istrict loaders , 1 ear as offered an additiona FENDERS reward of $10,000, making a total Se jot $2 of! by him for the (By fortpps News Ass'n) fer and the assistance of Prosecuting | ony iction of the Tammany district witW .. FORE Attorney Jerome the grand jury t¢ tiie tiie anu bexen, all day began an investigation of the|yoon co eee ee aoe polls after charges of fraud in connection with |"P0", Complaint of @ poll watcher last night by a tug the mayoralty election poe SBe change Of omnes ane wae river Phese.. were eae visited the criesinal ‘court arraigned this morning. His case bureau of elections and a rigid in-|yutiding early this morning and| "as Continued to December. A sub- n will be made by the at-| corerred with Assistant District |[OC™s, Das been issued for Joba Voorhis, president of the board of elections, elting him to appear be- fore the grand jury and to produce |for their inspection the registry in « stateme Attorneys. Sanford and Perkins, to! whom Jerome has delegated the| work of prosecuting the cases and t last night more than £,000 & ed to other been accre drawing up indictments. The grand motah evide aa already been 4 , books of the election ¢ ber of persons under suspicion of | *Ppeared immediately. triet paroarn jona. Eight deputies of Superintendent| it is charged that the face of the fraud in the elect wien : jot Elections Morgan, a number of|returns has been changed, and it is ¥. 10.—Under the jclicemen and about 50 other wit-|alleged there was much fraudulent iM nesses were called. They said that! yoting in this district cW YORK. tion of Att dir N 3 y YORK, Nov. 10.—President Voorhis this afternoon, in discuss- ing the reports that ballot boxes were dumped into the river, said: “There is nothing to this talk about the missing ballot boves. The board election knows exactly how many ex they gave out, and how many returne o far as 1 know all back. The story about the boxes being thrown into. the river is ail false. If a box was found in a barber shop I am sure it was only one of the small boxes use 44 waid had there been one he would/for mutilated ballots, which Pani Commercial club promises to be one| have called for it, and got all his|always destroyed after the good of the most interesting yet held by| friends together to play “craps’| ballots were counted. The report the young organization. for the success of the club. See ne ee The meeting will be held in the] ‘The origin ken in handing” al intentic the club iT caus ok a ae a ee orig on of the ¢ broken in handling. was to make it exclusively a young - ec NO Alaska Duflding. The principal) men’s organization, but men in ev-|¥ ¥¥**¥¥ ¥ NE MR RM speakers will be Rev. M. A. Mat-j ery stage of life are insisting upon|* BANK CLEARINGS. * thews and James A. Moore. joining, and the bars were de-|% Nov. 10, 1905......81,109,039.31 # The club is now growing at | cared down when the constitution|*® Nov. 10, 1904...... 1,073,150.07 & phenomenal rate, Scores are being|and byla.s were adopted. Colonel | * ——_-_— & added to the membership lists ev-|p, B May insists that he is the|* Increase over same * ery day, and the beginning of the] youngest member of the club, and|® date last year...8 35,889.24 % organization 1s most auspicious. If] declares he will demonstrate it by|%\** *¥4¥¥ ¥¥¥¥ + % ¥% you have not been approached by| FO cS upncncne pa ge the seckers after sew members and) tnepem whore ta an lint. tbe ae cee eo ae the ones who are trying to exchange| enthusiaam, for every mab, YOung| ‘heed fs hinee Prdey caine. receipts for annual dues, you can| or old, ts intrested in the future] Otiiten ot the weed ene reat assured that you will be|of Seattle and feale that thé Com-|cricere porsche vessel Tepors among the number and that all the| mercial club has the right spirit and| ene eee im the north. unlucky numbers are all gone, Sueb behind It. Or ee SNE RE wae Se aay at Sig Re ~ ; Skagway Friday night. The vessel Receipt No. 1 went early Wednes- e next meeting will be held| will take 40 passengers and a full Monday night. eargo of freight. AMONG HELLO GIRLS up $25 for the receipt issued. No. The next meeting of the Seattle 13 went to J. F. Lane, cashier of the Scandinavian-American bank, and he sald it was certainly a sign of good luck for the club. Mr, Lane id be did not believe in the bad luck signs, and had rather have No. 13 than any other Th receiver of receipt No. 14 ex- pressed great satisfaction that he had been neglected just one num ber more, or he would have called for another receipt by paying a sec ond installment tn dues. There is no receipt numbered 4-11-44, but N Equitable Is Bad as Ever ‘Dy Seripps News Aan) NEW YORK, Novy. 10.—Wiliam Darnes, of Albany, who for 40 years Diphtheria has broken out again, mont, have both been obliged to stop work. Both are ill with diph- theria. among the operators of the Sunset lephone company. Investigation revealed the fact Dr. Ludlow, city health officer,|that both used the same receiver, Friday began the work of ascertain-|one being a day and the other a ing the exact extent of the disease | night operator. One of them un- among the girls. | doubtedly caught the disease from Thus far there are only two cases, | the other, Miss Maggie Rectinwold, 19, resid-| The telephone companies are sup- ing at 843 South 17th, and Miss Leo! posed to disinfect the receivers reg- Mounts, 19, residing at 1610 Bel- | ularly to prevent contagion. has been an attorney, voluntarily appeared to testify in the insurance investigation this morning. He said he had been employed t various insurance companies at dif- ferent times, He told how he had} frequently recommended a change in icine the management of these companies. In @ tirade against the Equitable he declared that whatever changes had bee made did not change its methods, and asserted that the one man power remains, for this port at 8:30 o'clock. avy fog prevailed at the time, The revenue cutter Arcata went the} to the vessel's aid upon receipt of @y Geripns News Aas PORT TOW steamer Bel END, gham. “a —— t Sound Navigation ny, | the news | this mornnig unning between and Port) ‘The bottom about the {sland ts les via this port ground] mostly soft and it is thought the Island. THEY ARE SHY VICTIMS OF FAIR PICKPOCKETS WON'T DIVULGE NAMES s_ west] Bellingham can be gotten off with- I eat damage. Jellingham wag formerly the ner Willapa. PRISON T00 GOOD FOR SUCH A MAN IF CHARGE I$. TRUE ut z The Wili- stea mmanded by Port “That's alright who am now am nobody's fool, All T want you to is to get bumy, arrest the wornan|URY WILL DECIDE GUILT OF SAILOR ACCUSED OF ASSAULT- the Argonaut lodging house, to| Anh EERE SE. Patrolman Damm, Thursday night Damm attempted to secure his| “Mamma, did you ever see one] could not rescue the little girl in name and address for a formal re-| man kill another?" time, screamed to the others on the port, but the fear of publicity scar dear beach, who ran to the child's rese the Victim into silence. He told t "I did once it is gafd, only Just tn time to sna officer that Pauline, don't you know|her from t he took a room | the woman and that when he| {t's » had decamped with a| hain and $12 in money, | it He ig stoll looking for his fickle lady love, but the police say they| {t's tru to tell stories, That | emt y, and you must not repeat ‘But, mamma, it isn't any stor Bit le uitine had by . Shut the door tight, m o haye little time for the man who | and lock It; won't you, whart, @irm of chat wants his money back, yet refuses} Stch is the convers: ment, did not t other W to face the powder, passed between little 6~ ear-old | she had been, ae ‘much ; G. W, Currier, of the U, 8, $8. Chi-| Pauline Roff and her mother one! ened, however, and out of BES cago, Wan not quite so shy when re- porting a loss of $220. “I fell asleep tn a chair In some saloon, I guess they cleaned me,”"| an night last August, and although she said § man had given h the moments the words of the little | cents, and as her mother girl mean't nothing to the mother,| away in her little bed. by : hour later they came to her|her mother the strange ai y fraught with terrible sig-| with which this story opeha. © art of the money wos in mash Friday morning they| An hour later, when little Pa part in money ordet upon | were repeated again, for Louls Ha Wag asleep, an officer called at which ment has been pped, son, 4 sailor, charged with attempt-| Roff house to ask if it was dé — + |ing to criminally assault the child,| Paulite who had almost Frank Burns and Jack Heath, the} was on trie victim of the degenerate, De Neuf, being an honest man, now admits that he was mistaken, | DON’T NEED ANY HELP, THANK J and his ersewhile enemies, with a| with its Rhoda Mexican. consul at San Francisco car. Mne,| bas written Collector Newbury, of own street it of forgivene ne 0) a igh Mian, ge Dh na vefer® lighting plant and water plant, West| this port, cancelling the Mexican schooner Aca- solved to forget the unpleasant paat, | #eattle will not care to annex to {ta} register hold by t and march to yictory this year with | big neighbor at tho bay, thank| pulse, lite the Carmencita, noforious thetr former \adversary os their|you, and annexation will be in-jreputation, Newbury has kept the standard bearer. definitely postponed. The citizens'| register in his hands ever since the Wilbor Lewis, candidate for treas-| party is willing to annex as soon As) return of the vessel, and has refused urer on the Citizens’ tioket, was a)#0 | guch a movement will be a real) to turn ft over. & member of the party that 1# NOW| henetit, but the t to be sh < no more, and with the same spirit | benefit, but they wan shown.) prt gs, W. Va. Nov, 10.—— Of forgiveness, his past sing, too,| There would be very little satistac- tutu wak wrecked and Deen forgiven. nm {9% tion, they, believe, in becoming. 8 dirte tratamen killed this: morning the campaign is to be part of city unless they Ongar here @ “: ee, t e eR oe - - men who broke into the postoffice| Pauline Roff is the pretty ttle} When Mra, Roft "te and general store owned by Charles| S!fl who, it ts alleged, was enticed | Pantine’s rescuer julln at Gertrude, Pierce county, | ®¥8¥ bY Hanson, who was drinking, | wretch down, the odd June 30, and robbed th wountys|from her playmates on the Went | little girl caine by hos ppt @ postoffice Of} seattle beach, Hanson, it is claimed, | shuddering, the stamps and money amounting to] gave the child 16 cents and told her| little doughter's bed al $63,40, were indicted by the federal] he would buy her some candy ff she the ttle in grand jury Friday morning. would go with him; then, it mocent way, ; At 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon tho| he led her away down the ben childish lgstinet of shocked mé caused her to hide her little ff cornerstone the new. Roman| Ward a sequestered spot, where I attempted to criminally assault her, Catholic cathedral, on the corner Of) Four people, it 1s claimed, witnessed Columbia and Terty, will be laid by vite clad Bishop O'Dea, The sormon will be ina "a pin? Shines ont] Sean waa, saatraseed: PR preached by Bishop Carroll... 4 the surf, when he saw that he q