The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 22, 1909, Page 1

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SEATTLE, WASH., Seeaiia aan BIES ARE HERDED LITTER OF PIGS COOK 15 NOT PREPARED 10 MEET PEARY | Will Prepare Data, Then) First Submit It to the University Officials at | Copenhagen. NEW YORK, Sept, 22 Are you willing to meet Commander Peary personally and take up with him the controversy which ts attracting the attention of the world? | To wtlon Dr. Frederick A.| Cook today replied } “That ie rather a personal ques tion and | am not ready to anewer it at this time +} “I have no bitter feeling againat Commander Peary, but he is not the judge of my claims, They will 60 to a higher autho than he Mas Original Data | Dr. Cook announced that It will take two m bim t his data tn shape t mit to a sclen tific board. He said that the return of Harry Whitney, the young mil lionatre hunter, will not af his | ree ris as Whitney was entrusted lwith dupticate data only and that be bas the ortginal data in his own | possession | Regarding the statement of Peary’s negro Hasen to the effect that he talked to the Eskimos and that they said Cook bad not gone dvesy far north, Dr. Cook said to | day | “The Kakimos were properly obey ing my orders to not reveal the | discovery é Through With Explorations, Cook will submit hin data first to the University of Capen hagen as the Danish government wen the first to accept his clatme jas he explorer said that hentic fs bat @ short | onducted by eis he intends to min at home and enjoy bimself as much as possible of which during the rest of bis life. He sald Featerd: that he fs through with exp! iappen: el and will never seek the South Pole. _ “ He will leave that for Scott and pfifie more Shackleton, he sald , the in Dr. Cook edmitted that he had unkempt, if recetved a large number of offers to appear on the lecture platform but refused to discuss them further. Peary Starts for Home. poor little snanenesanaatl to exist, ill cared | MRS. GAGER AND ONE OF THE LITTLE TOTS SHE 18 CARING | SYDNEY, N. 8, Sept. 22—Com and FOR AT HER “BABY FARM.” mander Peary left at 7 o'clock thts biot- ng for Portland, Me From never } t he will go to his home at Magic of a | guarding the identity of the Eagle Island, where he will rest for Jess her | mother of the babe. several day before preparing a The Gager farm or baby board statemen ommander Peary fetels housed in ing house was found yesterday nounced last night that bh would | forego ali banquets receptions for the prosent. GOV. JOWNSON'S BODY Mt the present afternoon while a reporter for The her two chii.| Star and a photographer were at “boarders,” and) work in the neighborhood | $15 per mont? If Mrs, Gager kept a register like | One of these @ hotel should, tt would read: } Possible ex- Jessie, Orange, Goldie, Arthur, Ger-) Mittie girl, ald, 2 years old, three babies about | INTRUDER FELL FROM WIN | fay is held ax 14 months old, and ene sale Meter DoW SILL BUT LEFT NO &n old trunk, 6 weeks old named Ruthie. Two of Pledge, to pay them are her own children. Of the TRACES OF HIMSELF. estab ab usiness, she first four named all go to school we MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 22 Present but she except Jessie, who is the pet Of; © Brennan, of 419 Seneca st.,| phe body of Gov. John A. Johnson a soon pick the family [fired two shots point blank at 4\¢, }ying in atate today tn the rotunda fn a8 many a ) burglar early this morning just a8 | o¢ the capitol building where thous ee Mt the farm siamuptinge tits \the intruder was climbing into the ands of his admirers have come to They Are Dirty The house, a miserably poor) room through an open window. The | view it. The body will lie in state iSlao with tw structure, is built on the side of the | purgiar fell out of the window to| throughout the day and early to @ times in eat!) steep bill xo that op one side It 18 the ground but managed to gain! morrow. It {s guarded by four com ring for the most re that is bestowed a one-story cottage but on the other his feet and disappear before Bren it has an elevation of two floors nan could overtake him missioned officers, four and four privates of the corporals militia | On the two-story side {s a dirty, Brennan is positive he bit the This afternoon the chaplain of the} ie the ee greasy stoop where are kept numer: | burglars The police were notified | governor's staft, Rev. F, J. Lawlees, | 8nd ill-cared i ous mops, brooms, pots and kettles, | and Detectives Keefe, Oldham and! conducted a brief service tn the! Pit, You proud and | and the place swarmed with flies. Patrolman Barton made a search of| capitol, and the final tuner }Rith one rt a But the inaide of the place was|the vicinity. No trace of the! services will be held at St. Peter's| 1 you owl Aughing | ¢1! more aninviting when & reporter | burglar was found | Presbytertan ebureh tomorrow g You of thes of entered the house yesterday, Dirt the hehe tie ke ve |" filth seemed to permeate the TAFT TO OWN “STREETS, y alr. The ancient lace curtains re covered with # fine powder of and were without a doubt fopether with one ** Mate for the jot? me ime MOVE WALLA WALLA t the requ t of Cong eman year. placed there more to wereen the {n- | sinigh Sf amirey. and other | MY & spirit of co ide from prying outside eyes than | g ; ter, Smee interested in the matter ayor toot Will betwees trom any sense of beauty. The car-| Miller will ikewe ae order protibit Mrs, Th t was unbelievably dirty and the | Mill yl ’ . Walla will send 9,500 of ita| ing vehicles of all descriptions from * &8 when onc were smudged with tiny fin-| Walla W alla will nd St eobabged pow. SAG sd iattesn ba wala {0 take an att lresidents to the fair to celebrate| passing over the streets on which atternoon | ger marks | Walls alla Day tomorrow. Ove esident Taft will ride during his germ the two hor hen Mrs. Gager answared the | Mode Otte are already in Beattle| briet visit here eter like #0 1m k on the door her garments |1,500 Of them or ior ure expected of off goes carcely better than the lace “pb iie patel Peep dlls sckaepdedt ater wecure in tains or the towel that served penis] tenia aend and tomorrow ye OOH Hy te east her | &# a dolley on the bureau which was), 1.4eu the unvelling of the statue|* WEATHER BULLETIN. & pany, | t © “parlor of Marcus Whitman and speeches by| * Shower tonight and Thurs- Gets Her Picture Taken. | Gov. Hay, Director Geperal I, A. Na-| ® day; light east winds. * 1 @Mternoon, when Her hair was streaming down her |deau, Judge Thoma rke and Dr,|* * ower presentative w. . . a” eee Penrose, of Whitman éol-| ** ~ m9 over . was eae, ca Papseiss peters eet, or , vitman Col: | ap pe eR ore ee herding” anu man at the door and not one of the | lege sTOGK MANIAT, TI a oo ee ee ee eee eee 2 2 y yuan Pre a to enatch a Phra gir ding! 5 * NEV ) Sep arly Baby incubator, °", {hat « oe ee ea’ mous |e. AeNol ATTENDANCE | bullishness in ‘the siock market Beparturs was in 10 ant See ene SOlr lS Veatenday 596 %|gave way toward the ond of the : the children, but your price is Ae eS Mery mysterious ‘ y * Total ...+.+- ‘a 09 076 * session to extreme bearishness, and Nd great U!ehty cheap, But I ain't fixed up prices in practically every tasuc ed in (Continued on Page Seven.) ekkhnteehek de dosh pe had » heavy sag from last night WEDNESDAY, SEPT. charge 22, 1909. ‘THE STA lite Hopes People of the West Will Take Same View of the Bre ter as President Taft. (By United Press.) LO8 ANGELES, Cal., Sept . Former Governor George ©. Par dee of California, wh returpe: from Ban Clemente island In com- j pany, wi th Gifford Pinchot, chief |forester of the United States, has just- given a wiatement regarding the declarations made in the letter of Président Taft to Secretary of the Interfor Ballinger, exonerating that official from charges made by |L. R. Giavts, chief of the field work o2 a Of the*keneral land office at Seat |e. Fornser Governor Pardee wae referred to in the Taft letter as one of there who had criticised the polley of the interior department Mr, Pardee in his statement aye Moving read with great interest and care the, president's vindica tion af Secretary Ballinger, the first thought that suggests Itself to me. is that about the only per sons Who rejoice over It are those few wha desire to monopolize, to the detriment of the many, power elites, Con) lands and the like No Refiection on Garfieid. “1 potieed particularly the presi dent's declaration that, In his judg mont, ‘the hest friend of the polley of conservation of natura! resources te be who inaletse that every step should be taken within the law and buttredeed by legal authority. 1 take it that chat in not Intended as & reflection on the officta! acts of former President Roosevelt and former Secretary Garfield, who withdrew from entry public lands which Secretary Hallinger after ward restored to entry, on the ground, | am informed, that there was no specific law for Garfield's action. According to common re port, President Taft himself direct ed Secretary Ballinger to rewilth j@raw from entry certain lands | which, originally withdrawn by Gar field, Gallinger had restored to en ry Any intimation, therefore, that Garfield was not acting within the la® and wae not ‘buttressed by legal authority’ when, to save pow er alles, he withdrew the lands whieh Ballinger afterward restored fa of. gourse a reflection on the president “It f* unfortunate that very fre quently the efforts of one. kind of legal authority ‘buttressed’ the ef. forts of those who desire to grab and thenopolise coal lands and power site: Ruttreswed by legal authority,’ Garfield, in order to pre vent the monopolization of power sites, withdrew from entry millions —~[Gontinued on Page Seven.) NO USE TO DIE As GRAVEYARD 15 FULL WALLA WALLA, sept 22.— Resitents of this city are think ing. twice before deciding to hes a in thelr checks admitting them to the local graveyard. One reason is that the cemetery je nearly filled and the other Is that two lots which remain vacant have so increased in value that the holdings rival the front foot price of a busi. ness property. The old inhabi tants whe have fondly hoped to ep in the city cemetery ¢ome to the conclusion that it's no use to die. Who wants to die when there is no place in the cemetery for his decent interment? MUSICAL CONCERT AT REGITAL HALL he e first eason's recitals to be given by the Eilers Music company will take place tomorrow evening at thelr recital hall in the Eilers Music buliding | The recitals this year promise to be popular. The soloists for Thurs day evening will be Mrs. Lotta Ashby Othick and Mr. George T Breeckow, who will also render a number of sical selections on strolle. admission ul the orche be no the piano! ThA will AVIATOR 1S KILLED Ferber, PARIS. of the Prench army killed today while flight fx a biplane at Boulogne Sur Mer on the French const The machine fell to the ground and Capt, Ferber was horrtbly quangled, Sept ‘apt was instantly | attempting a| PARDEE MAKES CAUSTIC REPLY TO BALLINGFR’S “VINDICATION” se QUE, WE ALL “USE FREEZUM, Butchers Put Up Bonds to Appear in Cases Brought by State Pure Food In- SAY ACCUSED SEATTLE INE CEN) COASTS OF THREE STATES SWEPT BY GREAT TIDAL WAVE Death Dealing Water Hurled by a Hurricane in the | South Sauffs Out Hundreds of Lives and Great Damage Is Done to Property—Death List Will Be | Larger When All Reports Are Received. spector. ure, I have used ‘Freezum’ and . 1 the rest of the butchers (By United Press.) hat's what any one of the} W ORLEANS, La., Sept. 22,—Not less than 300 lives twenty-three meat dealers arrested | : for using preservatives on thetr| Were lost and property valuec $10,000,000 swept away in meat “a tell you if you ask for an/ the tidal ch pt the coasts of Louisiana, Mississ- explanation 4 : : There's not wrong with |'PPl a and Tuesday Almost every tele- Freesum.’ We n't une It to dope | vraph line into this city is prostrated, and when com- ap bad meat. Just meat that's been : exposed to the air a while and be unication with the tlying districts is restored, the list of gins to darken some. ‘Freezum almost certain to be ¢ increased brightens {t up and makes it look a| ‘ little better t state coast ol siana was swept by And they continue in the same ave which ro! 1d upon the homes manner, ignoring the fact that the drug “Freezum hibited from wu ie & poison, is pro by law, and under any conditions is deceiving the buyer, They forget that the food inspectors have found meat which tWey can prove to be decayed be yond a question of a doubt, which has been doped with “Freezum’ ugtii it could not be told from wholesome meat by looking at it. No Decayed Meat. Each of the twenty-three declares that if decayed meat was fou t did not come from his shop. Y did come from some of the shops and very possibly the one you buy your meat frow. “Freezum” pre vents you from telling whether you are getting good or bad meat and you have to trust the butcher Eighteen of the offenders brought before Justice Brown ye terday afternoon and their bonds placed at $250, with the exception mes Henry, who owns four His bond was put at $1,000 were p other five ga nd this morning. The ¢ will be heard October 15. The penalty for the first offense is 90 days ment or $600 fine or both Tells of His Crusade. Will H. Adams, deputy state and dairy Inspector imprison. food who has been carrying on the crusade against bad meat tn other cities, also tells of a meat shop In Aberdeen which he Investigated ‘I went into the shop of Frank Nikkila there Septem! 10. | said Mr. Adams this morning, “and |in @ back room found three men trimming up meat covered with maggots. [ called in the health officer and had the 1 arrest He pleaded guilty and three hours after I entered his shop bad paid a fine, which with costs, amounted to $30.20. In the meantime | carried | 800 pounds of meat out of the shop. some of which hung in the in which I discovered | poured gasoline | bernee it.” git AUSH SAVED maggots over the stuff and GAME FOR SPOKANE (lly. Uaited Pree SPOKA) Sept The In {dians took another amo from th Canucks this morning by a score of 6 to 4 Wheisman, a recruit was tried out by Brown, and did well until the ninth, when the Ca |nucks scored two runs off his de and planters res of these, it is feared, have met de the water se inland at least two miles. The eans of co cation with the southwest district is by te vone, and only a few of these are in work- ing order, WORST FLOOD OF GULF’S RECORD. From this source it was learned that the flood is one of the worst that ever visited the Gulf coast, and many res- idents living in ath « 1¢ wave say that the toll of 300 lives exacted b storm is entirely too low an estimate. In this city 300 city blocks are under water, and the property loss run into the thousands Scores of lives are st certain to have been lost, but only a house to house canvass will reveal an accurate list of the casua Yesterday's reports had 30 dead in this city alone, but it feared that this number will be greatly in- creased by today's revelations Refugees arriv here t from the southwest coast of Louisiana say that the wave swept the coast from Grand Island hat at least Reports fr on the west to ish. They are predicting re lost in this stretch of territory alone. are slowly coming na and Mississippi it. The rice and cotton are said to have been com- pletely ruined ALABAMA SUFFERS GREAT LOSS. The property loss in Alabama, it is reported, is almost as Hundreds of homes Telegraph communication in the flood- 1, and t as great that wrought in Louisiana have been inundated ed district is prostratec he exact damage caused by the storm will probably not be known for several days. It is feared this afternoon that scores of pleasure seekers t their lives in the tidal wave ich was accompanied by a gale reaching a velocity of & es an hour. A number of people were out on the Mississippi and the Gulf in small craft when the hurricane broke, and as they have not been heard from, it is feared that they were unable to weather the gale So strong was the force of the wind that houses were |lifted from their foundations and hurled to their destructi | Several of these were even blown into the Gulf With the subsiding of the storm the damage in this city appears greater tl first reports indicated. The French section of the city is almost entirely wrecked. Four hundred passengers who were marooned for two days in washouts arrived here last night in a half starved con- dition livery, and he was taken out and MEMPHIS, Tenn., Sept A message from New Or- took hie place and held the Wag: |leans states that 40 are known to be dead in that city, and couver team safe that the loss in Louisiana alone will exceed $5,000,000. All Score by innings: R.H.E.| railroad traffic in the states of Louisiana, Alabama and Miss- Vancouver 1000100024 8 2 a abe altel ‘nd umber of ici aah Spokane 200080008 4 2/issippi is at a standstill, and a number of trains plying be Batteries Erickson and Sug-|tween the principal cities in these states that left for their den; Wheisman, Rush and Spencer. | destinations before the storm broke have not been heard from. NEW YORK, Sept il It is believed that the damage to the cane crop alone will ‘Be wpe st acct bh ah amount to $1,500,000. Hundreds of vessels are said to have SEE KK! Doon Jost : $3.00 FOR Pq BARGES SUNK IN RIVER. * ay Two hundred barges of @coal were sunk in the Mississ- i THREE STARS * * ip P at New Orleans, At Lobdel, La., 106 other barges load- | ed with coal also went down. ‘This loss is certain to exceed * ~=Read the testimonial on the * $1,000,000. Ihe loss of life to fishermen who were plying o Sar ior wants tniee Nenlen * | their trade when the storm broke cannot be estimated at this * The Star of a certain date and */| time PB A ta I eRe at The Louisiana coast swept by the tidal wave is low and * = Read the ad. */ swampy, and much of it has been dammed for the production * * ORO TOR ORR Re (Continued on Pace Seven) y

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