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HE SEATTLE TREADWELL MINE ENGLAND 1S {SLAUGHTER HOUSE | WAATHY QUER “WMH HUMAN VICTIMS 7, A, SPEECH “Roosevelt Guilty of Grave | Offense Against the Laws Binding Host and Guest,” Says One Paper. Js Attempt to Give Alaska Mine Regula- hered in Congress Through Efforts of Lobbyists, Lewis Shackleton and Ex- (My United Pees) LONDON, Jur unaffected by his larity, as shown by goneral comment sevelt was in a \¢ y He spent nea at speech e 1 h ad m t Es an aftaly it is filled w + Broa tha leader, preside oe ot ile, window The London T warns } "% houses of H elt that he dence iy Sy ing fro The News statements « Le with a heart swell: that the me and he would for his old the Omer d ewe modern JAS. WICKERSHAM rankly Ber to the land a! wrote often a a mm | ANKET d over the Roosevelt speech es of (jm a eral ,czprecston is heard; SEES chaees at Roosevelt discussed subjects he 17 DEAD IN “= ” none of his busin ly, the letters ie told of the LONDON, June 1-—-English of te get in an Alax ficlaliom refuses to comment pub re | itely on Roos & speech at Guild pomaaiond | Hall beeau the al-official tell her of : “a ia > ined character of the president's visit} the prom Ihore. im spite of thie lack of open comment, however, !t plain to ve ‘Wilt Come. leee that many officials fear ‘Will come, nor any - |*peech may result in an uphe | of her lost jof the Anglo-Egyptian relation fe tee Phases oe ie Many people today declare th: deen kil! Roosevelt violated diplomatic pro conducted mine (My Vetted Pres) | priety, and compare the incidents Rave thrown SALT LAKE, Utah, June 1 surrounding his speech to the Lord ackville West | 1888 when President Cleveland dismiss ed the British ambassador for ad r seven Aus incident tn an Hugh Maguire trians, seven Italians and two Jap nm an explosion at anese were killed vising citizens of the United tates to vote for Cleféland The he man's rela | the rock quarry of the Union Port : : iP here !s dumbfounded by the land Cement company at Devils | Pree ; gold ming as” ss aE ae t of Ogden, today, | S2anel’s utterances, The Evening fe defiance of | Slide. 25 miles cast o jon, tOdSY | Star anys Roosevelt “le guilty of Sey pothing of | Four hundred kegs of powder were|a grave offense against the laws turely set off and it ls report | binding on host and guest « in the quarry was! The fact that Roosevelt's prede joston damaged the | cessor was assassinated, the Star ft a mile distant, to|adds, “should make him careful in saandes Gollare. bis comments regarding the « ae lief train carrying physicians | sination of Boutros Pash jand nurses left Oy Devite| The Manchester G Han calls Cattie. Slide as soon as t wie re-|the colonel’s views sddled and the vie-| All wires boyish.” The Standard calla his Roist, titted an expert powder | speech “a social crime, little short e the com-| ™an it Heved that an irre- | of aacrilege. Pamped into | *ponsible person set off the biast All the newspapers concede that There is no| The bodies of the men were hurl-| Roosevelt's arraignment of the causes |! a distance of 500 feet across the | English people, after receiving the anyon and were mangled beyond | city’s highest honor, viol: the recognition propricties PUT GAG ON BURGLAR WHO LINDSAY USED AUGE |corporation counsel's office that! Court Commissioner Lindsay grant | od restraining orders against City; wo c¢ Stone, who given bie oc Engineer Thomson's echemes t00| pation ax a laborer, and wh readily, the judges of the superior | ioved to be the “auger burglar in the efty Jail Following a re rt from Mr court have taken away from Lind. say the power of granting reatrain- | ing orders. Hereafter all such or! carnin, who runs a lodging house at ders will have to be heard before! iggy Seventh av. that she had| Superior Judge Gilliam. been robbed of $82 this morning, Pa facta, and yet the “ bill Intro by James Wick from Alaska, has for over « by the lobby of of the largest <u Lindsay has several times from | troiman Cunliffe arrested Stone |the bench expressed his opinion of | yi). haw roomed there for four the high handed methods that) jonths. He denied any knowledge Thomson was using to put through | of the crime, and as there was no| | his sohemes. He has issued orders | i vitonce, he ebirn me topping the operation of Thomson) ff aior $2 the money, wrapped PPPRR RHA & & and the board of public works’ |). C handkerchlef, was found be and Thursday mandate until the property owners) oath § os wiktew, ‘A conreh of W; moderate * had a chance to secure compensa | jin por ght to Nght = dark * \tion In court for the injury being » tevelver and a brase and PESS Sey % % % ¥ | done them. lbtt. So the police arrested him =, ~ sso = === | again Heveral weeks ago there was @ ° by som man w opened doors after boring holes in the with a VACATIONS, TOO, NOW “*:.< | | The bit found in Stone m will ’ ’ be fitted into some of the holes eS bored in the doors of the looted] homes. | clerks |gets very tiresome, and Jack and Pete, like men, get so they are not| BOOSTING PRICES of the best service posi o the Dmitri COSTS CIRCUS $100, lairs, Jim or! At least that is what both old-| ieiatonaiceinn | It cost the Sells-Floto circus just ment, and |time horsemen and new-fangled| » Of the str imanitarians say, so the city of|$100 for boosting the price of} be browsing on attle is going to give Jack and| admission from 36 to 46 cents for a) heedn't care just horses, their playtime|few minutes yesterday. City Li-| cense Inspector Maresh caught the there are or streets Councilman Fred Sawyer intro-|cirous agents selling tickets at an/ 804 Jack, Old Pete duced an ordinance at the council| advance of 10 cents at one wagon horses, but! meeting last night providing that | yesterday, and immediately be col-| 5 well as mon.|the city buy a pasture where tired,| lected an additional $100 license| Apparatus, the sick and lame horses in the elty|fee. The city ordinance provides) become 4d ice may be turned out to graze | that circuses charging 25 cents ad mission shall pay $100 a day, those charging between 26 and 50 cents lghall pay $200, and those charging 150 cents or more shall pay $300 a day. One hundred dollars a day for the two days had previously been collected from the Sells-Floto people LOAN SHARK LOSES TO SEATTLE WOMAN the continual drag | through the street cu from time to time each year. Th 1 went to the finance committee =3 OF BEANS AT PRINCE; ARD MISTAKES MISSILE FOR BOMB (By United Press.) 1—While th Was leading Crown Prince Frederick Wil- Grenadier Guards in review to | | | SEATTLE, WASH., WEDNESDAY JUNE 1 1910. HOME.6:30 P. M. THAT WAS A MAdE YEeTER! Sorveey The Red Flas lar With ghastly r interv iteration a red light flash at regu it s the als in the Mammoth rink lest night silent knell of some victim of tubérewlosis. Once every two and a half minutes it flashed, reeording the passing of it marked the ending the or some sufferer in the United States of and life, the end to of some some long enduring hope indifference of some n an sacrifice ignorance whe the ne to those ga lesson With aling the power of human speech it to uffering and ht pair deaths each coming to its appointed cc } a inevitable, certain as time; its ruddy beams car of the hacking cough and pictured the ! and ad whe It that another flashed was gone, and those t slipped from time knew ore dead,” it seemed to say, * | , ck quic a half the the kly ttle I the hands of the el spanned the ight sh with space of twe nute me out } hi its grewsome message f arnel great the It seemed as if Death himself pushed the button with a skeleton hand, flashing the signal of another nations langer t triumph, or a ¢ beacon to those who remained To those who sat under the accusing rays, the seconds swept by into minutes, swift as doom, and the red light flashed again, its death-bed tally; another dead; another heart stilled forever; somewhere hands cold with woe pressed down the lids on eyes that would see no more; somewhere choking sobs were ascending heavenward; a mother’s heart was breaking; a wife's soul black with despair; wide-eyed children were standing about. filled with instinctive dread; another dead of tuberculosis. AND AGAIN THE RED LIGHT FLASHED. up and Death claim tubercular holocaust land of the feverish, coughing body be that at this ing sheet is spre ad out in the mansion, the next flash tells The two and a half minutes were ed another victim for his else in this broac ours the last mewhere acts of life's tragedy was being enacted black curtain was falling; 8 and 1 me was cold ant the « It may for all time at of a death on a heap of rags in some dreary garret It that inexorable red light of thi berating ticks of some matters not. Imagination cannot keep pace with the mind cannot paint the detail It can only count, like the rever man-devouring clock, All day and all night the vast slaughter monster, “Another dead, another dead count goes on unceasing, with never a mo “Another dead, another dead That is what the red light told in the Mammoth rink h nt's respite, seen it fla last night. There were those present who had own in their homes; there was there a man milli who stood by helpless to keep out that red light or even dim its incarnadine effulgence; there wealth who live in fear that it will some day mark their were those of little passing ‘They were there, one and all, with a high hope and a firm resolve to widen the interval between the red light Today it flashes h tomorrow it will be three minutes, then five, and onec vo and a i flashes minutes, ome day the hours, and not the minutes, other death from tuberculosi will mark “An @ Polish Jew, hurled a heavy missile at — en dot htt 2 bomb had been thrown, cuirassiers and TACOMA, June 1—I. M. Bloom, ott the prince’s assailant. a pawnbroker aded guilty to a|= + pla ea and seriously wounded a policeman. It charge of extortion here today and Give Original Concert ‘nual manuserly neer B zine pot containing boiled beans. Although the |was fined $50 and costs, Mr®| 4. L.ogram of nine numbers, en-|0veninggat the Moyistor Wat hed when told of the nature of the weapon, Joatrice Harrington, of Seattle,) jlan oburch Thome wried from Attendants are stil) quaking in the knees. who pawned her watch with Bloom, | tirely original, was given by mem-|Sigurd’s meeting with Brunbilde t ng | ium was accompanying the prince at the time. was the complainant. She alleged)... of the seattle Center of the |“ Indian ballad. The work of thon 'Y Missed the Belgian monarch. Elerwelss that Bloom charged her 120 per looal sposers received flattering ne. cent interest on her loan, American Music society at the third |notice from the audience Buy SPEECH YOUR MOTHER SHE Mave © AKE THE SEATTLE AY, KILLED Ten-Year-Old Ellensburg | ,,, Boy Blown 15 Feet in| the Air in Explosion and lust of gold. Men tire of humdrum OF HOSPITAL |duily tasks and yearn for the wild Vetted Pree) |risks of the North, the risks that RG, June 1.—Playing | mark the trail to the yellow treas UNDER ARREST with his pockets full | ure | e Alfred Baldwin. 1¢ ‘rom to $50 a 7 Who of F 1 Baldwin « id " : bad cd nikon it a Anna M. Dickey, acting superin- harge of reclamation|watting inthe ground in abund.|tendent of Pacific hospital, by her titas, was biown 15 feet|ance? Who wouldn't take the |Sttormey appeared in police court eréay evening, and| ga With glcknews, death and|ti8 morning for failing to report if stakes? Count over |‘® the police that two men hurt in aldwin and his playmate, | ¢ Juhneons and the |#® automobile accident early Sun- Edmundson, found the | mall score of lucky Swede argo- 04 Sr had been received at near a Milwaukee con-|nauts of ten years ago who went | ‘he hospital amp. They carried it) North and made thelr pile. The warrant was first issued with them for several days, | Multiply their “pile twenty | #s@inst Mrs. Day, but it was found undson boy's mother|or hundred; run ds into She Was not in the city at the time. ed 1 She ordered the | thousands and-thousands into mil-| Mrs Dickey's artormey asked for « to throw the stuff away lions; tell of ir magnificent | time to plead. The case was set Instead of doing this, the young-| homes, their automobiles, all taken | fF next Tuesday sters hunted up a discarded stove.|out of the ground. And Iditarod) The Edmundson boy placed his| will be the same dynamite in 5: stove ootns| Hundreds Who Failed. | AFTER AN AIRSHIP a pehond.ehange, Aa teer ware aF1 There is never a word of the| i eo face as Bal hundreds and thousands who rush-/ (By United Press. ranging the fuse Jeune Bald fire|ed North and found no gold, who| — JOPLIN, Mo. June 1—When te the expleaives in hip poeké came back penniless and in debt,| Charles F. Willard started on The Aywamite. in the boy’s|OF Who never came ‘back. These} cross-country flight in hie aere- clothes and that in the stove ex./4fe never figured on when there! plane yesterday and failed to ploded almost simultaneously, and|!* ® rush, and Iditarod is no ex-| return, J. C. Mare ascended in soem Gaia win rieking with ter-| ception. | another aeroplane and went in ror, was thrown 15 fect in the air.|, Men who never h a blister on| search of the missing aviator, their hands talk glibly of the back-| marking the first aerial search- breaking trail; men wh: n't know | ing party in history. what hunger is are ly tempt Mars found Willard camping | starvation, men who wouldn't know | by his machine, six miles from pay dirt if it was pointed out t the aviation field. A stray rifle | them will move heaven and earth shot from a hunter's gun had | met to the place w e they may put| splintered his propeller. The |thelr txnorance account is| propeller was patched up and haracteristic of a gold rush; aj two hours er the spectators stampede for gold; a pante of greed.| saw both machines returning to king outs! ft th Five creeks have bi discovered, the aviation field. b toner morning a ere a ey ‘ rhage of the brain. | nto the City hospital, he] nd to be be 1 medical aid. | neclousness a SSeS dead man has been a « employe for some years ‘anc Before the eyes of a large crowd at Second av. and Yesler Way made a record for effi y this afternoon, Clarence Kistler, laborer, Idaho hotel, was dragged 15 three years he worked the a8-| feet, his clothes torn off and his back broken, when he tried to get aE Free aE” eneenteotonaa teen Way car. He was taken to the City hospital. His plants. In this line of work he had condition is serious. no superior, Fer many months he — : Deen OTRAS. For | Sony Young Cari Gittner, 12, ran away from his home two days ago r Case, In the recording =) taxing $160 which his stepfather, Christ Killen, saloon keeper, 3107 1 sah asoo Western av., had hidden under a mattr Wanted Outside Work | Truant Officer Ketchum found Cari with a playmate, Warren A few weeks ago he requested) Pittman, also one horse, one sadddle and $63.10 in money. They loounty Assessor Parish to place him| had spent the rest of the money on the horse and saddie, and the back on assessment work so that| time in riding gayly around the city. he could get outdoors, This wa P. M. Sloan, who sold the horse to the boys, and R. F. Gor lone. Only this morning he thanked | merly, who sold them the saddle, were also arrested for contribut- Parish for the favor H dhe ing to delinquency, which is punishable by a year in jail or a |was much better alread | heavy fine. Mr. Snyder was single and made | - a ee liciiaiieatiai ieee ind Gene t WASHED OVERBOARD, MARTIN STOCKER GRABS ROPE AND SWIMS 8 MILES TO DOCK lt OO tt) ® peeaees * - *\* Martin Stocker broke all long distance swimming records * *% POINDEXTER DINNER, %|% in the Sound yesterday morning. Martin swam eight miles, * ~ %|* but not because he wanted to. Today he is demanding are * * There will be a dexter #|)% bate on his ticket from Anacortes on the steamer Perdita * # gathering Saturday night in &|* Taken il! about daybreak, he left his berth, clad only in * x Allen Dale’s cafeteria, Second &|% his pajamas, and draped himself over the single rail of the * wand § a The regular ®|% lower deck, The Perdita isn't an immense ship, and when a * ® cafeter ner will be served, ®|® lusty wave came along, it washed Stocker overboard. He «* *® and the attend will pay *&|% grabbed a rope and held on all the way to Seattle. Every * |® for what t der, The dine *|*® time he yelled he shipped a quart of salt water, so he quit ® |® ner will be open to men and ®|*% yelling. He was discovered as the Perdita came in sight of * * women alike *|*% Seattle around West point lighthouse, * \* ** * [OR OR ORR ROR RR ROR ORR ROR OR ROE EF he-Death |PLAYS WITH DYNAMITE; ON TRAINS AND NEWS WFANDA be ONE CENT GOLD AUSH 1S OK LURE TO IDITAROD GHOWS WORLD WIDE Gold—The Magic Word Fires Imaginations in Every Camp in and Out of Christendom, and Scramble Begins to Get to New Diggings, Which Are Said to Rival Klondike in Richness. es SRT — IDITAROD! Fr the steam- ng the that it ie to be another Klondike with ac they are seven fortune within every man's grasp. r Enough for all | Any man who can tell of a letter " lex of pay Crt received concerning Iditarod is a And » I be more dis- hero; his words are ae precious as erie fickle fortune wil the gold he tells about. He may xmile on the man who is there be vague, indefinite; perhaps he Doubts Are Gettied. can give no satisfactory explana- tom: Gk coabla whe ane on Se © man whispers that he in- |acene are anxious for the rest of |“ to opens Lenk there: Taee ett all doubts The bank te al- the world toe come in and share the gold, but he can confirm the wiid- | "°° extetenen, Cane Se Se” est ho the most extravagant, # business in gold dust and # nine gets: every dreamer can see himself Already. Geattle ie feeling the| ™**ine deposits from his filled-to- thrill of this Iditarod madness, |PUrsting poke. The banking tine Steamship accommodations to the | ‘ures have n shipped:, they are north are snobtainable. Men with|% the way. North now—$360,000 bank accounts are bidding for a| "orth of fixtures—for = bank whese | place im the steerage. Freight is|"izture splendor cannot be matched | piling high on the wharves. All sid seis. eee se the complicated spontaneous ac-|_ Jit the very sound of it, the I tivitte fent to a gold rush are| YY look of it-—begets confidence in full swing. and hope. Whoever says that gold - is not there by the bucketful Mes; Tell Great Stories. there is gold and every one can get Pay runs from $5 to $50 a pan/ his fill of it if he can only get there. shallow gravel,” writes some | And get there he will. So the rush one whose words will travel far| is on The telegraph wires take ——---—_— em up; tomorrow they will be where they stir the heart with the