At the peace conference in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the representatives of Russia and Japan agreed to a ceasefire to become operative immediately upon signing of a peace treaty.[3]
The British Imperial Army Council announced that it would provide free fortifications to the Dominion of Canada to protect the province of Nova Scotia, and that supplies, ammunition and small arms would be provided at cost.[3]
Navy Secretary Bonaparte announced that he would court-martial the commander of the USS Bennington and an ensign for charges arising from the deadly boiler explosion.[3]
A powerful gale on Lake Superior in North America sank several ships, killing at least 35 people including the 19 crew of the steamer Iosco and the ship Olive Jeanette.[5]
France sent an ultimatum to the Sultan of Morocco demanding an apology and indemnity for the August 22 arrest of a French Algerian merchant.[3]
A cause of action began that would lead to the landmark 1908 U.S. Supreme Court decision of Muller v. Oregon when Mrs. Elmer Gotcher, an employee of the Grand Laundry in Portland, Oregon (owned by Curt Muller), was told by foreman Joe Haselbock that she would have to continue working beyond the 10-hour shift that she had spent already. Mrs. Gotcher complained, and Muller was charged with a violation of a 1903 Oregon law that set a maximum work day of 10 hours for female employees of factories and laundries, though the law did not apply to male employees. The Supreme Court ruling set would a precedent that laws that applied separately by gender were not violative of Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.[7]
The patent application for the cotton candy machine was filed by Albert D. Robinson of Lynn, Massachusetts submitted his patent for "Controlling an Electric Candy-Spinning Machine", making the creation of cotton candy (also called "candy floss") safe and practical, with a design that would be used more than a century later. Robinson would be granted U.S. Patent No. 856,424 on June 11, 1907.[11]
Died: Thomas Menees, 82, American physician who served in the Confederate States Congress during the American Civil War, later the dean of the Vanderbilt University college of medicine
The 7.2 magnitude Calabria earthquake, rated extreme on the Mercalli intensity scale level XI, struck southern Italy and killed at least 557 people, and perhaps as many as 2,500. The quake destroyed 18 villages outside of the city of Calabria as well as causing hundreds of deaths in Calabria itself.[13]
Denmark-born Oscar Nelson, better known as "Battling Nelson", won the world lightweight boxing championship in a 45-round fight against titleholder Jimmy Britt, held at the Mission Street Arena in the San Francisco suburb of Colma.[15] Nelson, who had lost to Britt on December 20, 1904, knocked Britt out in the 18th round to win a purse of $18,841. Films of the fight were made by the Miles Brothers Company, and the event was replayed to paying viewers at movie theaters across North America.[16]
An gunpowder explosion killed 19 employees of the Rand Powder Mills in Fairchance, Pennsylvania, and seriously injured nine others.[17]
Twelve passengers on an elevated rail car in New York City were killed, and more than 40 injured, when the train car fell to the street because of the wrong setting of a switch on the tracks.[3]
The execution of a Polish Socialist leader led to a general strike in Warsaw in the Russian-controlled Congress Poland[3]
Emperor Franz Josef of Austria-Hungary rejected the Hungarian Assembly's proposal for women suffrage.[3]
The railway bridge over the Zambezi River was formally opened in southern Africa, reducing the travel time for trains on the Capetown to Cairo Railway.[3]
In Helsinki, at the time part of the Russian-ruled Grand Duchy of Finland, Imperial Army troops with bayonets forcibly broke up the meeting of 800 delegates who had gathered from towns across the Duchy to discuss independence.[19]
Died: René Goblet, 76, Prime Minister of France 1886 to 1887
After a meeting of Finnish representatives at Helsingfors, threats were made to kill the Russian Governor-General of Finland.[3]
The Prime Minister of Hungary and his cabinet of ministers resigned.[3]
Died: Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza, 53, Italian-born French explorer for whom the Republic of Congo's capital, Brazzaville, was named, died of a tropical illness contracted during his Mission Extraordinaire
As part of the armistice in the Russo-Japanese War, Japan's Marshal Oyama and Russia's General Linevich agreed to set up a demilitarized zone 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) wide between the positions of the two armies.[3]
A joint announcement was made at Karlstad by the commissioners of Sweden and Norway to assure citizens in the Union that there would be no war between the two countries after separation.[3]
Several ministers of the Korean Empire agreed to allow Japan to control its foreign relations, with the Japanese Foreign Office having an official in Seoul.[20]
The earliest recorded use of the name "All Blacks" for the New Zealand national rugby union team came the day after New Zealand's touring team defeated Devon, 55 to 4, at the opening match of the tour in Exeter. A reporter for the Exeter newspaper Express & Echo wrote that the name referred to the team's all black uniforms, commenting that "The All Blacks, as they are styled by reason of their sable and unrelieved costume, were under the guidance of their captain (Mr Gallaher), and their fine physique favorably impressed the spectators."
Arsenio Cruz Herrera, the first Mayor of Manila, resigned his post after repeated disagreements with the U.S. Governor-General, Luke Wright. Cruz had served more than four years, starting when the position was created in 1901 to provide for Filipino governance of the capital of the Philippine Islands. He was succeeded by Felix Roxas.[21]
Born:
Greta Garbo, Swedish film actress (stage name for Greta Lovisa Gustafsson); in Stockholm (d. 1990)
Stage magician and escape artistHarry Houdini, and a challenger who styled himself as "Jacques Boudini", participated in a challenge to see which person could get free first from handcuffs, chains and leg irons while underwater. Both men jumped from a tugboat at the same time into the Hudson River at New York City's Battery Park. Houdini escaped his handcuffs in 70 seconds and freed his feet 90 seconds later, while Boudini struggled beneath the surface before being rescued.[22][23]
On the Philippine island of Palawan, almost 100 prisoners were able to break out of the brutal Iwahig Penal Colony, with 33 escaping to freedom. Most of the 33 would either be killed or recaptured by a contingent of the Philippine Scouts stationed at Puerto Princesa.[24]
Died:
Adolf Hedin, 71, Swedish newspaper publisher and the oldest member of the Riksdag, with 35 years of service
The Italian town of Sutena in Italy was buried in an avalanche caused by sulphur mining operations on Mount San Paolino.[25]
The government of Russia announced that the ban against public meetings would be lifted, in order to allow campaigning for elections for the Duma.[25]
In the antitrust criminal case against the Chicago meatpackers, four officials of the Schwartzchild & Sulzberger Company pled guilty to charges of conspiracy to accept railroad kickbacks.[25]
At Karlstad, the Swedish and Norwegian delegates reached a complete agreement on dissolution of the Union of Sweden and Norway. The agreement was published on September 25 in both Stockholm and Christiana (now Oslo)[25]
In voting in Cuba, President Palma was re-elected and his Moderate party received a majority in the Cuban Congress.[25]
Coalition leaders in Hungary rejected the ultimatum sent to them by the Emperor/King of Austria-Hungary.[25]
Representatives of the warring Armenians and Tatars signed a peace treaty at Baku, moderated by Prince Louis Napoleon, Governor-General of the Caucasian Governorate.[25]
Born: Severo Ochoa, Spanish–American biochemist, 1959 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine laureate for his co-discovery with Arthur Kornberg for the mechanisms of DNA (d. 1993)
The meeting of a political congress of 300 delegates from all parts of the Russian Empire was held in a large private house in Moscow, with the consent of the government.[25]
Health commissioners of Mississippi and Tennessee agreed to waive quarantine requirements against persons who were traveling back from Louisiana. The change was made after President Roosevelt announced his plan to visit New Orleans and then to come back through the neighboring states.[25]
Died: Godefroy Cavaignac, 52, French Minister of War who discovered evidence that Captain Alfred Dreyfus had been framed, but continued the prosecution anyway
Germany and France reached an agreement setting out their spheres of influence in Morocco.[25]
The six great powers notified the Ottoman Empire that they would assume financial control and jurisdiction over Macedonia and that the decision was inalterable.[25] The Ottoman's entered their formal protest on October 2.
The British Empire and the Chinese Empire announced that they had agreed to the basic terms for a treaty regarding the status of Tibet.[25]
The United Kingdom announced the terms of its military alliance with Japan.[25]
Born:
Juliana Koo, Chinese-American diplomat and supercentenarian who lived to age 111; in Tianjin (d. 2017)
Albert Einstein submitted his paper "Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?" for publication, putting forward the idea of mass–energy equivalence and introducing the equation E = mc2. The paper would be published on November 21.
Died: Wheeler H. Peckham, 72, American lawyer whose 1894 appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court was rejected by the U.S. Senate
Nevill Francis Mott, English physicist and 1977 Nobel Prize laureate for his work on the electronic structure of amorphous semiconductors; in Leeds (d. 1996)
Savitri Devi, French-born Greek writer, National Socialist philosopher and spy; in Lyon (d. 1982)
^William Kalush and Larry Sloman, The Secret Life of Houdini: The Making of America's First Superhero (Simon & Schuster, 2008)
^"'The Prison That Makes Men Free': The Iwahig Penal Colony and the Simulacra of the American State of the Philippines", by Michael Salman, in Colonial Crucible: Empire in the Making of the Modern American State (University of Wisconsin Press, 2009) p. 117
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrsThe American Monthly Review of Reviews (November 1905) pp. 540-543