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Paes YW ane Bie Ryan, “The Mouse” Star Tells) Ready She Is to ‘Help Out who was a benefit ps nate — The thea company ‘of this comedy & y benefit ma MBut just (he 8a fenefit somerim wort ¢ " peliere hall tad ibe perto: € for time stax just that 0 Mew York the @ on Su p task that Is f ‘eho have you ¥ tmas! hov sip ook forward to Su Pasa complete rest. \W . go give that eve gomotimer we a the bene !!t aa be in W oth otre sat family of fit med to say that whe fo give the fire Mouse,” not 4 5 ¥ showed at fe Will all be Piite to help this brave giad to is will be in our work.” | tomorrow at the will without doubt benefit per dere, for the from at! yea Marie Doro, w at the Moore this pes specialty. Furris fthe Grand; Rima Bunting and Alleon May, of R wil each appear in a i arranged number The the Star, the/ are om wale at of! the! and at the leading dry! and the Savoy, Rut) Annex hotels. The cents for all seats : HIS POST, ‘Uatted Presa) L July 22-—Sir Robert takes te more than practically decided im the position of direc fol Chinese customs on Bealth. y Cire whieh | A-Y.-P, Staadium} ‘will provide all the fegular show. Can }, twelve cages, includ r Giraffes, hippo ‘Men, snake charmers o78, two chariots, and pats and wpecta| features ‘ ts preparing Iron man to bite aad lion heads and skins beasts of the mention several han- “props. tthe burlesque and nov. on by the focal a let of profes engaged, and will farnish a lot of Nothing so elab- has been plan- fair opened. BLAME ON PAL. By Dniter Prows) i, July 22—John Mo Jorgenson, log- tn jail here, ac . an alleged being the man! ited the rob} postoffice Jast and Ferguson ‘the former wld the HED TAOOPS 10 (By United Press.) UTON, July 2%.—Sever.| M0 It was announced y mt that the Y, tt part at Fort Law.) Would leave for the| ten tate this summer, and } te troops now in the take their pla A number of pro- Asalgning colored sol-\ ile post have been Ley the department, and B Ras been made to have Meetinded, However. it vate fepartment today ens 80 far advanced y the rescinding of for G. A. A. ) July ° Grand Army} Mhcanipment to be| whip Will be a liv Of 1,248 children! oat this number 544) Fed, 480 in white One ly 22.—Orfi-| & rupture Bolivia and bile, and all have Peon ! Swill give our best efforts | '™ | ane local scenic art call for three! { FORT LAWTON suse jerked into place with a 1 Gatdel }has SAGRED CHINESE PEALADY BILL SYKES, CINCINNATI, Oblo, July 2% revival of 1 ¢ tragic Who K bin?” is being stag i-famed Cineinnatl Zoo, Aa a result of damaging evide found fier a search, BIN Syke » Mari ked up on a double h arged with the kill 4, the beautiful sa saben. of converse © days--this blooded killing of Cleopatra pt. Sol. Stephan, started an offictal and who understands animal couldn't find the guilty bird cause Till Sykes is the soo bully, other birds were afraid to le tople when he investigation talk, Ne tell. Two days ago all that was mor tal of Cleopatra was found in her | esc re ee MURDERER, There , id Bt Sykea, together with t rdstains On thie evidence Bill was jatied. and ts kept on a diet of four her a bucket of water dally plore ring an Th night of the tragedy, ioks were b patra’s cage und berry tree 4 towering hack Dick, an duck, and Pat patra how they feared Bill Byk 1 think when thie om nee to trial Stephan, “Hill's will be ity, I've noticed lately that hasn't been acting right The food-pouch under his bill has shrunk like @ punetured balloon, African insas which shows he wasn't taking any | thought for the future.” a eee POSTMASTER RUSSELL GETS A BIGGER JOB THAN HE HAD PLANNED FOR .« - Mr. Russell was busy all day long; turning down applicants for the pea But butchers’ Jobs for the Bike ear-| nival at the A-Y-P, B They came) and all ages, each and every one looking for an easy graft out at the fair grounds, till finally the post- master got exasperated and told | the clerk to shut the door and lock ft. It was only then that be got rid of the heterogeneous crowd | which had besieged his office since the early dawn of the day after! the notice appeared that there were venders. | ALS GIRGIIS to be given away for peanut | dollar a rook Little boys of 10 years olf came | sounds easy, an Ay take it!” in bunches, and when Patrolman Bergstrom asked them if they had) «| got a fob at the fair they were mad- the management/der than ff somebody had swiped) piped a small voice their best alley. TWO HAE | CLOSE. CAL UP AND DOWN IN RUNAWAY ELEVATOR IN PIONEER BLOCK. Frank Powers and Leroy H. Cas to narrowly escaped death last night when a runaway elevator in the Pioneer building, at First ay. and James «t., dropped from the reot to the seeond story before the safety clutches checked Its terrific speed. Asid ‘om a few seratches and bruises neither passenger was injured. Casto entered the elevator at the first floor shortly after 5:30 o'clock last night Powers, the operator, started the car upward. The elevator immediately gained fast headway and continued wntil it struck a steel beam at the roof, With a crash the cables support ing the elevator snapped like straws and the car shot downward Hike a bullet. Casto threw himself in a corner waiting for the crash he knew must follow when the car stryek the basement floor, The whizzing elevator had just passed the safety the second floor when shock, Wiille land, 16 years old, was waiting for the ele- vator at the fifth foor and narrow ly exeaped being struck by one of the flying cables. Powers was se verely shaken bp and was taken to the Seattle General hospital, It fs not believed that he is seriously Injured. FB. C. Baird, manager of the build ing, is at a lows to explain the ac cident exeept that Powers failed to have the controlling lever properly adjunted. BRIEFS BY WIRE i@aho.—Harry Orchard baptized at the pent the Seventh Day Adven- z BOISE, been tary by tieta WHITE PLAINS, N. ¥.—-In a 20. page booklet iasued by Mrs William Thaw, prosecutors and in aanity experts in the case of Harry Thaw are bitterly seored DULUTH, Minn—Duluth was flooded again Iaat night, the second time in 24 howrs, The damage may reach $1,000; Nearly three inches of ral fell in an hour and a half . WABHINGTQN. ~ The revenue cutter Tahortaon tte long cruise Juat the same the postmaster was the maddest of the lot. Postmaster Russell is somewhat peeved. Why? Oh, because. “la the postmaster in?” asked a spent a year's leave | 10 twos and threes, and they came | ragged individual on Monday more Bngland, the first va-| singly, and they came of both sexes | ing “Yes,” aald the urbane clork Deo you want to see him? “That's what | came tn for,” said the RI “What name, please?” “Pat Delaney, and tell him that I'm after one of Whose peanut buteb er's jobs at fifteen per.” Next. My name fa Oscar Oleson, and Ay vant @ peanut yob at fifteen Ay ban vorkin’ on de raliroad, but that peanat yob “Can | see Mr. Russell? I wolked de graft wut sellin scores o' times, an’ 'm a hustle over the ed, of the counter, ENGLISH DEMAND “PLIMSOLL” LINE ON ALL SHIP® AT BRITISH PORT, The collector of customs at Port Townsend has received an Intima ton from the bureau of navigation, department of commerce and labor, lof the United States government, to the effect that on and after October 1 next every vessel of the United Staten trading to United Kingdom will be ob marked with the load line accord. ing to the British regulations. The letter further states that the regulations can most probably be found at the office of the British consul, and requests that the mat- ter be brought to the notice of the owners and masters of vessels in this district. The interesting part about this fntimation is the fact that It relates to what is Known to seafarers as the “Plimsoll mark,” | which ls a mark placed on all Arit- lah bottoms indicating exactly to what potnt they can be loaded, Bo far as it relates to United States vensele {t will not have much effect, since there are so few of them —— = to Port Townsend, Wash, baa ar rived at Yokohama. The Tahoma will proceed to the Island of Attu, in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, and thence to its station on sound. ST. LOUI6.—Several shots wore exchanged by 8. Selig, president of the Savings Trust company, and M Dawson, who, with a revolver, you terday afternoon had demanded and recetved $366 whieh he claimed to be the amount of his deposlt. LONDON.—Emaciated and hard ly able to walk an the result of thor refusal to eat while in prison, six suffragettes were relean today Six were released yeasterd and but two remain fn jail KENOSHA, Wis.—-Two men were wounded today in a riot participat od in by striking employes of the Allen tannery and nonunion mon whom the strikers were attempting to prevent from going to work SACRAMENTO. While Gov Gillett dontos that he has ever stated that he would not be a candl date for return to the gubernatoral chair and declares It Is entirely too early to begin to talk about candi. Secretary of a Charles F. ee has now come out with a formal announcement of his candl dacy for governor at the next elec ard from Cleo | spur-winged | the widower of Cleo | both told In bird language} PCE A RN EM FOREIGN VESSELS MUST BE MARKED THE STAR BOY BECOMES. HUMAN TORCH RUSHES DOWN STREET WITH HIS CLOTHING A MAGS OF FLAMES. ld Hverett RI ernoon ran down the} house with his cloth | little yesterday treet ne ing @ ma He had boon p 1 bround a bon fire with other ehildren and had | tripped and iallen Into the fire, Be | fore he could extricate himsel his } r a lothes were burning flor causing him exeructat jing paln, Not knowing what to do he turned and ran down bill aw funt au hie lit loge would carry bim He soon met two mon in a delivery wagon and they quickly wrapped the boy In a blanket, thus extiy wulshing the frat just in the nlek| A. D. Kidd, BB. Grant and Nason attended the youth, and although hia burns are xtrem ly painful they will not result sert sel wat the son of W. R ne an ormpl of the park board, and he Hved with them at NOTED BRITISH ARMY OFFICERS COME T0 SEATTLE FOR FAIR HERO OF THE GOER WAR HERE WITH PARTY FROM | CANADA, | Gen, W. D. Otter, ebief of staff | jof the Mrittsh army in Canada, ar Hing in company ot noted officers, and will d by friends and fellow « his stay here Otter la one of the best known army men fn this country jhaving been in active service Joring hin first war sory ing the Fenian ratd at that He afterwards served durtng ince | the Riel rebellion and led the march | of $00 miles to the rellet of Battle | lford, which wae beeeiged by In dians, This march has gone down | In history as one of the events that turned the war and broke the back | of the Indian uprising Gen, Otter served In the Boor war) and won hie C. B during the turbo lent time in South Africa. With Gen. Otter are Col, RW. | Rutherford, who served with Gen. Otter in the Riel rebellion and also in South Africa; Maj. ©. Beunett,| who le the prowd enviable record during war, and Capt. Bruce May, of India, NO MORE SMOKE IN CASCADE TUNNEL The last steam engine has passed through the Cascade tunnel according to the statement of M. J. Costello, assistant traffic manager | ot the Great Northern. Today the} new electric motors were run reg: | ularly and from henceforth they will constitute the entire motive wer of the Great Northern hrough the tunnel, ‘That Would Fix Him, Blin What would you do if you etually found a mah under your ; | ele-—T'a drop my hat on him Newark Mar 2 — | Which Trade to the United Kingdom. | But the fot that this mark bas jseved the lives of countless satiors iis of vital interest and how it came to be placed on vensels is also his | torically worth while, | Piimaofl was @ coal dealer who was born in Bristol tn the early part of the last century. Through ‘hie business he had a great deal do with shipping, and consequently (became interested in sailors, And this to such an extent that he found that many lost their lives through the tneuring of overlouded sbi | which were Intended to be lost. To jremedy this species ot wholesale murder ho became a member of parliament and {n the year 1876 brought about the age of the merchant shipping act, which made {t iegal for any ship to go to sea } with her “Plimsoll ttn to be called, under U act effectually put a stop to the overloading of vessels of the mer. chant marine, and has been the neans of saving many a sailor's life. When an engaged mir) gots mad at her Intended, she begine to fidget with her engagement ring, an If ahe were going to take It off, and tram- | ple it under foot.—Atohison Globe. —— se =e tion. would not He cjaiins Gillett said he be a candidate, SAN FRANCISCO.--Tho dopart- ure of Andrew Christeson, general manager of the San Francisco do- partment of the Wells-Fargo Bx press company, for the City of Mex jico has led to the circulation of a }report that B®. H. Harriman has ar }ranged a morger of the expreas busines# of the Diaz republic with the companies he controls in this country WASHINGTON--In addition to a three days’ visit to San Fran. olsco, President Taft probably will vielt the University of California at Berkeley, Stanford university, Oakland and Alameda, during his California sojourn, MONTREAL.—Prof. George H, Howlson, for many years head of the department of philosophy at the University of Caltfornia, and author of several widely known treatises on philosophy and psychology, ts dangerously i WILL STUDY BANITATION, The members of the department of health and sanitation are or ganizing to buy a Hbrary of books on sanitary science. They are also planning to publish a paper on san- {tation. THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1909. ne ern ee a en ‘BILL SYKES, HE MURDERED THE Wrrnmay George Washington Richest Man of His Time George Washington was ona of the richest. men of his time, He became wealthy by the pur« chase of real estate, As a young man he surveyed hundreds of miles of rich virgin the mountains to the the Atlantie seaboard, and, knowing that soil across westward from this country could not Increase its acreage, but must increase its population, he purchased land, meant increased land value of After purchasing land, he could not help it, Why Don’t You Make Money by Doing Likewise? Are you so dumb that you cannot see that the population of Washington, and especially Seattle and vicinity, must con- tinue to increase by leaps and bounds? Don't you believe five years from now there will be more people across Lake Washing- ton than now? Then You Must Believe in Summit Acres at $250 Per Half-Acre Tract as increased population course, he became rich, ., a Summit Acres at $250 Per Half-Acre Tract Lying just 100 rod lake, just soutl just will be the owner wants to quit turn his pro bearing the twi will w He Says: You Can Buy a Tract (One-Half Acre) of My Land for $250 $10 cash, $10 per month until half is paid, then you can have 99 years, if you desire, on the balance. opposite worth a great pert nto it mortgage ht of Seems to me that more young folks in Seattle ought to buy land now when it is cheap. When Seattle has half a million people Summit Acres certainly will be worth $1,000 at least. Come in and see us, or if you are too busy, mail us $10 and we will pick you out a tract as conscientiously as if we were picking for ourselves. OLE HANSON & CO. 314, 315, 316, 317 New York Block $1.50 Boys’ Wash Sutte fn pretty atyles; large assortment $2.00 Boy#’ Wash Suita In splendid materials; late styles; now, $2.60 Sulta, double-breasted, wo cassimore; sale price $4.00 Suits, sailor patterns and $5.00 Suits, In fancy worsteds; well-lined and finished This number goes for ..seeeeeeee 1317-1319 FIRST AVE. Business - Bringing Bargains Pack the Great Western Clothing Co. to the doors. Our Dollar Saving Sale is the most successful that we have ever held during our long establishment in Seattle. Main 8629 Independent 3928 NEVER WERE PRICES SO LOW. ¥ the cutting including 57c 13¢ Russian blouse; fine raaterisie, 92199 $7.60 guita, in fancy worsteds and velour, two patra of trouhers, knickerbocker and plain, $4.82 AND YOUNG MEN $8.00 Suits, fine tweeds and wor steds; sale price 4,25 $12.00 Suits, In variety of styles tn worsteds and tweeds; sale price .... $6.25 $12.00 to $15.00 Suits, in stripes and checks; all sixes; sale price $7.65 $15.00 to $18.00 Suits, in fashion- abje atylos of talloring; sale price ..... teeeeeee $8.45 $20.00 and $26.00 Suits, hand-made garments, and all styles and fab- rica; BAIO PHlO® ceevereees $10.15 GREAT WESTERN CLOTHING CO. Opposite Arcade Annex Clothing, Shoes, Furnishings and Hats FOR MEN, YOUNG MEN AND CHILDREN. This great stock that is being given the public practically at their own price was bought from the defunct Crescent Clothing Co. of Portland, and Seattle people are reaping the benefit. HERE ARE A FEW PRICES CLOTHING {SUITS FOR MEN FOR THE CHILDREN SUMMER SHOES For Men, Women and Children $2.50 Women's Shoes, in dongola and viel kid, blucher or plain; $1 23 ' sale price .... 2.50 Misses’ Shoos, fn low or high cut, in tans or black; now by at... ‘ . ‘ $2.00 and $2.50 Boys’ Shoes, in extra box calf, solid leather inner sole; guaranteed, These shoes are packed with a baseball for the boys; 1 43 sale price ass es ' 2.50 Men's Box Calf Shoes, well made in évery particular; 48 sale price : sees $1 ' $8.60 Men's Shoes, in buckle oxfords, in ta or black; $2 19 & splondid shoe, now eens ' $3.50 to $4.00 Women’s Shoes in extra fine —— welt, blucher or plain, tan or jack; BAlO PrlO® oc eeseeee Soveeveeess $2.33 1317-1319 FIRST AVE.