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Seattle Lots a lien. 82 1S Law fey Bids. 6298; Tek, it I Want ‘nalance RAST a, BOORR Ny an Rank Huilting Geet; Ind. Abed nRos, $1,250 just south of city | ie caeh. Wrinnce to ult Make se the Beautiful valor HANSON @ CO. it New York Hock Sacrifice et on otter on sess | view, ‘Grade & WLACKWoon, —2T-a-28 guerre ‘Mock of car, 30 minut: * enced, phen make your living Tac ter = PwALTY ty build you ase on Beacon With | et prite for lot and 16 ef house. jon BARGAIN — MISCELLANEOUS. | for staining. for sta jo * only erase | iGeor. leas trocn: top. Door prices We bare aniy one price. ual save the mid 28 20-2 a expres wagon 38-36 176%. Tracts, Room we Main $952 S19 and $21 Pine ot, oon, A 2 14-1 fer Feat; furniture tor| Anderson Supply Oe. 311 Phone wBirarncn se ir < Bo in Bast 7390 —11-19 ed for sate, phone | —t? ure sa97 a OR EXCHANGE. nn ertatcy trades “thtrefore can ex what you EXCHANGE, RE i 419 Cherry at. —tt | lot and | + he o te, (orniture aud Ati goods lore you soe them. 6, ‘Mam 461. ‘et OM. 28905 ina. s030 LIVESTOCK, * Manly Boarding Wired fee all” pa SALE—WoOD AND MONEY FOR ALAR Women keeping house, « mk butlding, = Main 2476 uF oF build houses oats Meld, Rta. Cla: sified Directcry. ATTORNEYS AT LAW SESE E EES EEE EEE REE ERE Walking the “ABSTRACTERS. — = Hanford Abeurmet Main 19 Capt. Robt. Peary’s boat int ANK OF COM- RCE. erent, Canada eenerel CLAIRVOYANTS. ~ DENTISTS. ® J. BROWN—I am ota “for bicyele reoairm c. 08 orthers Bank Bide. ne Main 4928 GOLD AND SILVER PLATING. h. 1WUGHE®, 219 Union st. Switches etitt om sale 618 Un HAT MAKERS. ee $209 Hate Kavanaugh. 16)? First —at disappointment, foe ct orate | lifetime bition +) Viectrie. steam ‘and ¥ location OSTEOPATHIC PHYS Aswortat tons. Mgneg. Kinevitie, Bk. Bide. th an PAINTERS. Painting. pegerbe: ki % Third —tt} PATENT ATTORNEY .. Adame & Dreoks remia stand. jorney r ne [pera Starr. Bova vioek. have go! PATTERNS AND MODELS. PHYSICIANS. ce (eat pointment eapense. (We soll | 1-1 Lomber Exch little. Dalton, skin Cierasce, 18h Aronde Dr Teeker, Union block. || PHOTOGRAPHER alone. etlone Workington Bidg,, 7 anything PRINTERS. BEI ot «a and Prints , Bindings and Printing jer Printing House, 105 Seneca. SHOE DEALERS. TS Never apy words or not mander if I was going to be any Sei Maan 598% ~Wieht ON, 1408 Wien av. eT See en ‘Transter, Moving & Mato * TRANSFER. COMPATIIES. ns towne’ 0 THE STAR—-WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1909. PEARY TURNED DOWN WHITE MAN, GAVE NEGRO A CHANCE Pathetic Story oof Daring Skipper Who Piloted the Boat for Explorer to the) Arctic. LEEPER eRe Ry PEARY'S FINE TRIBUTE TO BARTLETT. “When he (Capt. Bartlett) eft I felt for a moment pangs of regret aa he disappeared in the distance. My work was still ahead; not th the Bartlett had done good work, and had beegs@ great help to me. ee iteos had thrust the pioneering on him, inatead of dividing the brunt among severab as planned 1 bad given Bartlett position aud post of honor in command of my fourth and last supporting party, and for two reason: first, because of his magnificent handling the Roosevelt; second, canse he bet we annoyances on the tion.”—Commander Peary his story of his finting of the Pole i a ee ee Staff Special. SYDNEY, C. B, Sept streets of Sydney, tome | glum, dejected and heartbroken, ts Hartlett, commander of the Roosevelt, the man who took the teeth of the frozen Arctic ocean and then led the tramp northward to the 88th degree of latitude, 100 miles from the Pole. Here in Sydney, where everybody knows him, they would laugh you to scorn were you to say that thin big, broad-shouldered skipper, this sixfeetfour of husky bene and steel-apring muscle, had ever bowed hia head tn tears. will tell you himself, if you have is confidence, that he erled when ry turned him—thé last white back at $$ degrees north lati the Exkimos and Henson. “1 stood still In my tracks,” said the captain, “watching them out of sight over the ice. I cried a little, | guess. “Perhaps | may have gone a little crazy to think tha couldn't go, too. When | beg- ged the commander to let me come with him he finally sald that | might push on al so wild was my desire actually attempted it. “With nothing to ald or guide, with: provisions enough only fer a fow days, | turned my face towards the Pole and set out alone over the bieak fastnesses. | don't know how many miles | traveled thus, stumbling on, before my senses returned and | saw how fool- hardy my attempt and turned back.” It ts @ pathetic story, “1 guess I'l! have to go back,” nothing he replied. “There ie for me here. | am nat good enough for anything elee. The lure of the north Is in my blood and I've got to go back. “Man, you don’t know what tt is. You've got to go up there to under I knew the commander was going to get there. | never doubted it for a moment. If I had I wouldn't 1 would have got some job as a captain of a vessel where 1 could have earned much more. really didn't think I would have to go back until I had reached the th parallel. Then the commander said I must go back, that he had decided to take Matt Henson. “I—well, it was a bitter disap I got up while the reat were asleep early the next morn ing and started north alone. “I don't know; perhaps I cried a Perhaps | was just a little crazy then. 1 thought perhaps I could walk on the rest of the way It seemed so near. had come thousands of. miles, and it was only a little over « hundred ‘0 the Pole. ready ‘Take Blevator 204-6 People's Bank Bidg. Cor. Second Ay. and Pike, Wonderful val Tatlor-made Unca' verconts, Cravenet fine new hings, Hats, Ca Also Full D FVPEWRITERS AND 8UP Fox and other makes. Pagitic Type- writer & Supply Co, 323 MN. dd cheerfully stood eee eT Pe eee eee ee eee Yet the captain ‘Commander Peary figured five marches more, and it seemed ga it I could make it alono, even tf I didn’t have any dogs or food or I felt so strong I went along for five miles or so and then I came to my senses and knew I must go back, Forced to Turn Back. “They were up at the then and getting mind whether there were I told the com Money Saved Ladies’ Sample Shoes 83.50 (o 5.00 Shoom, 82.00 wh he ICAGO MASHER PAL 1400 WINNT AV. CAPT. ROBT. BARTLETT, COMMANDER OF THE ROOSEVELT, AND LAST WHITE MAN TO LEAVE PEARY. hindrance, and perhaps make a failure out of it, I would turn around and go back. He said I must go, #0 I had to do it. But my mind had been set on !t for so ong I had rather die than give it up then. When I started on the |back trafl, 1 couldn't belleve ft | wae really true at first, and | kind }of went In a daze. I can tell you every lead we crossed and just how far we went on every march and all about the tee on the trip up, but as I thought of ft afterward 1 could not remember anything about coming back until I got to the ab Back to the Aretic. “Then | heard of poor Marvin and almost envied him But that ee er ee THIRTEENTH CHILD | | Ung the Roosevelt through the tice. TAR DARED TO OO AlGHT, ONS DOCTOR Dr. Horsfall Commends Fight Made on a Fake ‘Medicine Game — War! Declared on Druggists. “The Star in the only paper in Beattie that had the nerve to refuse the revenue that would result from a contract with the Cooper aggregatian of grafters, and the publishers should be highly commended for the vigorous manner in which they handled the shame less impostors.” These were the words of Dr,| Frank L. Horsfall, in addressing | the Sociological club of the Firat | Presbyterian church last night, on “Patent Medicine War will be declared on unserup ulous druggists and patent médi cine takers by the club, as a re sult of last night's meeting and Dr.) Horsfall'’s address. Druggiats who sell patent medi cines with just enough nareotic in them to cause the frequent user to acquire the drug habit and drug: gists who violate the pharmacy law by compounding preseriptions with out an order from a physician will come under the ban, The legisla- tive committee of the club was in structed to take the necessary steps to bring the offenders to Justice Dr, Horsfall declared that at least one-half of the druggists in’) Seattle were criminals and that they violate the law repeatedly and with impunity, He said the hew medical law is a farce and a humbug and characterized the members of the legislature who fathered It, aa “an aggregation of brainless and pitiful imbectles who would disgrace Steilacoom.” The club decided to request the school board to appoint a physician got back and then I was busy get-jon the faculty of each high school In Seattle, in order that pupils may | “Now it all comes back to me|recetve instruction on the care of and there {# nothing for me here. 1 am not good for anything else One who has not been into the arctic does not know what it means. There ts a strange fascin ation that you cannot resist and it Just draws you back. | “lt cannot explain it. I just know it. I didm’t know that | was not going to the Pole until the last | moment. I thought this time that ‘at last I was going to get there, | and then the commander said | had to go back—-that he had decided to take Matt Henson instead of me. | am going back. I am going back }to the North Pole and I'll never die} distracted my mind until the boss | happy il L get to it” pe BN ED OF 13TH CHILD— FATHER SEVENTH SON OF SEVENTH SON (My Colied Prem) ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 29.—What will be the future of the thirteenth child of Judge Richard B, Russell? The baby boy was born yesterday, bination of facts, ls causing friends of the Russell family no little specu- | WRIGHT INA GREAT FEAT UP IN THE AIR (Conctuded.) the Hudson the great fleet of war- ships seemed to wave their fings | Curtiss, the eral prizes at the recent serial! jlation, The new baby is the thir- teenth child of a thirteenth child, the mother having been the young. est of a baker's dozen of brothers and sisters. In addition to that/ thie of |and already his future, because of astounding fact, the new scion of Capt. Bartlett; the story of a great|# wonderful and mysterious com. (the family ia the seventh son of a of the shattering of « daring, strong man's dream of He told of bis keen amp to have secompanted his commander when he struck and tn bis unconscious burst of con- fidence drew a dramatic pleture of halting in the frozen unknown, al most to the 88th parallel, and argu- ing, begging and almost quarreling with bis anperior to be allowed to fo to the end 1 asked the captain what he was going to do-—what were his plans for the futere. seventh son on hie father’s side of the house. probably make a longer flight later |pr the day. 8T. LOUIS, Sept. 29.—Glenn H. fator, who won sev- contests at Rheims, is to make four 6, 7, 8 and 9 For making these trips Curtiss will recetve $6,000, but bis contract does not ailow im recognition of thé supremacy of him to enter into any of the this new veasel that defies the principe of gravitation Dangerous Flight. It was a flight fraught with such | | danger as has been faced only by Bleriot in hin fight across the Engliah Channel, and the attempts of Latham to acoompliah that same feat: But the supremacy of Wright and the perfection of his craft were never thore clearly in evidence. He drove the machine at will and with deantiful, bird-like sweeps, he made a complete circle of the statue. Then, having accomplished his pur: pose, he turned the ship back to- ward Governors island and sailed swiftly to the point from which he had arisen and landed in the exact spot. A As the graceful craft dropped to the earth, the time was marked at 1:25. It was not until Wright had ‘eturned to earth that the crowd got back {ts full vocal power. There were cheers and applause as the white-winged ship made the circle wf the great statue, but most peo: ple who were witnessing the flight of man for the firat time were too much engrossed and too excited to «ive vent to their feelings Cheered by Crowds. But after the ship had returned lightly to the ground, the flight al, complete and crowning success, without a mishap and without a waver of uncertainty, the applause | burst forth if roars of approbation that undulated along the shores of the bay Ike rolling thunder Glenn H. Curtiss, the American aviator, also made a 12-minute test fight over Governors island this morning. The weather was ideal for serial navigation and the aviator will lowes two dollars do strictly work for price char; Combine My Jow prices, high-class work guarantecd, and have ma evening un Porking 10, and § p.m opie, Read my urday’s Kiar on "Modern | B a rt in, 8 Dentistry.” EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. ‘DANCE AT. 4 f CLEALDTMMLL IL" TO-NIGHT + AONISSIONAREE dental war, | | plane races which will be dur- ing Centennial week. . Knabenshue, Baldwin, Beachey and Bumbaugh are entered in the dirigible contests. ‘PRESERVE THE FAIR GROUNDS FOR PUBLIC The preserving of the exposition grounds for the permanent use of the public has been taken under} advisement by the public parks committee of the Chamber of Com-| merce, The committee has inquired of the exposition company whether they would be willing to execute a} $26,000 Indemnity bond to protect against loss in the wrecking of the| buildings. This the A-Y.P. man-| agement has agreed to do under| certain conditions, which will be! submitted at the next meeting of the unfversity regents. The steamer Buckman, which ‘was scheduled to sail for San Fran- claco yesterday, did not get away was Bion B. Whitney, one of the local steamboat inspectors. Vacant Lots Very Choice $6,500 60x128 on Prospect st., near Queen Anne &v., corner; su perd view of sound, moun- tains, lakes and city, One- third cash, $2,750 50x110, on 36th av,, overlook ing Lake Washington, Ma drona district ,#1,000 cash $2,100 4x110, Federal av. North Broadway district; $1,200 cash ASSESSMENTS PAID. E. W. Way & Co. BAILEY BUILDING. their bodies. PRESIDENT TAFT WILL. ARRIVE HERE ON TIME (Concluded.) and knowledge of the native tongues. Sent for Dr. Bourns. Just before the Philippine tnsur- rection ended, the late Secretary of State John Hay wanted accurate information as to nd conditions. Without @ moment's hesitation Gov- ernor General Taft recommended his “tentmate.” Dr. Bourna re mained on the islands until affect- ed with a tropical disease, which nearly cost him bis life. Dr. Bourns then retired from the army with the rank of major. BY ROBERT H. HAZARD. | Staff Correspondent United Press, With President Taft. NORTH YAKIMA, Sept. 29.~ “Bear meat ts better than croco- dile.” Prestdent Taft made this declaration after trying the former for the first time at a game dinner siven at Hayden Lake, near Spo- kane, by the business men of Spo- kane. “I am glad to testify that one's internal machinery 1s not as badly | Stirred up after a meal of cub bear exhibition fights here on October as it tw following a repast on the crocodile we have in the Philip- pines.” Mr. Taft ended his remarks with & declaration that he believed the “American sense of humor” to be the most valuable asset of our people. He agreed with Kipling, who said that “as long as we have that sense of humor the race will live.” Joke on Ballinger. On the return journey from Hay- den Lake to Spokane, which was made by electric train, Taft was accompanted by Gov, Brady of daho, Senator Jones of Washington, Secretary Ballinger, and a number of prominent business men and politicians of both Idaho and Wash- ington, A roar of laughter was rained until} 9 a. m. this morning. Sha! had a heavy cargo of freight and| many passengers, among whom! when a practi Joker in the party approached Secretary Ballinger and, with a spread eagle speech, present- ed him with a bouquet of flowers from “Chief Forester Pinchot.” The secretary was somewhat - flabber- gasted at first but entered Into the spirit of the thing and came back with a speech of thanks. President Taft arrived here at 5:50 a. m. and left at 1:45 this after- noon for Ellensburg. While here he was the guest of Senator Jones. His program included a motor ride about town, a reception and a speech. : At Seattle on Time, At Ellensburg this afternoon he will make a‘short stop and give an address. The school children will be given places of vantage to listen to the remarks of the presi- dent. Unless something unforeseen oc- ours President Taft will arrive with \his party at the King st. depot in Seattle exactly on time, 8:15 o'clock |this evening. President Taft ts |looking forward with a great deal of pleasure to his Seattle visit. He remembers the good time he had there when he was making his round the world trip. He made |seores of friends in the Exposition |City and has expressed the desire that he meet them all again, President Makes Protest. Orders have been sent ahead on the presidential itinerary to cut all programs to the bone, Mr. Taft the cheeky manner In which the local arrangement committees in the various cities he has visited have enlarged his labor by adding speeches, handshaking receptions and long automobile rides to his program. At Spokahe yesterday he voiced his protest at both the luncheon and the dinner because, he was jealled upon to speak after he had jbeen assured that he would not be oxy d to way anything The promise Is always exacted always given and always violated sald the president referring to the fv eal committees hay solves lo spare him Protest Ie no Joke. the luncheon etlor where lo pledged them DEMANDS POSSESSION OF BOUILLON'S OFFICE. when O'Brien, acting for Mayor Mil tried to foree him out of office Wrangling Continues. While the wrangling was still going on Mr. Boulllon recelved from Scott Calhoun, corporation counsel, an opinion as to whether he was within the law by retain ing his office. “| beg to advise you that, under the provisions of section 12, article 19, of the city char- ter," wrote Mr. Calhoun, “that it's your duty to retain posses sion of the office of superinten- dent of public utilities until your successor is appointed by the mayor, such appointment is approved by the council and a bond given by the new official, as required by law, and you can be held responsibie to the city under your official bond during such interim.” Mr. Boutllon read the opinion to his assistant, and then declared to him: “You are dismissed for insub- ordination.” : This being the second time he had been discharged in .an hour, O'Brien not at all surprised | by the action of his superior, He immediately rushed from Mr. Boutl- lon’s private office, seized the coun- ter book in the adjoining room and disappeared from the office, He took this book to prevent a record of his dismissal from being put in it. Mr. Bouillon says he has never) been offictally notified of his re moval. All he knows about it is what he has read In the newspapers and what he has heard. He holds that until he receives official noti¢e be t* still superintendent of pub- He utilities. It is expected that the city coun- cil tonight will confirm the mayor's hew appointment, so that Mr. Boutfl- jon will have to step down and out | do not wait upon the com- | ing of the man behind. patience has become exhausted over) tomorrow morning. JOWANNA AT ~ TRE FAIR a At the dinner he again voleed his} |disupproval with the arra ments} that forced him to talk after a day of many speeches. The gu | at the banquet thought the prest-| dont was joking, but there was no| "a - jest intended, In addition to send - ‘ Ing out orders that all speaking pro|9he Chews Her Quid and grams must be chopped, the presi H 4 dent has directed that the meals Says Nothing, but She nerved in his honor must be made Is About the Niftiest 4s simple as possible. All myster ‘ foun foreign dishes are to be elimin-| Animal Ever, ated, the desserts cut out and — the menus comprise dishes as digestible ts iv an possible Colantha — Fourth’s Johana! Indigestion is the bugbear that|Some lady cows would never live the president fears on this trip, if] under such a name. Not so with his digestive apparatus goes back|Jo. Jo is one of th on him, he knows that it will spell|of the A-Y-P. stock show. Her the end of the trip jspecialty is giving milk and but ter-—rather, “the makings” of but ter, Jo was responsible in one year for 28,000 pounds of milk and 1,248 pounds of butter Which is going Some and which stands un beaten. Jo is owned by W. J. Gil- lett of Rosendale, Wis, and is worth more than her weight in gold—golden butter Jo is not @ bit stuck up. She says (or she would say if she could talk that she is just a plain every- day Holstein animal. Of course Hid also way that the bluest blood courses through her aristocratic veins; that her ances tors came over on the Mayflower; that her father is a colonel and that her tnother belongs to the cow D. ALR However, she does not worry much about such material things and takes what s! ts as coming to her. She chews her cud just like any ordinary cow. In fact, Jo acts if she was just an ordinary cow. There are hundreds of just as fine looking Holsteins on exhibition—that is, Holsteins that are pretty nearly just as fine looking. Jo could not receive better care if she were the daughter of a Wall st. millionaire. She ts fed on the daintiest of cow dainties, pampered, petted. Her “room” is kept as spick and span as a railroad prest- dent's private car. Her bedding is changed a dozen times a day, and there Is always someone brushing and primping her up. And if she should happen to get a little cold there would be a dozen of the best doctors in town at her bedside as quick as automobiles could get them there. For Mr. Gillett would not part with Jo for any amount of money. “She is a member of the family,” he sald. INDERSON'S STORY 1S BELIED BY THE FACTS (Cenctuded.) conferred secretiy with some mem- ber of the board, but it is not true that he made an argument before | that body. My brother told me that the permit was rushed through quietly and quickly; that although he was present he did not know the permit had been granted until in- formed by the clerk. “That does not sound as if an argument had been made. After my brother received the permit on that same day Anderson came to me and -gave him a check for $150. REGING 10 (AY “Anderson told me when he made | the proposition to get the permit SOCIETY FOLK OUT IN SWELL| GOWNS FOR STUNTS THIS | MORNING. | As a prelude to the formal open- | ing of the fourth annual horse show, this evening, in national guard armory, Western av. and Virginia st., the directors gave an| {uformal exhibit of various classes | of prize winners this morning. Dur- ing the hour's performance the big | oval, 170x70 feet, was a scene of | Wife and action. - : The armory is profusely decor- ated with flags and green and white banners. A small number of soct- ety women, in striking morning costumes, cheered the exhibitors as they dashed around the ring. Miss Lillian O'Brien, of Portland, with the representative etitry from | that city, Miss Bernice Baker, of Tacoma, with Highland Gaines and Uarda, in tandem and singles, and | Mrs. Walter Fulton, of Seattle, with | the prize winning chestnut gelding, | were the center of attraction in this | morning's exhibit . | The classes shown this afternoon were the standard breds, three divt-/ sions of Shetlands, speedway horses, business horses, two gaited saddle horses, ladies’ saddle tan-| dems, ponies in harness, saddle} horses, high steppers, heavy har- ness horses, horses suitable for cav-| alry service, harness horses and | jumping horses. | that he wanted $150. “‘Is the permit worth that much to yout’ he asked. 1 replied that it was, but I was curious to know where the $150 was going. When he informed me that $100 of it was going to the board I wheeled around in my chair and asked: ‘Do you mean to tell me that you can bribe the board of public works for $1007 “Anderson quickly corrected him- self by saying that he was going to keep $50 and the remainder ‘would be used all right,’ but he didn’t want jit to be understood that he was going to bribe the board.” Mr. Roney said Anderson's offer to get the permit after the board had turned it down sounded so ab- surd that he at first declined to entertain it. Anderson insisted that he knew what he was talking about, so Roney told him to go ahead, never thinking that a cab driver could Influence the board. “I was so sure that Anderson was talking foolishly that I did not think it worth my time to be present’ when the application cdéme up for reconsideration again,” said Attorney Roney. “You could have knocked me over with a feather when my brother called me up and informed me that it had been granted. I am still wondering why the board ig- nored my argument, denied me the permit, and then gave it to a cab driver. To say the least, it was a strange proceeding. . i ELGIN MINUTES HE railroad user needs the same standard of time and timekeeper as_ the railroad runner. Trains Conductor's time and assenger’s time agree when th are taken from time- pieces bearing the watch-word Elgin G. M. WHEELER Model 12 Size 0% Bohtler Pendant Winding and Setting. Seventeen pam iby and papire ogy te! center wels. Compensat lance, | soring, with micrometric reguiator, A 0 temperature, tsochronism, three tent recoiling click and sell-locking sett) es damaskeened. ox ving inlaid wih gold Cased and timed | Gas af f factory. Open face and hunting cases In 3, $28 and up. In Botta Gold Gases: 83 sad a. Other Elgin models at other prices according to grade of movement and case, ao lels are sold by Jewelers every where, and are fully guaranteed, ELGIN NATIONAL WATCH COMPANY,