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Te DEAD THE MIN Roslyn Mine in Hopes Others. No. in ” Xplosion occurre d Pumpman John X Be alive, but his body y. The Tomach are still iy entered the mine, ping plant stationed fist opposite burned. He instantly w where They the must Sot within 500 bodies of Porar We, and were back. The search by use of oxy. and H. M. Wolt, of les geological sur ber of the rescue ny that operates hased a number and will drift! men MINED 1N of Commerce won in its suit to enjoin fom completing the pur- @ McElroy lots for stable y when Judge @ temporary injune- ber contends that no right to contract to build the stable ted the plans for @ council agreed to buy the corner of Eighth er st. from James F. ther for $96,000. McElroy the barn. TION 10 HAVE (AL CONCERT the A-Y.-P. expo- become a memery iy fixed for the ig show, the diree- for a post-ex- y. October be open to those yy an admission fee gee the exhibitors Children wilt Weents. The post- 7 May extend over ‘Mx weeks, or as long ‘anything of interest to > | | j bodies | SARA ARR Ree . . * * * * le i* \* \* * * * * * Jones Taken) “DADDY OF "EM ALL” TELLS HOW TO BY JOHN HENRY THIRY Tm 87 years old and a few days ax 1 became a fathe If you ask me how I have kept my health, 1 am, at a ca ‘s answe Perhaps it was my motto that [ have faithfully fol lowed for the last 20 y *—since I was 66 years old My motto ts Use, but do not abuse Refore my 66th year I couldn't get cigars too atrong—1 have smoked 65 years. I drank whisky and Wine could never be served too strong 1 took everything 1 wanted and af much as I wanted, Fut within the last 20 years I have become moderate 1 amoke several cigars every day, but I have them made espectally for me and allow them to dry for three months before smoking theme I pour water in my wine, ar whisky before I go to bed at night E have warm into ft. How am | #0 healthy and strong and young at 87? the nearest true anawer of all is that | have kept all my life and have never allowe: So | am young. The ih hee eee eee eee eee ee ee BY W. G. SHEPHERD. (The Star's New York Correspondent.) “At eventide it shall be Hight." The Bible. 9. old th LONG ISLAND CITY, N, ¥., Oct John Henry Thiry ts 87 years a, but on September 4 he became @ father of a bouncing baby boy He wasn't as much surprided as were scientists, who have since been pestering him for facts re garding his manner of living. Two years ago, when he was 85, he had become the father of a fine little with a three- OFFICER WOUNDED IN who was wounded yesterday pl wy LOT DEAL PAPA BRYAN DENIES DMUGATER IS TD RUN FOR SEAT IN CONGRESS {My United Press) LIVINGSTONE, Mont. Oct. 9.—Wm. J. Bryan, en route for Seattle, today denied that his daughter, Mra. Ruth Bryan Leavitt, intends to run for con- gress on the democratic ticket in Colorado. He expressed great indignation at the news paper reports, and said that the newspapers have always mis represented him. He refused to discuss his controversy with Senator Bailey of Texas regard- ing the tariff. ~—— FIGHT WITH BANQ)T (My Volted Prem) SAN BERNARDINO, Cal, Oct. 9 Deputy Sheritl Chartes T. Ritchie. in a the Ptute and Sheriff itched battle between tirderer, Billy Boy. Ralph's poase, was brought to this etty this afternoon. ous condition for lack attention. The Indian tratiers, Se. who a gunde Chin were report LK WHEN DOHORTEN to Keep the Winter Time Dealers—Eggs ‘That's mitk ions, are raising So far, it has milk. have be Bre selling at pay 5 cents more co that bread and all Mh be higher B fresh loaves o i's bread remains in the fall, It keep a herd in the Say, and butter is Winter, so they argue be higher. , of the new announced today that ir ORES Were stil! sell Senis Wholesale on West Morning. stented TIME THE. Ps MMED WISCONSIN wkd sore was 4 the Wisconsir with the present Deafness Cure lable offer by one of it wpwcla Who will » West-| to $ tickets for a dol-| gent, ENGLISH COME TO THIS Famous Julia Pankhurst Is He is in a sert- ot medical and Jack Hyde J to have been wound. to Visit United States on an Official Tour and Will Lecture. (iy United Brews.) LONDON, Oct. 9-——Mra, Julia | Pankhurst, president of the English ffragets, will sail October 13 for America, to leeture. She says the American t interest could be aroused. “She " says Mra. Pankhurst, “Intelll- independent and original, but selling |so long as her husband gives her 19 | plenty of money and doesn't Inter. T |fere with her pleasures, she will let [him do the voting.” | | bu | tle li an oa | se } th: | ar yo syn ney Japan on Cet. 15, ae ys arrange | that Pank MMA Bt the old price at|a hoarse-volced, masculine woman who affects mannish |who dresses in the |would regard her as the, last wom Hlishmen regarded it as a joke Mrs. Pankhurst wishes it under. milk is an in| stood that she will be positively the Bakers first simon-pure English suffraget { bread jto visit America on an official lec Row sell five for @)taring tour “One or two English women vis ix loaves for @|ited the United States and lectured, t their visite were not author- Gying off? Not that |ized by the union, They made the of, hut the season|mistake of waying it's the style to) American women were _apinoless janid didn’t want fo vote believe any one can judge @ coun- try and ite people in a day,” pabliely 1 do not Dre in the Mode. People who have never seen Mrs st have a mental picture o' collars and es, short skirts and heavy shoes The picture is Wide of the truth he in a slender, fragile woman, mode, One n to slug a policeman.” She has luted a dozen with vigor and has rved two jail sentences: When the movement started Eng Now ey admit it is a national peril The riots have been humorous. ihe University | ot content with breaking win en n iiase, ‘fme dows and painting “Votes for Meieeeating th ¢ Japanese| women” on public walls, the suf 6 the Waseda unl-|fragets are breaking heads If you pay your fare tn a street sa%s Mrs, Pankhurst, “and © annoyed by & man standing on yur toes, you may use necessary cays to make the man realize he trespassing. You first remonstrate. We told the prime We did minister Money Saved Ladies’ Sample Shoes woman’ all over the clty./ would make the ideal sufffaget if that } Trt STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1yu9. HOW GRANDPA STARTED NEW FAMILY AND -IS DADDY AGAIN AT THE AG t E OF KEEP YOUNG AT 87 nd when T take my drink of water poured Perhaps my mind busy my thoughts to grow old. SESE ESE EEE EEE EER EEE Ee Ee baby girl, And two years before that he-had become the father of a baby boy. And two years before that Hut this t# telling the story backward Here ts the story, dates and all of the seeming miracle whereby an| old man was living out the end of| his life alone, his wife d his two sons grown and fathers them selves; the story of how this old grandfather began a new family of his own that {* younger and livelier, and even perhaps health fer than the families of his sons. by the fugitive, are suffering fror brilkes re when © hore were shot from under ¢ m by the Inet } REMARKABLE FAMILY. LEFT TO RIGHT, THEY ARE: 87; FRANCIS, AGED 6; HENRIETTA, AGED ee ee ee | MRB. THIRY; JOHN * * THOUSAND! Re 5 in S 2eews TEMBER 4, 1909, PHOTOGRAPHS BY DONCOURT. * * * === * * Pte ORLEANS, Oct. §— @ + - ® Tho steamer City of Tampico. #| 1's a story of one bright evening | took care of my ‘grapes and wife MH loge brn Mb Progresso, ® of life and we uxed to #4 some pleas # from’ 2000 to 8,000. ¢ Ss nf No wonder scientists in | times together, in apite of miss # were drowned on the {sland oft i cree Aeeew See Sorteany, </'Be vera lini Hecalad ta tee teed rn oh in well as in the United States, “But in 1886 she died. She © take at # bur : are asking Thiry his secret. was 63 years old then, and ee | In his fine old home In Long) when she died | began to feet “4 _ island, with ite vineyards and wa old. | saw that if | didn’t find * ofl Ree eee eh ew Hod garden behind it, sitting In b @ new interest in life | would creat iWhbrary where once he fade out of existence. at * aa de oe a thonght he must spend his dectin That is how I instituted the ing years alone, he'll tell you freely m of school savings banka, ri a bi swe Saag about the wond which is tow in operation in all ore a ca But first you must have some parts of the world. I was sum |” "One can aterays the wine ‘he himself made from | moned to tell edueators of my sys you know.”—Spokane Chr his own grapes, and some Helgian tem, and | have the satisfaction of “Why te @mith so sad? Ch, be CAROS That is the custom of his knowing that the biggest part of juet returned from a ‘joy’ ride? native land. my life work was done after | was New York Herald. | 1 married tn Belgium when 1| 60 years of age. | ‘The husbandman is wlwase to pal ®4* 26 Years old, 1 waa. born in At the Parle exposition [ was rieh the Rext yRar—Philemen. $822, and f think | shall surely jgranted xpecial honors by educa See live until 1922 Don't you think|tors for my savings system.” iz SPREE Ree ee we ba aake, Re rene if . Mra. Thiry talks interestingly * My boys, Ralph and Joseph,itoo. She in ‘ * BANK CLEARINGS. ® were born ip Belgium tn 1853 and her name ak Mangler O'Otase: * Seattle. w) 1804 In “1859 my wife and 1) She was born in Ireland ® Clearings today. ..$1,767.125.54 @ broweht the children to Amert There was @ litte romance *® Balances 197,974.82 & and | opened a book store. I did /wbout ft.” she says. “But my hus * Tacoma, * pretty well Mnanctially, band thinks we ought to keep that * ag ie today. ..% 853,100.00 # The boys grew and we bought! to ourselves & Balances .... 47,267.00 & this old homestead. That w “We met : Portions: # back in 1883, Pretty soon the boys| banker In Now Yorks ome cot ® Clearings today. ..$1,495,906.00 % were married. They went off to| ing in 1898. - Balances ++ 131,829.00 @ mart homes of their own “We were married within * * That left mother and I home| the year. My husband was 75 SPREE EERE EH BE By Alone. J retired from basiness and| years old then, SECO. WINS FRANCHISE BID SUFFRAGET TO COUNTRY Supreme Court Decides in Favor of Corporation This City. (Star Special Service.) OLYMPIA, Oct. 9%—The Seattle Electric company won a wonderful victory in the state supreme court today when the court held that the provisions of the Seattle freehold ers’ charter requiring the council }to call for bids for franchises is | void | The court says that the laws of | the legislature of 1903 and 1907 give the clty council the right to grant | a street railway franchise, and also | power to prescribe terms and con Against the Citizens of | 87 YEARS a } eee Soe ; WATS AAP SSOTY THIS PHOTOGRAPH SHOWS THE WHOLE SECOND INSTALLMENT OF JOHN HENRY THIRY’S ERNESTINE, AGED 2; MR. THIRY, AGED HENRY THIRY, JR., BORN SEP- “The next year, on March 17, a baby boy was born to us. We named him John Henry, after my husband. This baby died the next year, We then adopted a found. ling who was born on the same day that John Henry was born. We didn't nam him John Henry, though, becatse I thought it might be bad luck We love him as if he re our own child ‘hen, on June 14, 1901, Henrietta was born. On Dee, 11, 1902, boy was born us We wanted {to name him John Henry, but we were again prevented from doing this my fears we called him Francis Then, on April 28, 1995, another baby was born, He died in August of the same year. Then, three days.afier Christ mas, in 1907, a girl was born, We called ber ‘nestine And on Sept, 4 little boy was born husband had his way the baby John Henry last our new This time my and named after him. | “This i# the strongest baby of them all, and so we hope that my husband's name will go down to jour children. | “Little John ja man 30 years old. Thiry.” Henry ts uncle to son of Ralph LANDIS STILL “ROASTS. NANY CASE APPEAL OF THE U. § |\Declares Entire Outfit Is | Topheavy, That There Is a Lack of Transports and Other Craft. (By United Press.) DELPHIA, Ind., Oct. 9. man Charles B Congress: Landis, of Indiana, to reiterated his arraignment of the navy, declaring that it was “top- heavy and lacking In trans- ports, hospital ships, scouts, col- liers, oF In this connection, Congressman Landis sald Admiral Dewe mild buy the ne ent of war was says that we ded ships in the jditions under which the railways} “Has he forgotten the junk we should be constructed, and that | got while dallying with Spain, the MRS. JULIA PANKHURST, such powers Cannot be Hmited or | scandals attending the purchases, preseribed by a freeholders’ char ter. In other words, the council can grant any old franchise on any old terms, and the court says it cannot interfere unless a showing is made of absolute fraud or corruption. The decision was rendered in the daughter's arguments fafled to do. | it made a suffraget of Mrs. Pank- | urst | Her executive ability put her on She edits the suffraget news: papers, lectures, participates — in riot and conducts a tremendous the constitution gave ua the right of petition, He wouldn't receive us. We tried to push our way inte his office, and were arrested | | | top. Push, Then Strike. et If pushing does not get the man off your toes, you may strike. We | correspondence. case of Edwin C. Ewing against }atruck with everything we could Mrs. Pankhurst suggested that | the city of Seattle and the Seattle lay our hands on.’ |suffragets refuse to eat in fail, and vetrie mpany. Ewing bid 10 Prime Minister Asquith admits | compel the authorities to release 115 per cent for franchises, and the right to petition, but maintains |them as “physically unfit yme | the council granted it to the Seat he doesn't-have to receive the petl yoarly died from starvation tle Electric company, which had bid |tioner, He wants the suffragets to Are we unwomanly,” she asked,|2 per cent. Ewing secured an in ition by mail. because we do these things? We) Junction in the King county supe | The suffragets say that if they don't want to. We want to be on| Mor court against the city of Seat mail a petition, some one will chuck | friendly terms with men, But we / tle, but the supreme court sets this jit in a waste basket, Which {| will go on using violent means un-| aside and orders Ewing's case dis true. |til we get what we are after missed. Further, they say Asquith re | \ceives male petitioners, establish | | ling a precedent. As ngland. has |\GOMPERS RETURNS | MPHERE DENIED no written constitution, doubtful TO UNITED STATES) points are governed by prece So the s#uffragets have the NEW YORK, Oct. 9,—Samuel ment. But Asquith defies prece- | Gompers, president of the American} dent, and is backed up by Scotlan¢ ation of Labor, who has been Yard in Burope studying labor conditions “ ‘ | Asquith cannot leave paritament,|and problems, returned to the) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. OFt. 9 \his London or country home with-| United States last night on the Governor Marshall today refused to parole. Ray Lamphere, who was convicted of burning the house on French liner La Savole. An elabo- out passing women each brandish rate reception has been planned for ling @ petition } Gompers in Washington upon his! the Gunness murder farm, where a Daughter Worked Change, arrival there next week number of men were murdered Once Mrs, Pankhurat did not be- | Lamphere is dying of tuberculo |ileve in equal suffrage. Her daugh-| Royal P. Bacon of Kent, Wn,, se-| #8 in the Indiana penttentiaryvand lter Christabe, went to a university | cured a license at Milwaukee Tues-| the request was made so the man could go to his home to await his death. The governor declared that the demands of justice are not yet mot in Lamphere’s case, and came back an “advanced” wom- | day an, Wer mother disapproved.|tha Pipenburg of Milwaukee after Chriatabel slapped a policeman and |the five days required by Wiscon was jailed, Love did what the)sin law elapse, permitting him to marry Mar | and the abuse heaped on President McKinley? Had our quarrel been with an aggressive and prepared enemy, nizant of our weakness, Dew in history might be different.” | plac ‘DUMMY SHLUTES. AND TIMES DEPARTURE | | ‘The gentleman, or gentlemen, who turned out the dummy figures in the government building certain ly did a good job on some of them in fact, in several instances the dummy figures are more lifelike in appearance than some of the humans who stop to gaze at them A pretty young woman, with a 4 year-old in a red coat tagging after, stopped suddenly in her trip of in spection today to gaze at a young soldier dummy. She looked and she looked “My!” she gasped, “if I didn't know that thing was a dummy I would say it Was alive and—here, here, Margaret"—to the little girl with tl d coat—“don't touch the | dummy! Whereupon the and moved away, dummy saluted PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 9.-—Miss Campbell Scotland today won the women's golf championship of the United States by defeating Mrs, R. M. Barlow, of Marion, Pa,, three up and two to play, CORNELL oT TO PLAYING AT HIDE AND SEEK | Detectives Fail to Find Any Trace of Elusive At- torney Wanted on a Blackmail Charge. While city detectives are still] prosecuting their “gum shoe” search for Henry Watson Cornell, the law yer for whom a warrant is out charging him with being involved in & scheme to blackmail Willian Gottstein, a cigar dealer, he in walk ing the streets of Seattle every day Cornel! probably could, if he cared to, slap any one of these sleuths or the back at almost any hour of the day and surrender, but he prefer to secure a bondsman f so he would not be taken st nt tor the county Jail, That the missing man in In Seattle was confirmed today by Phillip Tworoger, who, as his at torney, withdrew from the case at} noon | Tworoger will have nothing further to do with the matter be cause Cornell failed to keep his} promise to appear in Justice! Brown's court at 9:20 o'clock this! morning. Attorney Tworoger advised his} client to surrender at that hour,| telling him that be would not have j to remain in the county jail longer than next Monday, Justice Brown promised that he would set the case | for hearing on that day if Cornell surrendered this morning / When Tworoger learned that his elent preferred to remain in hid-| ing he announced his withdrawal | from the case. He told Cornell that bail could be secured quicker if he} were in jail than if he were at large. | | Alcoholic tontes destroy hair and | sealp. Leary’s non-alcoholic com-| pound gives lite cures dandruff, itching liing hair, grayness and baldness, AN druggists aud bar- bers. . hair and uleoholic 4 yne and r druggiet Union Savings & Trust Co. of Seattle, $300,000 Surplus and undivided profits Capital 40,000 You should not forget that each day of your life brings you nearer to the time when your capacity for earning decreases, and finally ceases. What are you doing to provide a fund that will prevent you from be- coming dependent upon reluc- tant relatives? Prudent people save and become independent. terest QJ Per cent Compounded Semi-Annually. JAMES D. HOGER, President. N. B. BOLNER, Cash DIRECTORS: Ferdinand Schmitz, J. D. Low- man, A.B. Stewart, C H Bebb, R. C. McCormick, James D. Hoge, N. B. Boiner. CORNER SECOND and CHERRY STREET Branches at Ballard, Georgetows Rente: HAND-MADE HAS A SPECIALTY, Mme Paul EXCLUSIVE MILLINERY, 122% Third Ave. Opposite New Postoffice. Ind. Phone L-1808, By Edwin J. 8: I know of many Dentists who! have practiced their profession | from twenty to forty years and are Heensed in other States, but who! have been and are now denied the! right to even take the Dental/ Board's personal examination in the | State of Washington, and they are thereby driven from or kept out of this State. This is the way the scheme is vorked: The State Dental Law does not permit a Dentist to take the Dental examination unless he has a dipioma from a Dental Col liege; this shuts out all Dentists who have no diploma, but if a/ Dentist bas a Diploma from the} |best College In the world, he is re- quired to come before the State Dental Board and take an examina-} tion; the provisions, requirements, extent, and limitations of which are de mined only by the will of the Dental Board members who are members of the State Dental So- which society furnished money for the Dental Board to} cute and drive from this state | ntists who are not acceptable | or desirable to the Dental Combine These combine rules have been | substituted for the Dental Law in| this state, and constitute a monu- | mental crime against the Nberties | of American Iastitutions of Right and Justtce; yet all that the Board has done and is doing, has many times .been brought to the notice of ovr Supreme Court in cases) properly presented and all vital | questions of Conatitutional ms ciple raised. The Dental Law was intended to work @ forfeiture of the Constitu tional rights of Dentists, by mak- ing the right to practice Dentistry in this State depend on the will of | men instead of on the ability of dentists to comply with a standard prescribed by the commonwealth The Law, therefore, fails as a law | to come within the definition, “due | process of law,” contemplated by | ‘our State and National Constitutions Which provide that “No person shall | be deprived of life, liberty, or prop: erty, without due process of Law,” | This is elementary and it does not require a legal mind to comprehend and distinguish between a standard | for Dentists that is presertbed by the Legislature and incorporated into our public law so that a Dentist | wishing to be examined may go to the law and advise himself in what | he shall be examined, and prepare to | meet the state's requirement, and a private standard prescribed by | the Dental Board, And, should oneJ fail to comply with the individual standard of the Dental Board and | proceed to follow his vocation, he is | a criminal under this lawless act of | the Dental Board which has been | attempted to be made legal by | Legislative enactment | he Constitution, however, is the shield which this class of special lawlessness must not penetrate, for what is life, liberty, and property if| made subject to the sordid will of | man unrestrained, ve by his own | desires and greed? The Dental Law | therefore does not provide any ex amination for Dentists, and when a Dental Board provides their per. sonal examination, “the equal pro- tection of just and equal Law” be ° Shall at all reasonabl THE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ° DENTAL COMBINE HOW DENTISTS LOST THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS IN WASHINGTON. Vv irown, D. D. 8. 713 First Av. comes a misnomer and is obliter- ated from our free American insti tutions. CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AN- NULLED BY THE COURTS. The Dental Law of 1901 provides that the Law “shall not apply to per- sons who were engaged in the prac- tice of Dentistry at the time of the passage of the act, who were bona fide citizens of the State of Wash- ington.” This provision was for the purpose of protecting those who began the study of Dentistry under the provisions of the Law of 1893, which did not require a diploma, but accepted ten years’ practice under a preceptor as sufficient qualification to permit a dentist to be examined by the Dental Board, but the State Supreme Court held against this provision, and all Dentists in Washington who had studied under preceptors according to Law from 1893 unwl 1901 (eight years) became criminals if they continued in the practice of their profession in this State after 1901, and those Dentists who had studied for eight years prior to 1901. were and are not even allowed to be ex- amined by the Dental Board. Tell is this justice, according to Law? EXAMINATION PAPERS AND RECORDS. The Dental Law provid in Pierce's Code, Sec. 4466, that “Three board members shal! constitute a quorum and the pr ings thereof times be open to publi¢ inspection. The Dental Board refused to obey | this mandate of the Law and the State Supreme Court boatd, in refusing to allow me to inspect my examination papers which becanre public records, when I placed them with the Dental Board. This is Government by force and without Law; it is this kind of Gov- ernment that is condemned by the people, A man who would not be a rebel under a power that robbed him of his life, liberty and security is not worthy of the name man. I have been told time and again that I would get my Heense if I would take the examination, but I am fighting for principle and right guaranteed by “a government of Law.” My pri busines: I wish upheld the es for Dental work is my nd not the Combine's. If advertise in the news- to papers, that is my business and not the Combine's, and I don’t propose to sign any contract and code which some “numskfills” call ethtes, nor bring my dental practice under the Combine's unwritten Law of high prices and refuse to gaarantee my work I am bound to destroy — the fluence of this combine, destroys men and deprives them and their families of the right to live In Washington. Give me your Dental work at any price and send me your friends. Open evenings until 10 and Sun days until 6 for people who work in that KDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. 8., 718 First Ave. Union Bloc Seattle,