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sega er tee a for Kidneys) jojlowing oe one ot bi tption © moat effec ck rellel and of the kid- dger: “Halt ounce flute ayy, Dalf ounce Murpx Ee aRS" ounces of good gin = nim of (his prescription, in the i" , Pheysnatic | “e frequent and scanty driv jon and pains in groin are nature’ warnings that the Kidneys a w and sho have medi PAY or serious Itinoss, such late “disea: ‘of diabetes likely to follow.-Advt Trunk & Bag Co., Inc Tr CASES. AMPLE and rt pat? Bapolia—What Does Tt Meant The best in Enam- els, Staine and Giidings Desaity Your Heme pet Ee 4 Private Lessons Halls wont Drivate les- every da and even- in. free. Dancing Wednesday, Fri- ‘Main 3911; Ind. 104 AMUSEMENTS MOORE THEATRE| ight and Ali Week, $1.00. ja atines Wednesday. THE gait baa bler & Co. ment ‘Rv Prices—| ing, S0¢ to ~ 60: Mat- Inees, 6c t Both Phones 43. mpvays ALL, WEEK. ner Thu 3be. Fante'g Ploy Barr MeCutcheon's t ‘Novel . ¢—Otner Big 8. 8.5 Acts—¢ Matinee thy. PANT. AGES THEATRE THE “TEXAS TOMMY” DANCE Beuel Witson Champions). ALBANY PANES We Are the Pike Street e. s ; nbn gl regular BUT you MUS} in! Go TONIGHT DER CLUB GiFes A INKS, ADOLF VICH MEANS 4 ROYAL @oor TIM® FOR ALL, wv [RAILWAY KILLED (By United Press Leased Wire) KINMUNDY, file, Jan. 22—! James T. Harahan, former president of the Illinois Central railroad, a three other prominent raiiroad of: ficials met instant death here early | today in a rallroad wreck. The other victims of the wreck were: F. 0, Melcher, second vice pres! ; Pierce, general solicttor for the 'iMinois Central railroad, EE Wright, of the legal department of the Hiincis Central, son of Gen, Luke BE. Wright of Tennessee, for: | mer governor of the Philippine! talands. Rock Island private car attached to IMinois Central train No. 36. Train No, 25 bad stopped at Kinmundy when No. 3 crashed Into the prt vate car at the rear of the train. ree railroad officials were jaxtant! a ROYAL DUKE ARRIVES AT NEW YORK NEWYORK. dan, 22-—-Aeriving In New York a quarter of an hour ahead of echedule time, the Duke of Connaught, governor general of Can- ada and uncie of the King George of England, the Duchess of Con- naught and Princess Patricia, their daughter, today avoided a hug crowd waiting to welcome them at the Grand Central station. Welcomed by Whitelaw Reid, American ambassador to England, | the royal party were immediatel hustled into private automobiles, and, guarded by a cordon of secret service men and police, they were rushed to the Reid mansion for || breakfast. When the Canadian pulled into the Grand Central sta- tion the crowd was not aware of its arrival, as it was expected that the duke’s party would travel by | special train. The railroad company ltraordinary precautions against pos- {sible mishap, and special track walkers were assigned to duty to See that the route into the metrop- ots was entirely safe. Big Preparations. The arrival of the party marked took ex n4 $10 Geld | the first visit of British royalty to ‘Teeth for trom Os, -| Although their Vr Hi you exactly what your work wil cogt, rantee your work goers, we age Yo work | for Our are very our work equais the vest in the world, Ht is to your savantage and ou call on us. and peddle cheap talk; we are In every branch of the Den ork for snail fees lo & cash practice. We want & large practice and small profit. a Mac: | reward of one thousand dol- ius ($1.000) will be paid by his gister. ientiette Moutons, for In- formation leading to the where- ute of Henry Moutonx, last if in Seattle, Wash., July, hod born in pee any Noy, 186 Weighed 150 pounds when Ne. left Paight 6 feet 8 In, hair thin and of leht brown color, jet and medium-sized ustach and chin Scar in center of fore. where the hair ownward to th te custom to com heir to te date #0 a to conceal sour, whiskers punning seme KISSLING, 1005 Larkin st., fan Francisc® Cal, the late King Ed- was |a century, since | ward, then Prince of Wales, [here Incognito. 45 ihe Usted Sates x mere tan oat? GIRL CANDIDATE | sit is announced jas entirely unofficial, and they |wiehed it to be informal, New | York’ 's elite prepared a fitting round of social affairs for.their entertain: | ment. The party will be guests of the Reids during their stay, which jlasts until Thursday | At noon today luncheon was given jim honor of the party and a few our ‘We do not sell Intimate friends of the Reid family, |@8 As jand later the entire party went on }an automobile sightseeing tour over |New York City, Tonight there will |be an informal dinner at the Reid |home, with Cardinal Farley as one ee the boner. guests. ‘ DOCTOR CHARGED WITH MURDER Leased Wire) , Jan, 22.—Detec rehing, today for Dr | Chas, H. Carleton, who is charged jin @ warrant with the murder of Miss Sadie Jones, 21, upon whom he jis alleged to have performed an 1} Hlegal operation, The police of all | Pacific coast cities have been asked to search for Carleton. Short on Matches INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 22.—If Ist dor Wulfson, city inspector of weights and measures, can have his way, short count on matches is go- ing to cease in Indianapolis, All lover the country, from San Diego, |Cal., to Portland, Me., says Wulfson, lconsumers are paying 6 cents for |boxes supposed to contain 600 |matches, when in reality they only |hold anywhere from 800 to 384. 'T. R. DELEGATION | FROM MISSOURI 8ST, LOUIS, Jan, 22.—That Mis- sourt will sénd a Roosevelt delega- tion to the republican national con- lvention was the statement here today of C. C. Madison, state com- mitteeman of the Fifth district, which includes Kansas City, Madison declared that his dis- trict “would hold a primary, at which Roosevelt followers will be given a chance to show their strength | QBy United P: LOS ANGELE | tives are se: dent of the Rock Istand road, BE. B.| express | See, DeY Har HIND DOT ORVYES GIRL AUB MEMBERS ry HM dER CING HEADS IN WRECK j killed, their private smashed into splinters. Harahan's body through the roof of th ribly mangled. Pierce's body was found lying near that of Harahan. The bodies of Wright and Melcher were pinned j beneath the wreckage and had to) be removed by passengers. The regular passengers of ‘both trains escaped injury | It was reported here today that the private car of the railroad of | fietals carried no tail lights, and it was also stated that the flagman of train No. 26 failed to Mag No. 3. | Harahan retired from the prest car being was The party waw traveling In a/ dency of the Hilnols Central Jan-| wary 1°, 1911. He received a pen sion of $6,000 annually, under the rules applying to all employes over 70 years of age. His average eal ary for the 10 years prior to his i retirement was $36,000. SCRUBS ‘FLOORS (Ry, Unites Press ICAGO, Jan. dan, Fe Xunough she has an income of $10,000 yearly, Misa Zetia Emerson, a beautiful young settiement worker, is scrubbing floors for 10 and 11 hours a day in a cheap festaurant. Her income kept it from being a tragedy when she was discharged from a higher. priced restaurant for ineffi ciency. Miss Emerson put Christmas holidays as a sales. iret in partment store. She je reeking to ascertain the real conditions under which women work in Chicago, and to find out If the ten-hour law is being vio- lated In the FEDERAL PROBE (Ry United Frese Leased Wire) INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 22.—Whea the federal grand jury resumed to- day its probe into the alleged coun try-wide dynamite plots, witnesses | from Clinton, Ia Grand Rapids, Mich,; Salt Lake City and Low An geles were on hand to testify. The witnesses from Clinton were questioned first by the probers re- garding an attempt to dynamite the | bridge over the Mississippi river at that point. The Los Angeles wit nesses may be called later in the day. |» FOR ASSESSOR |: | ERDE, n. 22,—-Por the | first time in the i atory of Chehalis lcoufity, the voters will have the {pleasure of voting for or against a | female candidate for county office. Miss Ruth Townsend, for years a hurled | rand hor: | STARTST DER FUN, VRTAIN SeT Yo BE ARTNER. TRY YOUR LUCK. THE STAR—MONDAY; iid aed 22, 1912. ‘Adolf Picks Dancing Partner ‘Sight Unseen,’ But Hurries Oft ee ( REATY 183 Here 139 A PRETTY PAIR OF reeT —— I PICK Diss von! DER Seceor |CARDINAL FARLEY ARRIVING AT NEW YORK; 300,000 PEOPLE GREET PRINCE deputy assessor, it is learned, is In the field and will make a dofinite Statement of ber candidacy as soon ssor Jones comes out with a nent that he will not run state Friends NO QI E. Humphrey are stilt inconsolable, so far, at least as the Young Men's Republican club is concerned. They had hoped that the popular verdict inst Hum: phrey at the dinner, and later at the mass meeting held under the club's auspices, would be offset by the rigid, official action of the club members themselves last Friday night. But Friday night had come and that was all, The members did not come—not even enough of jthem to make a quorum. 0 the club still stands committed against the standpat congressman. CASE RE-ELECTED SPOKANE, Jan, 22.—The Wash- ington State Federation of Labor has elected the following officers for 1912: President, Charles R. Case, Sent- tle; secretary, Charles Perry Tay- lor, Tacoma; vice presidents, First district, Charles 8. Hall, Belling. ham; Second district, W. J. Coates, Spokane; Third district, Lee F. Clarke, Walla Walla; Fourth dis trict, L, Alexander, Aberdeen; Fifth district, Peter Henrotty; Sixth district, T, H. Bolton, Seat- tle; Seventh district, J, B. Camp- bell, Everett, Delegate to the Seattle Minis- terial Federation and the Puget Sound Methodist Episcopal, confer- ence, George T. McNamara, of Se attle. SPOKANE, Jan, “22.—According to information here today, work of straightening the Great Northern line between Sand Point, Idaho, and Albany Falls, a distance ot 35 miles, will begin in February, and will cost the road $1,000,000, This picture is from a photograph taken of Cardinal Farley as he landed at the Battery, New York, from which point he drove through cheering thousands up Broadway to 23rd st. and then up Fifth av. to S Patrick's cathedral, where 6,000 moyen! children waited to welcome him. a ADMITS ROBBING HIS OWN MOTHER 1f Mre. Lottie Cramer, who had Charley Wright, but the charge was & thousand dollars’ worth of jeweis {dropped at her request. He gave picked from her person by @ daring | his age as 28 at that time, but | burg last Wednesday night,/night he said he was 24. His pic- wishes to avenge the theft she|ture and Hertillon measurements must send her own son to jail, City were taken at the time of his pre- detectives last night arrested L. M. | vious arrest Cramer and found a part of the, The robbing of Mra, Cramer was missing jewels in his possession, | a bold one, and indicated, as she re- and while a daring accomplice ex-| marked at the tinre, that it was the ecuted the hold-up, the son. of the| work of someone who knew that victim admits it was he who|she wore her jewels constantly. A planned the robbery. He admitted | young man asked to rent a room, this to Captain of Detectives Ten-|and held a gun at Mrs. Cramer's nant last night, saying that his|head, after being escorted to the mother’s jeweis had tempted him to | upper floor. cornmit the crime, Concerning the whereabouts or Ten years ago young Kramer was|identity of his accomplice young arrested for the theft of valuable| Cramer refuses to talk, other than articles fro sister, Mra./to say that he has left the cit Civilization Seems to ‘Bring Curse Upon the Tahitans ——— TYPE OF TAH 1 AN FAMILY PAPEETE, TAHITI, Jan, 22.—/6hce slept out of doors’ sleep in Civilization seoms to be bringing | Closed sheds, with doors and win | |dows bolted and with a light burn nothing but curses on the simpleling throughout the night, to keep people of Tahitl. away the spirits, When Robert Louis Stevenson! ‘The atest infliction on Tahiti lived on the island 60 years 480} was brought by the Mormons, who the Tahitans were fine specimens |have a large temple in Papeete, of manhood, Now they are weak lTt is now not an uncommon thing and puny. When the Island waslto goo a Tahitan with two wives, by pase ae pete ions hed though before the Mormons came timated at 200,000 bw today the lithe eee A Sr ne ee ¢ Tahitans were monogamists In the days before civilization BRIDE MUST PROPOSE |* the natives Hved on sun-cooked food, but the white man came with) (my gnitea Press Kensed Wise) SHERIDAN, Or. Jan, 22,—Fol- his ‘ ganned goods, tobacco and Nquor®and the natives began to lowing the example set by Judge Shortall of San Francisco, Justice degeneratd Consumption is common. The of the Peace Johnson gays he will marry any leap year couple free religion that has been taught to the natives bY missionaries has provided the bride did the pro- posing caused the natives to fear ghosts and now these simple folk, who TNS YOUNG AVIATOR, DROPS B00 FEET (By Unites Preas Lessea Wire) DOMINGUEZ FIELD, Cal., Jan. 22.—To his presence of mind and @ provident air bank, encountered in the nick of time, Farnum Fish, the youngest licensed aviator in the werld, today owes his life. Fish furnished the 20,000 specta- tors at yesterday's aviation events with a thril} that satiated their sen- nation loving appetites when he plunged earthward from a height of 1,000 feet, his biplane righting Itself when less than 200 feet from the ground, and sailing to a safe land: ing in @ far corner of the field The young flier, who ix but 17 years of age, stated that his machine dropped through a “hole” in the air, ard that he managed by desperate clinging to keep hie seat until he encountered another current that bore him up. Albert Elton produced the second | shiver of horror of the day when | he dropped from a height of 100 feet, smashing his planes, but es | caping without injury. SHORT NEWS in honor of the 16th anniversary ot Rev. Herbert H. Gowen's service of Trinity parish, and the 25th anni versary of his entrance into the ministry, a dinner will be given by the Men's club in the church erypt tomorrow evening at 6:30, Bishop Keator will speak for the diocese, and Rey. Major and Rev. Sydney Strong for the clergy, A number of | other addresses will also be made. The Lincoln high school, repre sented by Alfred Hall, Frank Lands burg and Howard Swigert, uphold ing the negative aide of the recall for judges, eliminated the Broadway high from the city championship. Broadway was represented by Ed: |win Adams, Howard Farwell and Julius Feinberg. Sheriocks in Demand. . “What is the latest fad in golf?” “Having real detectives track up the lost balls.” W. G. McLaren, second assistant United States district attorney, was | promoted to be first assistant, suc ceeding Charles T. Hutson, re signed, Loutls E. Shela, a young at- torney admitted to practice a little over @ year ago, Was named in Mc Laren’s former place by United States District Attorney Todd. ABERDEEN, Wash., J: 22. Blated by the information that an Industrial Workers’ fight is on in! |San Francisco, members of the or-| | ganization who made Hoquiam their | headquarters during the fight her today are boarding box cars, south: | ard bound. They intend to partici- | pate In the cAmpaigu, which it is re. ported will be undertaken in the California city. Words by Scha Music by C Condo lex-icK $ Hey! MISTAH ADOLF Yo' FO'gor CASE STANDS HIGH WITH THE WOR SPOKANE, Jan. 22.—One thing i , of the debate on the By sure, President Case of the Sta’ question Federation of Labor, has the confi-| floor and ¢ dence and respect of the big major-| briefly and impressively, ity of the delegates at the conven-| one big ovation of the tion this year, delegates applauded, every On the last day of the convention | woman of the: {t looked stormy for the president and then repeat when several influential delegates, Case stands ebarked with being unduly representatives of state intereste the attack on the |labor at the close of the governor, and even with wire pull. citing convention in m \omd methods, bat ivi an at the close | — he did at its | open Hang This Up, ‘ ‘I Have Nothi Say,” Remarks Teddy | NEW YORK, Jan. 22.-—“Tell the editors of the country to te this phrase; ‘| HAVE NOTHING TO SAY.’ Whenever they a fous to quote me or interview me on political subjectsy they that, and that alone. I bave nothing to say on this or any otl feal matter.” This was the statement of former President Theodore on leaving his office tn the Outlook here for Sagamore Hill, porters asked his opinion of the Cummins presidential ¢ nouncement Told that it was reported he intended to accompany bis European trip, Roosevelt grinned and said: Why do the papers so cruelly excite me? What have I has never entered my head to go abroad now or at any other tim 1 know of.” * IF YOU CAN'T GET YOUR STOMACH REGULATED, EAT A FEW DI In five minutes there will be no Time It! You don't want a slow remedy when your stomach is b certain one—or a harmful one—your stomach is too valuable; injure it with drastic drugs. Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for its speed in giving relief; Jeswness; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick, stomach: Its millions of cures in Indigestion, dyspepsia, other stomach trouble has made it famous the world over. Keep this perfect stomach doctor in your home—keep it & large fifty-cent case from any drug store and then if anyone something which don't agree with them; if what they eat lays fermenis and sours and forms gas; causes headache, disziness: sea; eractations 6f acid and undigested food—remember as & pe’s Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach all vanishes. Its promptness, certainty and ease in overcomli stomach disorders is a revelation to those who-haven't tried It Low Westhound Colonist Fan Daily, March 1 to April 15 PUBLIC MARKETS FESTLAKE MARGET. Bight herring. ts trout, 3 for suited salmon 4 pounds 25 ¢ h salmon, 10 | cents pound 5 pounds conte 1s, halibut pounds pound salted cents ps, cents pound ound; 16. 0 centa: J soap, 28 conta J0=cenf@ean | #20 conte 0-0ont pears, 2 for 26 conis: onions, ounds 85 cents; grape fruit, 36 cents: Snow apples. 10 cerite per | j duincer, 3 for 25 cents: Japa- | 10 cents dozen; | Anas, cents doren; Winter | W@ pears, 20 cents dozen; cook-| apples, 2 dozen 15 cents PIKE PLACE MARKET. Sirloin steak, cents bone #toak, 18 © pork, 11 ‘centa pound cents pound; eauer kraut 10 cents; imi pound; loin 2 & cents: pot pork roast, 12% not over & duyw cents, Towa cents pound cauliflower, 18} 6 for} bacon, 3 pounds | conts pounds | 10 eénts pounds nts pound, ewae, | old 16 $1 box, de 4 pounds 16 conts Burbank potatoes, pounds 25 cents, sugar, § pounds cents; Muscatel raining conts; White Misatc 16 conta; coafint SANITARY MARKET, Two dozen 26 gol onberg ap) o-frutt 4 pounds 25 | figs, 2 pounds 10 cents b: i |conts dozen; lemons, 16 cents Belifiour apples. pounds 20 cents, 8 dozen Missourl Pippins local ranch exes, sweet po yunds 10 conte lamb pound: a 1 centa per | 8 cents per at hams, \ cents pound; all pork sausage cents pound, via Great Northern $25 From St. Paul, Minneapolis, Dat Sioux City, Omaha and Kansas $33 From Chicago $50 From New York And proportionately low fares from all other Eastem Tickets Prepaid by Mail or T Money Back If Not Used Send us the names and addresses of Eastern friends terested in the Northwest. 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