Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE STAR—SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1912. Want Children Named for Him Pro SS BABY SHow iss 4 PAIR OF TVINS VICH HAS DEON NAMED AFTER US. WE SNOULT BE HIGHLY HONORED, ’ Ask Your Doctor | A dolf Doesn’t It is impossible to be well,| simply impossible, if the bowels | are constipated. Waste prod: ' ucts, poisonous substances, | | | must be removed from the body | ,'! 7 at least once each day, or there! ; willbe trouble. Ask your doctor| ' about Ayer’s Pills. He knows! ry Words by Sepa miscuously | music .,’ ea Dise VON I6s WANED AFTER Me, UND DIS® VON AFTER You. MR, SKYGACK (39 Dem Papa, VAKe uP Chunee |! — TIT VANT A INCHUNCTION COME ALONG Mix Me TONIGHY, ADOLE, T AM GOING Yo DER BaBr SHow. SOMEDINGS ISS DERE vor ViLw ed Ni-ice ! IND WHO 139 Der Nome PARENT WHO why they act directly on the liver. Gently laxative. Late. SULPHURRO , 4°" 4 08. Bee. Or direct from laboratory if drug- gist cannot supply your wants. 4 on., by mall, G5e. en. by express, prepaid, 61.35. 1S. Tiateware’s Cohen EVERETT-SEATTLE INTERURBAN RAILWAY 1B TO RVRREY ad 6 * fi, ‘ daxeage trat Tadicares Sf freignt shed at Sixtn oo pm. SEATTLE-EVEREET TRACTION CO. ten xirts and boys. the jung capacity muscles, that our Clean- oes: oS rr we Morril § ecial Saw Set tie 500 Oni 40 Yankee Push 00 Village Blac 1012 First Ave. Cor. Pike St. and Third Ave. ALBAN PAINLESS DENTISTS ‘45 |oelve while ii PSH ees S |government warrant for $2.64 “SON MURDERS THREE OF FAMILY APPLETON, Wis. of the surviving members of the Maihland family here today declare that Louis jawed § years, Dora, 16 years old, found dead yes terday on thelr farm near Bing hamton, were murdered by Wm. |Maibland, 21, another son, who then committed suicide. | Domestic troubles which brought fon temporary insanity are said to Ihave been responsible for the \tragedy. The bodies of the victims were found by the three survivi jsons of Mathland when they turned home from school. WHITE GIRL POPS QUESTION TO JAP DENVER, Feb. 3.—The first ieap ;Year proposal of a white girl to a Japanese came to light today, when R, Wood, @ prepossessing young American woman, secured a mar riage leense to wed Kujoshi Ota- Kuro. Accompanied by a gtr! friend, Miss Wood secured the license her- self. “Where's the man you're going to wed?" asked License Clerk O'Brien. “Oh, he's at ho replied the young wo ‘ou see, this ix leap year. I'm doing thismyself. I needed no help in proposing and | don't need him to get the license.” As the prospective bride was about to depart her friend chided her. “You can laugh all you Iike,” Miss Wood, “bat my Jap is a prince of a good fellow, and i'd rather have him than many of the white boys the girls fall in love with.” BE CAREFUL WITH UR ADVICE Re ehary with your advice. At any rate, don’t give advice to young And moreover, be sure that you don’t send your ad- vice by mail, even though it may be quite fatherly. Henry Baker, « gardener employed |by the city, is out on $200 bail to- |day beeause, it is alleged, he wrote la letter to Mrs. William Wertcott, old family friend. In it he ad- |vised her in a fatherly way, but it j bumped the statute regulating the use of the mails, it is charged. He was bound over to the federal grand jury by United Stetes Commission. er Totten, it appearing that the letter had received interested | perusal by the husband, and didn’t catch his fancy. Uncle Samuel Time JOEL 8. JONES Sometimes Uncle Sam delays a bit, but he generally pays up his jdebts in full eventually. Joel 8. Jones, bailiff in Judge Ronald's court, can give document- ary proof of this, in the form of a He is going to frame it, for it represents 4 clothing allowance he failed to re he was wearing the Union colors in the civil war, 50 years ago. Jones served through- out the four years of the war, en- listing in Company F, Fifth Connec- tieut Infantry. (By United Prose Leased Wire) ASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—Presi- dent Taft will not send the name of Will B. Humphrey with those of other appointm: to judicial po- 11 | sitions which will go to the senate work for small fees ih practice. We want and emali profit, either Monday or Tuesday. A suc: cessor to Judge Donworth will no be named for two or three weeks. Judge Donworth is ready to resign as soon as the president makes his appointment. The president will receive the protest of the Seattle Bar association against Humphrey's appointment today, SS | ! PRESIDENT OF MENico (By United Press * cased Wired | EL. PASO, Feb. 3—The, | Mexican revolutionary junta here} announced today that Juarez has | been chosen as the provisional head-| | quarters of the rebellion, and Pro- | visional President Vasquez Gomez, |who is reported to be |tonio, Tex. has been requested to |e to Juarez and assume command. | It-ds also apnounced today that the junta plane to send « represen |tative to Washington. | Dispatches received here from Chihuahua state that Antonio Rojas, whose release was yesterday ef. | fected by an attack on the Chibua- hua prison, is at the head of 400 | Tevolutionists outside of Chihuahua | ‘FLOGGED FOR | WRITING POEM | ST. PETERSBURG, Feb. 3.—In-} lvestigation of iuhuman punish-| ments alleged to have b infitet-| ed upon political prisoners in the jeentral criminal prison at Pxkov, [was today begun by a government | jcommission. According to state ments made by victims, they were mercilessly flogged under the di- |rection of Col. Tcherlenkovaky, |Kovernor of the prison, upon the fiHinslest excuse One prisoner is said to have re. ceived 60 blows for writing a poem | on & scrap of paper found in his cell. Another prisoner swore he| was given an additional 10 blows for not having cried out during the infliction of the first ten. '$250,000,000 for | Chinese Republic SHANGHAI, Feb. 3,—Chinese | revolutionary chiefs here declared today that immediately any world power formally recognizes the pro- claimed republic of China as an actually existing state, the Chinese revolutionists will be given $250,- 000,000 to support the new nation, |a powerful syndicate of American |and British financiers, including in. | terests affiliated with the Standard | Oll company having guaranteed this | tremendous loan In return for this enormous loan |New China grants to the syndicate la monopoly on the development of of] and mineral wealth in China SHE DIDIT | NEW YORK, Feb. 3,—Mrs. Ther- esa Martin, 22, has today brought the trial of her brother, James P. McDermott, accused of the murder of Charles Muldoon, to a dramatic culmination by confessing that she drove a knife through Muldoon's heart. “Don't let Big Biz steal our Terminals.” Dreamland Pavilion Sunday, 2 p. m. one | ATMIRES US ah ee Ul LS BO OLD LIKE CATTLE j tuberculosis | performance Moore theatre douw success: Dorothy Hendricks especially cap- Elsa Navikoff, who says her father wanted to sell her for $500. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Feb. 3—)16, the legal age, and many so-call- Russian parents in thie city selijed marriages are perform: with. their daughters into marriage for|out the necessary license. Such from $100 to $500, according to Elsa unions are unlawful and shameful.” Navikoff, a 16-year-old Russian girl; Elsa's case was brought into the who fled to the home of her Amer- juvenile court through charges of joan sweetheart, Ray Hallack, a delinquency lodged against her by sailor. her parents, The whole Russian She was arrested, and at her triai colony, in their pleturesque ga the men in high-heeled boots a |pleated frocks, with flowing hair ~j/and beard, the women in short lakirted, gaudily-hued dresses and After the stori old | flaming headgear, appeared in in court by g ina, | court. ‘through an interpreter, Judge Wil-| Many witnesses, the majority of bur decided that the girl be held as| whom had to give their statements @ charge of the court till she be-/through an interpreter, testified came of age. \that they had a general knowledge Judge Wilbur said: jot girls being sold into marriage. “The evidence undoubtedly dis-| The price brought by a bride ranges closes that deplorable conditions ex- from $100, $150 to $300 and $500 in ist in the Russian colony. Many |the case of extraordinarily pretty girls are married under the age of | girls. REMOVAL NOTICE National Cash Register Office Moved to 1527 Fourth Av., Between Pike and Pine. GEO. H. DOWLING; SALES AGENT. —From the Baltimore San. TIME” WAS FINE “Once Upon a Time” happened last night. And it's happening jaeain this afternoon. It’s the fairy extravaganza, with 100 Seattle per- | formers, little mites of girls and bigger ones, to help out the Antl- jeague, The benefit inst night at the proved a tremen- Baby Seecamp and tivated the audience with their clever dancing. The extravaganza is in three acts, and telle a fairy story of princes and princesses, and is fascinatingly picturesque. Effie Kyle, Peggy Leather, Anna Sheridan and Jeasie Dow, four lit- |tle Scotch dancers, also made a dis- tinet hit. Mise Kathleen Gaffney in an Italian Gance, Hazel Archi-| bald in a Spavish dance, and Miss) joe! Dressler in a moonbeam falry | lance, each contributed comsider- ably to the success of the extrava- ganza, Waiting for Conner’s Verdict (By United Prose Leased Wire) LOS ANGELES, Feb, 3.—Crowds | gathered early today at the court} house to await word from the jury that tried Bert H. Conners on a charge of conspiring to blow up the Hall of Reoords. The jury retired yesterday morning at 10 o'clock When the 12 men were brought tn} | for the last time yesterday after-| noon at 4 o'clock a standing of 10} }to 2 was reported. The foreman | declared a verdict was improbable, but Judge Willis sent them back for | further deliberation. | In view of the court's instructions |the defense expressed belief that the majority vote had favored the defendant. The prosecution would not express an opinion. THREE PHYSICIANS SUED BY GIRL Three physicians are jointly made defendants in a $25,000 suit for damages by Emma Kirkneas, who says that they performed’ an unnecessary operation, which com: | pelled her to submit to a second one shortly afterward Dra. J. L. Millett. and 8, W. Case. In her complaint, she alleges that healthy organs were injured by the first operation, so that she remained unnecessarily il from February, 1909, to March, 1910, Can’t Raise Submarine PORTSMOUTH, Eng., Feb, 3.— Efforts to raise the sunken sub- marine, A-8, which went down at the Spithead entrance, with a loss of 14 lives, fatled today, when the giant hoisting hawser parted, Seven persons were injured when the great cable snapped. The A-3 collided with the British gunboat Hazard. She was of an obsolete type save for harbor de- fense and coast work. Every nem- ber of her crew was drowned. They are | ©. EB. Haygard i= MADERO THINKS HE : SUPPRESS REVOL (By United Prose Leased Wire) MEXICO CITY, Feb. 3.—That President Madero believes the loyal troops will suppress the Zapata in- surrection in northern Mexico, and that General Orozco will care for the Juarez mutineers, is evidenced by the following interview which he gave today: “The situation is not grave, The difficulty ties in the fact that Za pata ix doing his fighting in the town of Morelos, and during the jfileted upon him jarmy. ‘march with enough tts feats, 1 pl that have y dispersing all of theless | am of @ t will require fi in order to situation The Juarez, although no transcendental the reason that the trod belled against the gover to have been di se General that 4 k a Oeankl last few days there have been in-icate the rebellion.” — ES DUWAMISH VALLEY. IS PROSPEROUS A (Jey, and the whole The Duwamish valley is showing its old time prosperity since the boosted rates on the interurban were knocked oat, following a two- year fight. People working in Se. attle who were forced to give up WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—Carry ing $152,000,000, the pension appro- priation bill passed the house today by a Vote of 246 to 53. A provision exctading pensioners who live out of the United States was defeated. revival. The high rates are st. The company any condition, even req for two. years, and railroad — ¢0 in beight “Is she an A\ “I guest so. Why? “I thought perhaps le.” —Houston a MISS ELSIE LEUE. COLUMBUS, O., Feb. 3.—To the, end that hundreds of thousands of | lives may be saved in Initia, where! famine lays desolate whole villages every year, Miss Elsie Leue, a sen jor student in the college of agri culture at the Ohio state university will become the first farm mission ary to the land of the Hindoos. Miss Leve is a Cincinnath) ade a thorough study @ ning, which she im) to teach to the fi that they may in f crops large enough 10 ple. While teaching: will also teach Chi heathen in and aroumd dia. 'NO PIMPLES, BLOTCHES, § ULCERS OR aes cts t ' IMPURE Pimples, eruptions, blotches, scales, ulcers, sores, chronic swellings are caused by bad blood, but don’t become ~-no other trouble is so easily overcome, in the cure of any disease caused by bad or impure blood. -% all poisons, build up and enrich Ithy tissu Pure blood means perfect health ry he Cascarets are woud the blood, enabling It , and if you use Ci oie you good health and a pure, clean skin, free from lotches. To try Cascarets is to like them, for never b been roduced as perfect and stom harmless a blood puri h regulator as Cascarets Candy Cathartic! carets and you will pure, healthy blood and tions or disfigureme Be sure surely no A Cascarets will truly