The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1912, Page 3

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ly SETILES pPSET STOMACH "pape’s Dia) in” ends Indi- gestion, er Sourness in five minutes. é — peal? does” put bad stomachs aaer—"Teally Mhoes" overcome Paigeaton, dyepepsia, gas, heart sourness {0 five minutes wr that—makes Papo's LOOK! BURGL largest selling stom Dameaier i the world, If what ‘eat forments into stubborn Delch gas and eructate tne] and acid; and aches; breath : your ineides bile and indigestible ber the moment Dia al} such fm contact with (the distress vanishes. ishing — almost ma ‘and the joy ts its harmless it case of Pape's Oth give you a hundred worth of satisfaction oF hands you your mon you Comes now the first touch of fall weather, and with it, most certain ly, the pre-winter outbreak of burg: laries and hold-ups in Seattle You can help Chief Bannick's men a lot in burglar-baffiing if you will follow the advice given below always be kept} Now, most burglars are amateurs fe case of & sick, sour, up at the business; lots of them have during the day or/ittle real burglaring experience, It’s the quickest, surest and they are easily outwitted. harmless stomach doctor urally, it is much more pleasant to post keep a burglar out of the house 5 the world. than to put him out when once be bas loaded his swag in @ bag. it is far more conducive to a longevity, for most will shoot when with their loot. A food way to fasten my ; abe ‘worth its weight in gold to ‘women who can't get thelr ant It belongs tn EGGS SELL AT 55 CENTS NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—With fresh eg@p soaring around 55 cents and butter so high that many ree taurants are refusing to supply it unless specially ordered and paid for, the state health commissioner today admitted that there are in the cold Storage Warehouses of thin state 4,600,000 pounds of but- ter and 120,000 cases of eggs, in excess of the supply on hand at this time last year. Mra. Julian Heath, president of the Housewives’ league, declares she has a letter from an exg ship- per who says that exgs, even at the present high cost of living, should not go above 85 cents per 7 0@ YU dozen or little higher by Christ- Weak ankles, break- ye weak ep and " mas. She has sent out word to the HO Ul Esse to boycott the egg market if there RATE ina further rise in prices. NT ES TS [Rich Barter Leaves onl sone Mga Man Half Shaved pack or ovm wonx| 2s VERHILL, Mass, Oct. 10.- i wor Only one man had reason to regret ‘ ests worn that Joseph Naymalis, a Haverhill P curate F Fal barber, inherited $30,000. Naymalis ES 2 & | es m yments. Obie Cut Rate Prices. postman brought him a special de Mvery letter telling of his good for- tune. Naymalis tossed his razor out of the window, threw his barber's coat into a waste basket, and left his $5 customer half shaved. He didn't even say “good-bye.” The money was left him by an uncle. Nay- $4 malis immediately packed his va- | lise and left for Indiana, where he | hopes to enter the state university. Work ....... , And Jerry Waite had to go to an- shop to have the other side sid Gold Fillings, $1 Up Sf yas oe anon. iver Fillings, 50c Up Eve's Secret. WRITTEN GUARANTER| Eve—There is one thing, Adam. ane Wonk Adam—What in it? in permenie”” “"4| Eve—Never tell anybody the date 2 | Set of Teeth. anteed Fit ........... Gold or or Porcelain bans Detectives Cause Arrest Tommy Gaffney, alias Fred McKay, and , F. S. Edwards, wanted in Boise, on charge of forgery of a $500.00 earth by Detective repre- g s of the American Bankers’ Asso- F. S. Edwards was arrested in Vic- Cc. Burns’ and Victoria i iF <i % . F F I well-known light- fighter, and his trainer was in B. C., at the time of his partner's arranging a match with Baily, the lightweight boxer of B. C. SEATTLE OFFICE OF THE WIL- J. BURNS NATIONAL DETECTIVE » INC., IS LOCATED AT 308 ‘YY BUILDING. BRANCH OF-. FICES AND CORRESPONDENTS ARE MAINTAINED IN ALL PRINCIPAL CITIES (OUCHOUT THE WORLD. (Advertisement. ) Felt READ! in her organization | was shawing Jerry Waite when a) THE BEST AR BAFFLERS ARE HERE! fe to run screws through the up right frames, connecting both up per and lower sash, Ifthe windows| are to be tightly closed, have! screws at top of lower and bottom | of upper frame; if windows are to! be opened a little way for ventila tion, the screws should be farther! down on the lower frame and far ther up on the top frame. No burg lar can work a screw driver back ward, and he will have to take the whole window pane out if he wants to make his entry that way If you can't bolt the door, slip a wedge beneath tt, having the big| end of the wedge fastened to the floor by a nail or any sharp point ed tool, such as an awl A doubdle-polnted nal, with one end resting against the door, the other againat the floor, will make it impossible for any one to open the door from the outside, for the more | |one would push the farther the nail! When | door, he pushes againat t broom and the broom throws the pans on the floor Result: A great nolse, | aod burglar rune for his life. If there is anything burglars | don't like, it's noise, A Seattle man who was bothered with intruders comin, into hie summer kitchen and making away with food from the refrigerator bit upon this plan, there being reasons why he couldn't bolt the door, He filled a bucket of water, tied it over the door with just a couple of Inches of bucket extending down over the door, When the door was opened the bucket was overturned, drenching the man below. That burglar never found out how he got Dis ducking, but he never got over the threshold, Screws to make window sashes burglar proof. Giving Mr. Burglar a bath. Wedge or double-popinted nal! to keep door from opening. |. There'll be a frightful racket If» burgiar opens thie door. ‘PHONE KILLS” Released by Mistake, | Prinener Gove Back | yx sA POLICEMAN PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 10.—Po- Neeman George W. Freeman, 44 Oct. 9. | 8" Killed when he tnserted bi key in the patrol box at S2ad would be jammed | door and floor. Real Live Hunch. Another good way to protect doors is to pile some kitchen pans on a table, with the broom extend. ing from the pans to the door. into both the! PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Nine years after he had been re leased by mistake from the Cam dered to the police. “Ni years ago | worked for a milk ler, and while in his em. ploy I stole $496," said he. “I was | #24 House Sergeant Fox, wi convicted and taken to my cel) to|Tece!Ving the calls at the station await sentence. | house, was hurled across the room. “There was another prisoner in|, Other patrolmen in West Phila- jail by the name of Reed. One day | Meiphia were protected by wearing the jailer came to me and asked if "Ver boots, but all received slight my name was Reed. 1 . “You | # ke. prisoner, bat. the jatier ‘bad us| WICKEDNESS IN VARIOUS CITIES had ws mixed, and I wae liberated “The crime weighed heavily upon me. I could not sleep and I decided to come and give myself up.” NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—-Seven out — of about every 100,000 Now York- PERIOD OF STAGNATION, | rs are murdered, according to fig- Ures gathered by an insurance jour nal here, The rate of homicides | per 100.000 of population for some | of the other cities ts as follows Washington, 9.2; Chicago, Ban Francisco, 104; St. 16.6; 35. 37.8; Charleston, 8. phis, Tenn., 63.4, In England and Wales, in 1909, with « population of 36,7 of homicides J. F. MeCurry, 4% at S¢th and ine eta, Was knocked unconscious “How is it that you aren't run- ning for congress again this year, Judge?” y. boy, it's an off year in polities.’ “Since when {a this an off year in Original a4 Genuine THE STAR—THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1912. politics, judge?” “Ahem—since I wasn't renom- inated.” THE MARKETS ‘The following are the average prices paid by local commission mer- chants to the producers and prices pald by the refatier to the commis- stoners. Th eee paid the farme: come under “buying ney ry sum paid by the retal ing price.” Prices t subject. to variation. freshness and ral these prices, Unless otherwise cated, are for strictly first » Trades. Dressed hogs Trimmed side Short loin pork .. Bhoulders Pigs’ fe Spare rib Pork sau houne lettu 4 lettuce, d ucumbers, ao ery, don Joupe Feed, Selling Pri Washington Bastern timothy Puget soun Alte w HORLICK’S MALTED MILK The Food Drink for All Ages Not in Any Milk Trus! “HORLICK’S’ ~~ ‘mates heme . Sandahl & Son Co. FLORISTS SEEDMEN NURSERYMEN Cut Flowers of All Kinds Floral Designs Made Up D ° BULBS AND TREES Shrubbery and Plants of All Kinds Remember the Place Main 3253 120 Pike St. ~Chiropracti Is the Practice of Medicine WITHOUT DRUGS OR KNIFE, Chronic and acute complaints yleld to this modern branch of the medical science with prising case, Dr. Joseph Roane Suite 4248-7 Arcade Bidg. our. iin PRIEST INVENTS A FAST RIFLE ROME, Oct. 10-—Father Bon- tempt, @ monk who has been teach- ing physics at the convent of St. Anthony, has invented an auto matic rifle capable of firing 260 shots per minute, Bontempt wish- ed to patent the weapon, but the superiors ordered him to destroy the model. Discarding his priestly garb, ho entered into negotiations with the minister of war, which are Bow about to be closed ZEPEPL SES MEY SES ® MOTHER OF MANY * 18 SUING *® ANDERSON, Ind., Oct. 10. * Twonty-nix children were born *® to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Tuck- *& er of Elwood, according to the tion for divorce filed here ® by Mrs. Tucker. She charges w® her husband has abandoned ® her and the big family. * RARE KKKKKKRHREH MODERN elegantly _furntshea rooms at lowest rates at Hotel Vir inus, Kighth and Virginia, near ‘eatiake, Elliott 803. eee LADIES Have Lovely Hair . If you want to make your hair 80 beautifully lustrous that people can. not help but exclaim “Oh what lovely hair!" get a fifty-cent bottle vt PARISIAN SAGE today, It's the most delightful, refresh ing hair dressing, daintily per- fumed, and free from poisonous lead or other dye. The girl with the Auburn is on every carton afd bottle PARISIAN SAC Be sure get the genuine PARISIAN SAGE will banish dandruff, stop falling hair and sealp itech in two weeks, or your money back, That's a pretty square offer all fair minded people will say. Large bottles 60 cents at Bartell’s es and dealers everywhere. hair of and Payments MIDDLEMENS -| This Extraordinary Sale Now On National Piano Mfrs., 823 Third Av., Near Marion, One Block Below Orpheum Theatre and Opp. Central Bldg. National Cuts Loose NATIONAL PIANO MERS. 823 Third Av., Seattle ! ron rose HAIR TONIC WILL WIN MEN VOTES, PERHAPS TOPBRKA, Kan., Oct. 10.—Women|ery other plan we could think of who are leading the campaign for|and now we are going after them equal suffrage in Kansas are reach-|with a promise of hair. Yes, hair! ing out for the baid-headed men. “If we can make hair grow on/equal suffrage campaign.” very bald head in Kansas before the fifth of November, election d: woe will win thin battle for the bal lot,” declares Mrs. Lilla Day Mon. roe, whose home is the headquarters of the Topeka suffragists. “We have figured out that if we can get in the state we will win. You've got to do something substantial for men to interest them in the suffrage the vote of every bald-headed man| Tests of several varieties of hair | tonic have been made and the wom- en will campaign with that which they find the best. They have even evolved a tonic of their own, which | they will recommend if It seems to work well. The cellar under the Monroe home is the meeting place of the hair tonic campaigners. No man, not even Judge Monroe, head of the household, is permitted to * * * * * * *) * * * * * * cause, and that is especially true of | penetrate the mysteries of this cel- bald-headed men. We've tried ev-|lar. eS 'BRAINIEST WOMAN GIVES UP BIG SALARY TO BE NUN HARRISON, N. J., Oct. 10.—In the big local offices of the General Electric Co. here, Miss Mary Stevens, successful business woman, fre- quently characterized as the “brainiest” woman in New Jersey, explain- ed why she is giving up probably the biggest salary paid a woman worker in the state to devote the remainder of her life to church work and charity. Miss Stevens is supervisor of the General Electric Co, and the “right-hand man” of the general manager, But she will give up all this to enter the convent of the Sisters of Charity at Madison, where she can toll for the benefit of the poor and afflicted. Miss Stevens explained that she has always had an ambition to be come a nun, and that in her charitable work recently she has been touched with the terrible suffer- fing among the poor, which, she says, is constantly on the increase, For years she has devoted her surplus earnings to aiding the poor and dis That is the slogan of the Kansas | tressed, and the call for her entire efforts finally became irresistible, — a a = 2 wR KKK KEKE KKK KEK * * * KEEP MATCHES AWAY FROM BABIES * * Dear Editor: I wish you would print this for the benefit of * % mothers and fathers, also young people who may have the care *| *% of little children, and even if not, it will be of use to know. * + We lost a dear boy 38 months of age, August 19, not through * * carelessness, but through ignorance of the poisonous sulphur * * match, and I see in your paper tonight of twins, one dead and the * other not expected to live. It is a positive shame to allow the * *% manufacture of a match so poisonous. * * I would advise a doctor immediately, whether or not you are */ * sure the child has eaten the heads, Read up on the subject. * % Had I been familiar with the poisonous nature of the phosphorus * %* match, we might bave a living, happy boy, instead of a memory, * * MRS, Cc. ROWE, * * * a a eo ee ee ee ee ed MERCHANT TAILORS PLACE BAN ON PEG-TOP TROUSERS AND LONG COATS CHICAGO, Oct. 10.—Exhibits dis-)at the hips and are rolled half way played at the joint convention of |to the knees, siving the wearse the ca s eooiety |#PPearance of having legs about the merchant tailors and the society one-fourth as long as his body, will cutters’ league show/ not be tolerated. form-fitting coats and vests! Along with the ridiculous peg- and custom that with tight trousers prevail. Top-|tops will depart the coat that coats will be double-breasted, with | reaches half way to the knees. The velvet collars and edges. Much lati-| dark gray Prince Albert, with black tude is permitted in colors for walst-| velvet edge, also comes in for a re- coats, and searfs of the most vio-| yival this season, lent and riotous colors are proper, cali seen mM On providing due attention fs given the The Differen: Patient—How badly am I hurt? matter of harmonizing with the tone of the other garments, Doctor—Depends on whether it Peg-top trousers of the vaudeville] was in a football game or on a rail- stage variety that bulge like skirts) road,—New York Sun, SERRA ARRRRAAAAe * « *® «If your paper is not deliv- % ® ered regularly to your home * every afternoon, and if it is *® not delivered in good shape, please phone the circulation manager, Main $400. The Star subscribers are entitled to per- fect service. They are enti- @ tled to an early and a regular % delivery. Boys w up or otherwise mutilate the @ NOTICE 10 ELECTORS NOTICE I8 HEREBY GIVEN that in accordance with Resolution 3802 of the City Councl! of The Cit of Beattie, adopted September 23:1 1912, the simple referendum has b invoked by the said City Council {te self as to the following ordinance: ORDINANCE NO. 30039. An Ordinance relating to the ore ganization, management and ‘7 Uon of the Fire Department o' City of Seattle, and repealing al “ITY OF vs crumple seeeeeeaee ordinances in conflict. Section 1. ond day of April, 1918, the firemen and employees of the Fire Departs ment of The City of Seattle, sul to call, other than the Fire Chief, shall be divided into two (2) plas toons, one to perform day service and the other to perform night sere vice. The hours of the day service shall not exceed ten (10), commence Ing not before eight (8) o'c! A M. and ending not later than alx (6) o'clock P. The hours of th night servi all not exceed four teen (14), commencing not befor six (6) o'clock P. M. and ending no’ later than elght (8) o'clock A except that in the event of great, threatening or unusual conflagras tion, or such emergency, the Fire , or other person ‘command of the Fire Department, shall have the power and authority to summon such fires men an loyes as may be o' duty to in the protection 0! | lite and p: In their work the ty. bald platoons shall alternate. from day to night and from night to day each and every month. Section 2, There shall be provids ed suitable and healthful places of abode for the employes and firemen so employed while on duty. Section 3. All ordinances or parts thereof, in eo far as they may be ta conflict with the provisions of thi ordinance, are, repealed Section 4. This ordinance 1 take effect and be in force thirt; days from and after ite passage ani if approved by the Mayer shall take effect at the time it shall become a law under the provisions of the clty charter, Passed the City Counc’ September, 1 ws! ROBT, B. Ht President of the Approved wy, me this 17th day of September, 12, 10. F, COTTERILL, Mayor. Fited by me thin a7th day” of ber, 1912, Septtast. H.W. CARROLL, ttest City Comptroller and ex-officio City Clerk. By J. P, Agnew, Deputy Clerk. SEAL) NOTICE 18 HEREBY FURTHER GIVEN that on Tuesday, the 5th day of November, 1912, a 5 election will be held in The City of Seattle for the purpose of ratifying or rejecting the aforesaid — ordin= ance. W. CARROLL, City Comptrolier and ex-officio City Clerk, Date of first publication Septem- ber 27, 1912.

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