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She Id Have nthe Pimples aes the Fairest Due to Stuart's Wafers. ta in Cal ry And are dike pea when Stuar qleat the face of ev and blemi haven't dimy rent skin of a health complexion is more the deft touch of an dhe most exquisite water Soo mnde’ act di their mission s A stim: tory ducts. They do te tion, but cause = out vigorously ing perspiration into The calcium sul these wafers are the germ pot glands and pores makes @ new fa apurprisingly sbort ever be ashamed to in a mirror, once} fe Calcium Wafers friends give you that as much as to say sake, get rid of those je fe no longer any excuse to have a face disfig: ‘skin eruptions, when it ts get rid of them. Stmply | ‘of Stuart's Calcium Wal) pany drug store and take) on to directions. After you will hardly recog fa the mirror. The ht you immensely Will disappear te sell Stuart's at 50 cents & box Cal DANCING SEATTLE W DANCING PALACE. and University. Per Couple Main 43 . ALL WEEK , Baturday, Sunday DEEP roaRrLE” the} ‘HANGING PARTY sy 1S PLANNED|: SALEM ‘ murdorers have gon elec by The Or, Nov, 7—Twelv in the penitentiary here been informed that the Ore torate desired that they the neck until they are } were given the priv tricted Hyer vnthecapital hailed as the awures in Cali elsewhere, was deter hank dead helt re of the natil the model ik for wholesale } hanging fe planned very near future. Milk Bath Nearly Causes Death |) | HAVERHILL, Mass, Nov, 7 actress once Won much — publicity by announcii¢ that she was taking milk baths and that they were bet ter for ber than any other kind, but jArthur W. Butterick, an Basex county farmer, doubts the trath of jher claim. Butterick swam tn milk and came near being drowned. Dutterick had many gallons of imilk tn a tank in his barn ready |for an automatic cooler when his horse became frightened, and, dash ing from the stable, struck Butter lick and be toppled Into the milk jfollowed by a collection of cana. | The proverbial three sinkings jthat accompany water accidents |were missing, for when he came to |the surface he did not risk a second ducking but climbed to safety, As two doctors were called, the efft cacy of the milk treatment is in the doubtful column [yeeee eee eeeeenee * HIRES EVERY \* AUTO IN TOWN * LITTLETON, Col. Nov. 7 | To prevent his friends kiduap * ing him and his bride, Ralph |® Thompson, a drugxist, hired lw every automobile for reat in * the town. His heme | ® worked. \® eke eee ea ee ee eane ‘WOMAN DANCED TOO MUCH eee eeeeeeeee PITTSBURG, Nov. 7.—Mrs. Ger trude Steble, 93 years old, who, one week ago tonight, danced at the leo den wedding celebratic of her son, Chester M. Welss, died today Grandma Steble delighted the com lpany by going through an old jsquare dance with her son jday she sald she was as well as | usual. That afternoon she went to bed exhausted and never got up again NOTE IN SOCK WINS GIRL HUBBY } ROCKFORD, Il, Nov. 7.—Miss} Myrtle Bowers, an employe of local knitting industry, acquired a husband through @ note slipped into a pair of socks she made. The socks in question were pur-| chased by Robert Cobb, of a small] town in Plorida, several months) who read the note and accept invitation to open Bowers left bis} to Rockford. He aco. ed Mise Bowers \a correspondence. home and came Jsought employment near his sweet: | lheart In the big stocking factory jand the courtship was continued | lwith increasing fervor, They are y {on thelr honeymoon Bow Orme cuees Twice Nightly JUNGLE GIRLS” and Dancing Act and 20-. ting for a Den- the One You Want Destrsiry in like coun i H's no good beenn looking avenu for in id we coming to “iy offices, Giscover that they are of the wrong Or. the | B Practice enough for Beattica had a of about o Thad becom: inees tint 00 cony charged work clans i pent of first cians 0 IUPEA thar this say thes |) dation i upon Practice. any difference te, a hy and Sunde be Werk SAYS HE’S TOO YOUNG TO WED MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Nov, 7 Augusta Turezynsky, 38, a widow with four children, has turned down | her 22-year-old fiance, Stanislaus Kuliekoski of Laporte. He is too young to marry, she says. A few days after she negotiated a marriage license, Mrs, Turcayneki who is worth about $10,000, return led it. She didn’t want her fee back She just didn’t want to get mar ried. THE MARKETS The following are prices paid by local co: chants to the vrodu the retailer Suying by the retafler under ing price.” Prices In ali jubject to variation freshness 4 general excellence, but these prices, unless otherwist in cated, are for strictly first grad 2 r Fruit—sem e Priee teow apples. Jalencia oranges . Pears Dresned Mente—Selling Price, Chocks 9 wine, No. ad Bee: wteer . | Fore, steer | Rounds bOx tongue, fr full out. 2 10%@ Woetners Lamb, Pork— Drensed hows Trimmed sides Short loin pork Shoulders -- Pigs test Spare ribs Pork sausage Squabs, doz Heets Turnips 4 vox + Cauliflower, doz Hothouse lettuce, cr’ Head lettuce, dox s 0019 00@ 15 00@ 14 0 @ 18 00 @ 26 00@ 26 nee: et wound timothy Alfali@ ceecceeveere Wheat hay Bron *e Shorts Whole corn Cracked corn . Middlings . Rolled gots ‘and hariey mixed Reassomeinmee Se25525 Next} THE STAR—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1912. 0000000000000 0000000000 0008 MRS. WETTIN BUILT: A HOME IN THE MIDST OF A CYCLONE—A REAL HOME FOR A KING Mim Lis saareaceeessecs sees. MAS. WETTIN AND HER DAUGHTER MARY RIDING IN LONDON BY WILLIAM SHEPHERD. }the family fortunes had almost LONDON, Nov. 7.—She's the | set Hut Mary was sunshine woman who built a home in the/iteelf and she had beaith enough midst of a cyclone, Is Mary Wettin. | for three girls For that reason she's interesting. And so she war selected to By cyclone | mean that tornado| marry the future prince of Wales of wealth, culture, frivolity, Nattery,| whose name was Albert and who snobbery, pleasare, ambition, bitter:|was three years older than she. ness and joy that whirls around a|They called him “Collare and throne, And by « home I don't | Cuffs. While she was waiting to mean a house, but a home, a cyclone | be old enough for marriage, be leellar of a home, filled with love! was ruining his life in London, end kindness and peace and chil and in 1892 he died dren Then the present Mra. Mary Wettin is the queen|the next oldest son of the king of England She has turned the became the future prince palaces of the king where at times| Wales, The buay selectors didn't in the past hatred, fury and all the | make any search for a wife for him jevil passions have ruled, into peace: | If Mary was good enough for ful, quiet homes. Albert, she’s good enough for It was like this George,” they declared. Whenever England has an unmar-| They were married in July 1894 ried prince of W running | Eleven months later 4 son was born around loose, a future king, it| The: med him Edward and today jneems to be the job of some five| he ts the prince of Wales and un |bundred or a thousand people to|doubtedly the five bundred or one hunt around for a girl who will thousand selectors are now looking jmake a good wife for him It | for a wife for him doesn't make so much difference| When her husband became king |whether she will Jove him or not,/of England, and she the queen, the jor whether he will love her, But lahe must come of royalty, her past }must be clean, she must be healthy for there must be other princes of Wales in the days to come, and royal lines are matters of summa’ |stock breeding. About a third of 4 century ago, this mob of selectors fell on Mary |down in Richmond, the eyes of j|Her father and mother, the duke land duchess of Teck, were poor; king, being the way home from the pompous scenes in Westminster abbey, be cause they hadn't been able to stop laughing ever since they had seen Albert, their oldest brother, a tewH] minutes before, walk down the aisle lof the crowded abbey im funny clothes and bow very low before papa aod mamma who sat on strange, high seats, dressed in ‘white fur = shane enReeeeeeereaeeeeeee \* . KISS CHILDREN TOO MUCH PASAT A, Cal, Nov. T.-Prof. Arthur Schattenfroh, who occuples the chair of hygiene at the University of Vienna, official delegate of Austria to the Congress of hygiene and demography recently held at Washington, D.C. who is in Pasadena, says Americans drink too much ice water and kixa children too pro miscuously He declared those were the two most noticeable things in the United States. In elsborating upon the second he said children were often unable to throw off germs received from the lips of thelr kissing admirers, but “(hat it was all well and good for a man to kies his wife.” eeeeeeeeel eeeeeeeeeueee yh sie ess ead i oat hod Palade te Miah ll he Med i teeeee —— —— PARIS, Nov. 7.—-Our law courts are always providing comedies. new instance relates to an action brought by Adolphe Lechaud a nie ne painter, who sued the proprietor of a toboggan for Injuries old, and the judge remarked, in the course of the tri “You know, sir, you really oughtn't to go tobogganing at your age; a man of 55 is not in hie pristine vigor.” The plaintiff's counsel thereupon arose, and, addressing the court more In sorrow than in anger, remarked that a court of law was the last place in the world where he would have expected to hear the doctrine of “too old at 56” expounded from the bench, at that age judges and Counsel! alike were at the height of their powers. The court was evidently impressed by thie argument. .Anyway, M. pce was awarded damages against sid Sseene paadunsciocosabe NEWPORT, Nov. 7.—Mortimer A. Sullivan, appearing for C. Leroy Grinnell in the superior court in the suit for damages arising over Mrs. Elsie French Vanderbilt breaking a contract for tutor services for her son, William H. Vanderbilt, set a new price for society women’s slippers, stockings or garters at $200. Grinnell won from the appeal Mrs Vanderbilt had taken from the lower court in which he was awarded $200. He received a verdict with interest from June of last year, amounting in all to $216.75. It took the jury 20 minutes to reach a verdict. Mr. Sullivan prac- tically won his case when in his argument he exclaimed: “What does this woman care for a paltry $200, the price of a pair off garters, a pair of stockings or a pair of slippers? If we ever meet aq’ equals it is in a court of law, which is no tor of p men of the jury, decide this case on the |i and the evidence and your oaths, and disregard the personalities before you.” Theros ia Only One «“sBromo Quinine” That le : Laxative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TO GURE A COLD Ih ORE DAY. seni = CW Lore NOTICE! We are now located in our new quarters at 1424 Third Av., Near Pike Visit our new store, which is the finest on the Pacific Coast. WHITE SEWING MACHINE CO. New Location—1424 Third Av., Near Pike—New Location. Always remember the full name. Look for this siguature on every vox, 360, SAY YOU SAW IT IN THE STAR. children romped in thetr carriage on f ‘A MAN IS AT HIS BEST AT 55, $200 ‘VALUE ON VANDERBILT GARTERS, 28th Anniversary Sale Over a quarter century in busi- ness—a record we are proud of. A liberal appreciation of the pub- lic’s continuous patronage over a quarter century. SUPERB ENGLISH GABERDINE \J “~~ i ff, i ye ei] ‘ 4 b ite a wi pt \ ii a at a re va AG 28th Anniversary Sale These Tremendous Price Reductions. Three Days of Unparalleled Coat Buying— es Av-614 ALASKA BUILDING 28th Anniversary Sale The Greatest Raincoat Bargain event Seattleites have ever partici- IF | fonat in. Three days of sensa- tional price reductions—Today, WEIS Friday and Saturday. SUPERB ENGLISH SLIP-ONS gi 1) Lia fi Nt rn) TODAY,FRIDAY and SATURDAY &§ At 55c on the Dollar |: One of our superb all-weather English Gaberdines or Stip- ons, A $30.00 $16.40 coat priced at in Seattle. All Coats marked in plain red figures showing tremendous price reductions. ’ Ladies and Misses’ Coats Sizes 14 to 46. 110 Ladies’ English Slip-ons and Double Service Poplin Coats, $1250 garments priced $6.40 at H i 200 Ladies’ All-weath- er English Stip-ons and puperb Mohair Coats, $15.00 and $18.00 garments priced $9.40 360 Ladies’ $20.00 and $22.00 Superb Ail Weather Double-Serv- Coats and English Slip-ons $10. 40 priced at $30.00 Superb Double. Service Coates; the new English Gaber- dines and doubletext nglish Slip-ons, $13.90 Saturday Night, Nifty Tan Slip-ons — ble-service $7.50 —One of our priced at $15 a Men's Storm Rubber Cape Men's Short Ghaiver Rubber Boots at $3.95 Girls’ Storm Capes, with storm hood; fine for school service. Special at [EAR RAR HERR R EEE DEER HALTS FREIGHT TRAIN *| NEWTON, N. J., Nov, 7A 1~Two C big deer, with large antlers, DALLAS, Tex., Nov, 7-—Two Chi-)) Vi 'the Delaware river near engo youths told an unusual story» hore and came up the embank Jin the children’s court today. The|® ment of the Lehigh Valley bas, Joo Zimba, 14, and Bruno|* railroad just as a freight train f toski, 15, were arrested two was panies er Age cm | saw the nimal and stopped ago at Mesquite, Tex., where, | the train directly In its — ted on horses and armed with Without hesitation the ¢ vers, they were giving their tried to pass under the c best exhibition of shooting Up &/® but came to grief with its ant small town, In court today they lers in the brake gear, The said they had started their career trainmen liberated it after a Hast month on $800, which th quarter of an hour's work, stole from @ store in Chicago own RRA RRR RRRREE RE the mother of “Elmer Me- *) *) * * * * 7 a * *)| * * * *) * * LOVELY IN THAT CASE. LEAVES FORTUNE TO AID OLD MAIDS SAN BENITO, Texas, Nov, 7 Old maids of this county are pro- vided for in the will of Mise Mary Philpot, who died hi recently. Miss Philpot herself never married, and at her death was worth $100, 000, The will instructs her admin. istrators to amply care for all old maids who apply for assistance for a period of two years, The bequest warns against aid- ing grass widows and requires the apinsters cared: for to prove they are 40 or more years of age. CENTRAL WET WASH Phone Queen Anne 1834 Auto Service—-Best of Work 20 pounds for 600. 2%o for every additional pound. Rough ry 400 per dozen. 024 Ninth Ave, N, Ethel—What a horrible scar Tom has on his forehead. Edith—Oh, no! Why, he got that in a football game. IMPORTANT—iIntending buyers who desire to make a careful selection are advised to call during the early hours. Below we give just a few examples in the greatest Raincoat bargain ever witnessed 28th Anniversary Sale Beginning This Morning At 8:30 o’Clock, Till These Tremen- dous Price Reductions $5 and $7.50 Coat Bargains EXTRAORDINARY For men and women, Slip-ons, priced now $2.45, $4.15 250 Boys’ and Giria«’ English values. For Men and Women niversary unexampled Coat bargains, beyond comparison, In Scotch tweeds, English Gab- Slip-ons, ete. nd $35.00 coat 65c| All Coats Marked in Plain Red of the many different models One of our superb Men's all- weather English Gaberaines or Slip-ons. A $30 Coat $16.40 priced at soeee All Coats marked in plain red figures 10:30 showing tremendous price reductions. Youths’ Coats 240 Men's and Youths’ All - Weather Coate and English Slip-ons, $12.50 Coats priced a”... $6.40 at. 375 Men's All-Weather English Slip-ons and Cravenette Overcoats $15.00 and $18.00 val- ves, priced $9.40 now at 540 Men's Superb All- Weather Double-Serv- ice Coats and English Slip-ons, Superb Com- bination Raincoats and Overcoats, $18.00 to $22.00 values, priced $1 0.40 Rubber a dow Coat; 28th An- at 550 of these Men's and Youths’ $25.00 to $30.00 Superb Double- Service Coats, the new English Gaber- dines and Double- Texture Slip-ons, priced at $13.90 $15.30 and Men's Goodyear Hip Boots Men's Long High Hip Boots . Boys’ Storm Coats in tan and biack, for school service. Special at Boys’ Sou'west- ers 40c. ‘TRIED TO EXTORT $5,000 | FROM LADD, OF PORTLAND PORTLAND, Or,, Nov, 7.—-Areh! | Hamilton, a man of five aliases, is junder arrest here today for the attempted extortion of $5,000 from J. Wesley Ladd of the Ladd & Til ton bank. While Ladd was attend ing a theatre a messenger boy waited on him with a note request jing that $5,000 in a sealed package be giv to a man who would call at the Ladd home a few hours later. | The note was signed emy jand threatened the destruction of Ladd's home if he did not follow out | the instructions in the letter. summoned Sheriff Stevens, and at the scheduled time a messenger called with a return address for a local hotel. The sheriff and Ladd followed the boy, who, after leaving an empty etter at the clerk's desk, according to Hamilton's instructions, went di- rectly to Hamilton's room with the package of money. Sheriff Stevens then arrested Hamilton, finding the money intact on his person. Ladd ee ee ee ee ee es AT HER FEET IN VAIN They had wandered into the conservatory to them in faint, rhythmic throbs. “I have had many men at my feet,” she was saying, care- lessly, “but in n. Not one of them met my requirements.” He pond “Have you tried corn-plusters?” he suddenly asked, “I have known them to do the work when the most skillful corn doctors have failed,” The music came ‘eC * CERAM TRA AAA TEAS CARR RE IOS —_ : = ee ee eee eee es SAILED RIGHT BY IT Dark was the night, ran wild, The skipper (Note—Not the “Here, my lad, in a few minutes right.” The boy did so, and for a few minutes all was well. Then, of course, he muddled things, and presently the appointed star was shin- ing at the stern of the boat instead of ahead. Then the lad raised his youthful voice and shouted excitedly: “I aay, sir, come and give me another star, I've passed that one!” save for the light of the stars, and the sea and beside him was the , but another.) ou take the wheel. I'll be back star up there, and you'll be all stood on the bridge, y on the burning de said the skipper, “ Just steer by tha boy,