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FURIOUS — | BATTLE RAGING SEMLIN, Hungary, Nov. 9—Re rts of a furious battle along the) ‘chatalja fortifications, with the Butgars repeatedly charging Nazim | Pasha’s Turkish defenders, were re | ceived here today in dispatches | from Bulgarian sources. Asiatic | troops, the dispacth said, were re Inforcing the Turks. COLUMBUS, ©O., Nov. 9.—-Mra. W K. Liggett, club woman, blind for years, upon recovering her sight waa thoroughly shocked by wom en's styles. She said their clothes | are “ind - —_ he Pye CURED IN @ TO four drupe is! rerun’ mm Hin te rein Giese Freteutine Pine in 8 fo Dance at Dreamland tonight. *°** Sell Your Eyes? | | Sell Not for a Million DANCE TONIGHT MINUET HALL and 26t 2413 Jackson «t. bet 740 Wednend Bocial Dance every Ader Dr. L. R. Clark. D. DO. S. Fill that unsightly cavity with o perfect matched tooth. 1 match your teeth with artificial teeth so perfectly that they all look alike, and replace the missing ones without a plate. Our prices are ex y low. Just think, w will make you an extra heavy $1( Bold crown for $4.00, or & regula: $10 plate for $5.00. Dont wear ¢ famity plate thet will not stand th« eriticiamm of your mirror. Invest! fate our Coametic plate. It doe not slip or drop, and removes th Osga | | | F (BEFORE DER Game STARTS, NOT MAF Diss DANGEROUS ROCK RemMoren?t er, ———— THE STAR’S SP In this picture map Artist Brown yas stationed himself, figuratively, at Constantinople, sapital of the Turkish empire and « SHOU r a eeeen TUT-TUT, DOT 19S ONLY A Perm.e. pesipes, €F FelLiow CAN'T Tane CARE OF HIMSELF NE H4S3 NO BUSINESS IN FooT BALLs v" hb at WD WE oncoming, victorious nemi the thr ened His Mind Abou LATER: with hie back to Aelia, surveying his | nople.” Wf the reader will note the points m of the compass, he will see exactly « great expanse of territory such as how Turkey-in-Europe is surround the Balkan war does, is an entirely Balkan mew feature in daily newapaper it wrinkles from a prematurely old}has made his pencil took Europe ed by the micirole of mouth Work guaranteed. ward, just the Turkieh sultan sta ali of which are pressing Must be doing now, as he stands armies “forward to Constant. Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. A. 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Office hours, 9 m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, 10’ to Wednenday and Saturday ng tll 8p. m. 12 even your free siustrated book. 11-9-12 Name Street Town . MADELINE ASTOR SON’S GUARDIAN WORLD’S MATRIMONIAL RECORD PRETORIA, Africa, Nov. 9.—It is believed here that the world’s legitimate matrimonial record is held by Mrs la M. De Beer, aged 78, living in Pretoria. First 1 at the age of 18, she : me a widow ¢ tenth time. . She is the mother and step-mother of 49 children, and the grandmother of the (By Val tor. BOISE, vantage. | present 28,089. hag been blockaded for the night on the Northern Pacific main line by |@ big slide near Little Falls, mense depowits of earth have come down, and @ stezm shovel must be Oneida county gave governor, 3,046, and Hawley, demo- erat, 1,492, practically insuring the election of the first named, N. P. BLOCKED iy baie Press Leased Wire) CHEHALIS, No is WILL CALL IT TILIKUM PLACE The triangle at Fifth av er way, will have a figure of Chief Seattle will hereafter be known as Tilikum Place, acting on the request of th kums of Elttaes and ment of Mayor Cotterill, hav ed to official whieh. park for the aquarium 5 The plans submitted call for three buildings and a Temporary on the Lake at Hudson st trestles Washington shore line an¢ Ida., | President Taft in the complete re turns can show gains enough jovreome the lead of 574 votes now jheld by President-elect Wilson in incomplete returns from 25 out of the 27 counties in the state, Idaho will go to Wilson swept away The total Wilson all Press Leased Wire) NEW YORK, Nov, 9.—-Mrs. Mad. ‘BOY MUST STAY and Yes WALLA WALLA, Nov. 9.—Frank after Wednesday, Pellissier, whose mother tried to have bim transferred from — the stat ison to the reformatory, | " t remain in prigon. board yesterday, Te : . rit. to the decision of Judge Breats the endorse. 48%. The boy was eo unruly t he could not be kept safely at M roe, the officers testified. 6 at beach. recreation were pier. | ordered 1 Orcas st leulng the Denny-Renton | Coal Co. Clay mouse a8 for $16,500 damages have been dumping of Cedar river years. Judge Dykeman, who is hear' washed away by clay and stone | during the MRS, ROSE MAROTTA DEA Mrs. Rose Marotta, aged 60, {1517 Broadway, died suddenly neuralgia of the night. Services will Bonney-Watson and Olive, at be held chapel, 1:30 Suyday. are, This is to come of $3,000,000| to Seattle in 1888 As- COULDN'T STAY AWAY 2 : 3 : No to Latest returns of Taft's first ad- vote to the 28,663, Taft Paines, for Vv. 9—All “Jones got so excited at the fi ball game he hugged a young | travel Im-| ge Did she object?” | the lows of It acres of land, which last two the case, made a personal inspec- leline Talmadge Force Astor, widow | tion of the situation on Cedar river. jof Col. John Jacob Astor, was today lappointed guardian of her son, John} |Jacob Astor IV., by Surrogate Fow-| | on her own petition. Mrs, Astor was appointed general guardian until the child {9 14 5 of age, and is allowed $10,000 for) its support and education for the \next three years. from @ trust fund lereated under the will of Col IDAHO RESULT (Hy United Pre IN STATE PRISON aecording | to- | hat on. 11 ACRES WASHED | AWAY, ALLEGED Ignacio Sartori of New York is a for the nto o of of heart Thursday at Broadway Mrs. Marotta was born in Italy and came ‘oot lady sitting next to him, a perfect stran o, but the newspapers printed secured from Portland before the|the story, and the next day there track can be opened. were 5000 girls at the game.” : ae THE STAR—SATURDAY;“NOVEMBER 9, 1912, t Obstructi and events noted ches, while the hy map, wh newspaper, means How many of us ithough we read lay, what “the Bow A giance at this jatanding of pla topographical or “picture” In the news disp ordinary, or geog' printed in the little or nothing This of a great news event covering lumtration. Such a map conveys to the human eye instantly an under. TRUCKMAN 10 YEARS AGO, HE MAIL-ORDERED SELF TO CONGRESS FRANK 0. LINDQUIST AND HIS LITTLE DAUGHTER Jorder business out of a little two- by-four notion store. On each of the 10,000 letters which he sent out daily during the campaign was his jane argument setting forth the de GREENVILLE, Mich, Nov. 9-~|#rability of trading with the “Man The man who buys a pair of shows m Michigan,” as he calls him- has the right to know whether Oi'/self, and another elucidating the not he is buying paper. The “pure| Value of a clothes and shoes in- food” jaws ought to be amended to|spection and labeling law. Include “pure” shoes, too, If it tw} | Failing to get a congressman to wrong to label butterine as butter ihtroduce a bill forcing manufac: and whisky as patent medicine, ){t|thrers to stamp their goods, show- |is also wrong to call shoddy “all|ihg what the stuff is made of, he wool,” and imitation leather shots |announced himself a congressional | ‘calfekin candidate without the support of a He wrote These, in brief, were the planks newspaper or a machine. 192,000 letters to the 3,200 voters in of Congressman-Elect Frank a quist’s platform. His district, and thousands of an- Possibly if it hadn't been for | awers piled in “bawling out” that Lindquist got ‘Go to it,” they read, “we're with when he was a truck driver ten}you,” years ago, he would not have just! And Lindquist “went to it” On completed the only original mall-)Tieaday he was elected to congress order campaign from the Eleventh district, and he With $40 In his pocket, a wife |l*s now confident that the Lindquist and two children, Lindquist moved |pure fabric-andleather bill will be to Greenville, With hia $40 and the first bill introduced In the next his nerve, he built up a great mail-|congress. PHONE CO. SEEKS INJUNCTION Setting up the I4th amendment; Pacific company, which absorbed of the constitution, which prohibits) the ars peng berg and for Sea »| Which reason the city declared the the taking of property without due latter's franchise forfeited, must process of law, and also the COD | remove the poles, conduits and stitutional provision forbidding the|jother apparatus in Seatle streets impairing of contractual obligation, within 90 days or have this proper. the Pacific Telephone company has|ty forfeited to the city. filed a complaint asking that the} The complaint asks the court to city be enjoined from taking over require the city to appear in court the property of the Independent| within 10 days to show cause why Telephone company, in accordance|(he board of public works should with the ordinance recently passed,|not be enjoined from carrying out The ordinance required that the the city ordinance, TT he tay G WHOLE REMARKABLE SCENE OF THE BALKAN WAR|/FATHER RETURNS HIS SON TO PENITENTIA’ = oO . s, MAAS Ney dusdast {pleture map shows that the great metropolis of Constantinople is really two cities; that the Bosporus, a short strait and not a river, db vides it in half. How many of us have the famous Dardanelles placed accurately in our minds? This pic- ture map places it instantly. BIGGEST CROP OF CORN IN HISTORY | WASHINGTON Nov 9.—The |areatent crop of cora ever grown jin the world is the feature of the |most remarkable agricultural year in the history of the country | The November crop report of the federal department of agriculture, |iesued today, khows a corn crop of |3,169,197,000 bushels, 281,921,000 | bushels more than the biggest crop lof corn ever grown. On November 1 it was worth to farmers $1,850, | 776,000. The farm value of the crops of jeorn, hay, whe oa! potatoes, barley, flaxreed, rye and buck |wheat reaches the rmour sum of $4,171,134,000, while with | growing crops of cotton and the lerope of tobacco, rice and apples, the aggregate value will amount Well beyond $5,000,000,000. 45 SALOONS | ARE CLOSED BY DRY VOT The “dry” vote in King county, outside of the incorporated towns and citi of business. The county is requir ed under the terms of the local op- tion law to refund 90 pe to the saloon men. The license for country saloons is $300 annually. TRAVELING MEN TO BANQUET Chamber of Commerce is prepar- ing for the grand reunion of the mbers of the organization, to be j helt this evening at the Press club junder the auspices of the Seattle jcouncil No, 83, United Commercial Travelers of America. There will be served a buffet lunch consisting of 30 articles of food, which will be Washington made goods exclusive- ly. All the speeches will deal with the problem of the upbuilding of Seattle's business, and the Import- ant part that the traveling man can play in that undertaking will be emphasized, A small but appreciative audi- ence greeted Judson W, Mather, new organist at the Plymouth Con- eregational church at the reception and concert given for him last night at the church, Prof, Judson comes to Seattle with a good repu- tation as an organist, earned by several years’ work in Spokane, and his performance last night justified it, He possesses technical skill to a large degree and also apprecia- tion and the ability to interpret and convey the meaning of the pieces to his hearers. a.series of concerts to be given, m the Gridiron Hey Dur QUARR Some ~ ML (By Ustied Press Leased Wire SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 9. “Well, warden, here's the boy back jagain. Hig mammy and | | rather see him here in jail than to |have him break his promised word |with the state. He forgot his | bringin’ up, when he didn't remem |ber what he said he would do. His |mammy and | want you te know jthat we didn't raise him up that \weay.” | With this simple expl |the stern sense. of | prompted his act, D. W would justic Lan a | weather-beaten old rancher of Sha jta county, delivered to Wa Hoyle at San Quentin prison bis 27 year-old son, Frank, who bros his parole. There was just a suspicion of | motsture in the | eves as he shook father’s keen the boy's he ! the big grated door « «re | parting at the prison. Tht set of hin chin re jlaxed a little ‘Well, son,” he sald, slowly, “be & good boy while you'r here. Do | what's right and when you get « jcome back to the ranch. We'll be jawaitin’ for you. And then to the warden: “Sort Bewalled W. C. DeLaye, 21-year) old telegraph operator in the city jail, with two burglaries charged up to him, his confession recorded and the stolen goods recovered: “It's the little things in life that count, and.” he added regretfully, “asiso discount. To think that after half @ dozen neat little hauls | should now be surrounded by iron bars and hemmed in by evidence, and all be- | cause of my monomania on the sub- | ject of pink socks. It's hard tuck.” | Several weeks ago the § home on Minor av. lover $3,000 worth of Thursday night the maid at jhome of Virgil Bogue, on the ims was robbed o sewelry the } etre was forced to show 4 youn |man over the house that he might lbetter help himself to about the }same amount of jewelry In her jalarmed state of mind, the on jthing she remembered was that he wore lovely pink socks. The poll were notified and D: ltectives Phillips and Bryne put on | |the job and detailed to investigate | the premises. Finding nothing, | |they left the house and stopped ai | Third ay. and Seneca st. to lig their pipes. As they did so a lyoung man walked by and stopped | a few feet ahead to roll up his! trousers Phillips nudged Byrne and point-! — HOLDERS TO | Congress convenes next month, ) and Clinton W. Howard's name will lagain go before the senate for rat jiffeation. He was named federal) judge, as successor to Judge Han-| ford during the recess of congress and after the senate had failed to confirm his appointment. Of course, President Taft wiil jagain urge his name for ratifica- |tion, but it is certain. that the sen-| ate will again fail to confirm How-! ard’s appointment, and that Presi. will put 45 saloons out |dent-elect Wilson will have the real be pried loose of This jappointment of a new judge, / of the | will also be true in the ca cent of federal district attorneysbip, which | tofore been united the license for the unexpired term !s now being held by Beverly Coin-| pose of perpetuating er. | These are only two of the of-| |fices which will be removed from the hands of the old gang. The in-| |fluence in politics which the var lious postmasters in the state have! 138 NOT Dias GRANITE From Der 1S9 LIABLE To Ger HIS TASTE FOR LOVELY SOCKS LED TO HIS — ALL OF TAFT’S OFFICE Words by Music by ! wry inns IDERATION Y Remoren Fiecn? Fecvow mmr! of look after boy after all he’s done. This ¢ him a lesson. We ti bring him up right, but little wild.” Frank Lamb's Frank, and ag He's only a tte ta oa Jarceny,: achinery was released om p ) Inetractions not and to make authorities at s For a time young in obeying the Then the trait characterized ag wild” reasserted itself to the road. A short tired of a wanderers Uj ed by ‘0 the bome Come on, boy, we're going i to jail,” said the father, att down and eat a hearty like you used to when you little feller, and then wells phe idea aad ed or a father i 1 don't hold an the old man for bringing et he said the boy to Wane Hoy PINK ed to the young man. he whispered, “lovely 4 let's follow him.” They did a lowed bim to a pawn shop found him “soaking” a” watch They took him to police ters, questioned him, gob a damagiog admissions from bit i Captain of Da es" obtained « complete from him. The stolen gs were recovered from hie bouse on Boren ay, and? waits trial cae DeLaye is young, and x bewalling the fact that a ike the desire. for should put him in the m low, he is, nevertheless, ica t any rate,” won't be troubled with pik for a while. They don't at Mo = LATOON VOTE After the city council vassed the vote on the and found that it for and 18,620 or Cotterill issned the: proclamation stating tem had been approved @ go into effect April 2, 190% of the hopefuiness of roe. «the BE REC wielded will suffer F. Russell, of Seattle Appointed by Samuel give way to a new mab Collector Hopkins will al job. So will Ellis De of the immigration S. Marshal Jacoby’s rather shaky, a8 Js S. Naturalization” Ex ed Smith, Last of Old And there are sistants for this am Mus - < a some of them have 16 years and more, \ eve. in the om jobs from one term to antl The recent election broken up the ed in this state, so that It ¥ a shawdow of its Al four years hence, te np | Avel Johnson, J. F. Neiman, of} |the Standard Furniture Co., James |Henry and Andrew W. Black were | the principal witnesses examined yesterday in the trial of Edwin FP.) | Meyer, charged with defrauding} |the government. The case will be) ready for the Jury late this after-| noon, Johnson said that he built a }dough trough for the government | at the navy yard, where Meyer was | employed as chief clerk in the | STRONG CASE AGAINST NAVY YARD CLERK READY FOR JURY 10 head storekeeper's office, that did jcents. not come up to spe that Meyer was pel cept it. He said the paid $75 for it when it¢ make it. Neiman testified that bought a refrigerator the Standard Parnitare had been rejected by said that he filled an +" low for the soverntana Ze a pound, althougl i paroled another order at CHEHALIS BABY IS BURNED TO DEATH CHEHALIS, Nov. 9.—Joe Mrachek i Jr. 1 year old, son of a local dairy- |man, was burned to death, and Mrachek’s wife and three other members of the family badly burned the result of a fire which de- stroyed their home yesterday WILSON MEMORIAL | Tho program has been completed It was the first of|for the memorial services to be} with a fair at Jw held in the Moore theatre in honor tof Senator John L. Wilse vices will be held at 2 O21 hour of the funeral in Cram ville, birthplace of om. | program wil consist ObgNie dresses by prominent the senator and mi ns Hughes will presidi i —— ie Ballard Camp of the Aid. and Fellowstip give a number of ~ tainments this winters on last of this month.