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ake wks m Phone Main 903 Office 114 Jackson St. the DANCING HIPPODROME Fifth aed University Jece Union Orchestra nt by vst Stu re, reo iff. ert St ot ast for ck- THE SAME OLDSTAND pig? IS YOUR CHILD'S | Just now we are more Shotguns, Rifles, Ammunition than we grinding out ever did before, must be some reason for it. Better come and see us, if interested in the sport and your own welfare. THEODORE WILIS 1012 FIRST AVENUE wee eee Se Dresses the season green mahogany and of novelty mixtures. AmN=n mp Eyres Transfer Co. GRINDING AT Your Coat and Your Suit Is Here—So Choose It And Your Credit Is Good—So Use It. Remarkable Values Tailored Coats Suits and In Women’s and Misses’ sizes —latest colors, correct styles, teally the newest creations of They are blues, grays, olive, end FURS Of high standard quality, com most rea bined with the season's approved styles at most sonable prices We Fit Perfectly Every Man No matter if he ts TALL, SHORT, SLIM or STOUT. COME IN, bring your shape with you and let us prove with one of our SUITS, OVERCOATS OR They Are the Best in Style, Low In ] Corner Third Av. and University St. Open Saturday Evenings Price Come right, here, pick out what you while you enjoy wear THE STAR Mexican Army Made Up of Rubbish of Country; and the Officers Are Grafters By a Military Expert (Written for The Star.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 28,-"How | does the Mexioan soldier compare } with che American soldt 1 ean best show you how they | compare by noting that in which | t are most different, the thing which makes @ man with a gun a/ SOLDIER! An Amortean soldier who deserts | , in the face of the enemy KNOWS he is a coward; his former com: | radea loathe his cowardice; and he jhimself never forgets his broken oath But the poor, conscripted Mexi-| can peon, carrylag his government's | arms doesn't think much of a brok en oath. He deserts when the fire} ottest and at the very first pos-| | sible chance. He doesn't look upon] himseif as a coward, He pats him self on the for being lucky enough to get away! It 4@ so common fust now for | large bunches of the federals to d® el side that it passes TONGUE COATED? IF CROSS, FEVERISH, CONSTR PATED, GIVE “CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF Fics.” pete | Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, It Is a sure sign that your Nttle one’s stomach, liver and bow. els need a gentle, thorough cleans | ing at once, | | When peevish, cross, Mastless,| pale, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or act naturally, or Is feverish, stom- jach sour, breath bad, has stomach. ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of jeold, give a teaspoonful of “Call- fornia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few) hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of Ita little bowels without griping, and you have a} well, playful child again You needn't coax sick children to take this harmless “fruit laxative,” they love its delicious taste, and It always makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “Califarnia Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown: ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfelts sold here. To be! sure you get the genuine, ask to see that !t ts made by “California Pig Syrup Company.” Refuse any other | kind with contempt. DIAMOND RINGS ARE CUT IN HALF AT Carroll’s Jewelry Store 323 PIKE New Joshua Green Bidg. MR, HARD-TO-FIT; 1ow easily we can please you CRAVENETTES .00 A Week That’s All We Ask jbe in the | gradually The federal army ts made up of! the iubbish of the republle, eon victa, looters, notorious “bad men pecial Photograph by Staff BEL SOLDIERS IN MY, MY! THEY'RE BUSTLES AGAIN! BY MARGARET MASON for the United Press.) NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—Yes, it's quite, quite true—busties so popular before as well as behind have come into their own again, or, In other words, they have come back Just when you all had acquired the full stomach effect, along comes the fashion mandate that you must go to the other extreme. Of course, this doesn't mean that you will have to get a hustle on and get a bustle on immediately, to sartorial «wim. Dress re are just sort of tentatively ng it out and on With designing fingers they are drawing skirt draperies backwards and upwards, but you're sure to have one wished on you be fore many moons !f you don’t watch out. and panniers that have brought this ing after a new line in a tunic or a flounce, the natural tendency was to slope 1t down toward tho front of the pannier, so it 1s not surprising | that for its second event It should} have evoluted again from the same bouffant fashion AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK Metropolitan—Jullan Fltinge tn “The Fascinating Widow.” Moore—"The Bird of Parndise.” Seattio—Halley & Mitchell Stock in “The Great Divide.” Tivoli—"The Girl Question.” | | | | HE THANKED JUDGE FOR A LIFE TERM MACON, Mo., Nov. 28.—""Thank you, boss. I'm much obliged to you,” said Charles Davis, a negro, who was sentenced to the penite: tlary for life by Judge Shelton. Davis pleaded guilty to the deliber. ate killing of Chester Figgings, a negro of Shelby county. He was in mortal fear all the time that a mob was going to break into the jail and hang him, and to get off with a life seomed to be too good sentence to be true modern outelde rooms, 260 Stewart House, 86 Went Advertisement Best to 5f Stewart ALBERT “ANSEN Jeweler and Sliversmith Is Now Located at His New Store 1010 Second Ave.. This wd and the will hemmed in ® special package fh Star Ade Think it « only 1h cents, You ean sure remem@pr | your friends this Thankagiving. Where? | HE ENTERPRISE NOVELTY WORKS | 1119 Wivat Ay for mailing outside olty, te extra It Is really the flounces and tunics |), It has long been customary for Mexican judges to sentences men ti the army instead of the jail, Raids Phot THEC jrapher Durborough) ‘Y OF JUAREZ KILL CATARRH GERM PRINTS DEFENSE. GOING TOPUT ON |USEBOOTH'S HYOME! OF HER ATTACKS Try the sure and most effective | way to reach the raw, tender tn flamed mucous membrane Infested with catarrh germs—breathe Hyo- met. All druggists sell it. You cannot reach the nooks and revices of the breathing with Hquid preparations: only one way—breathe a daily the Hooth’s Hyomel. It acta directly on the Inflamed membranes and de atroys the catarrhal germs. Hyomet is not a cure-all; it has one purpose—quick and effective relief of catarrh and diseases of the breathing organs, When you are times free of catarrhal {lls the general? health will Improve. If you suffer from breath, raising of mucous, frequent sneezing, hnsky voice, discharge from the nose, droppings in the throat, spasmodic coughing, or any | other symptoms of catarrh, use Hyo mei at once. It will destroy the disease germs in the nose, throat and lungs, and give quick and permanent relief. Hyomei does not contain cocaine or any habit forming drug-—no stomach dosing—you just breathe The complete outfit, tnclnding | pocket inhaler and bottie of liquid) bustle business apon us, for In striv-| costa $1.00, extra bottles of liquid, | if Inter needed, 50 cents. CUT- OHIO Rate Dentists Open Evenings WE STAND BACK OF OUR WoRK Amalgam Filling 50c Up Gold Crowns $3 and Up Bridgework $3 and Up Full Sets Teeth $5 “us We heve thousands of Seattle pr Organs the Suffraget there {® startling series c germdestroying alr of hurst, in the current iss offenatwe | Jare made on low saloons and broth els; and drink-sodden recruits are forced Into the ranks The Mexican soldier is content to |remain in the army after t Jonce forced in, because army life t* | made more agreeable to him thar Jhis past halfstarved, halfclotherd condition, He {# allowed to take along his wife or woman—they pay | little attention to a private's mor Jale—and Nttle drilling is indulg | tn. Huerta, than whom none | | knows the Mexican soldier bet | ter, has seen to it that the sol | dier is pald regularly, He gets | his uniform and from $1.50 to 2 Mexican money a day, and a chance to do some looting— | THE DEAD ARE ALWAYS ROBBED. | The government furnishes no ‘food, that being tht woman's duty Often in a battle men will drop in their tracks from hun) There aré no hospital arrangement for the} | injured Tho Mexican private and fight hard at tim |when he ts cornered and choice So much for the men—now about | the officers | Just outside Mexico City the gov will fight 4, generally has no ernment has a splendid military | school, where many young officers |are educated In the latest and best methods of warfare They leave that school with high military ideals | Once tn the army, the youthful Heutenant learns that his superior| officers are not in the business for | glory or country, but for graft For instance, there is Gen Tracy Albert, who, with sever thousand men, has been trying his best to avoid battling with But during when he was supposed to be doing h to defeat the rebels, he was pock- eting half the salaries of his men and subordinate officers raking In the profit on r sold at 60 cents a bot- | As for the rebel soldier Many of them are bandits, always| | were and always will be. They will] |probably be in rebellion against | Carranza six months after he ousts Huerta. They are in Carranza’s ranks because the chances for grat | tying thetr desires are How many are re Carranze has good financial backing | is & problem unsolvable, but there are thousands probably fighting for principie, fighting for what Car iranza claims to stand for—equality and justice ON SEX DISEASE | LONDON, Nov. 28.—Prompted by the recent threats of supressing| on account of her} articles on ual diseases, Miss Christabel Pank prints a spirited defense of her action “These articles have simply told the truth about sexual dis- canes, the extent to which they ravage the population, the rea- son why they exist, the manner in which they can be prevented, prevention being, as has bee: ully shown, the only ri cure,” she says. “Where is the indecency in all this? “Tnat the existence of sexual disease and the immorality that ia its cause are Indecent, we the first to admit. But to tell the truth about such evils and to fight for their abolition are the most decent things that are possible for human beings to do. “If, however, the Guffragett: be convicted of indecency, then equally guilty of this offense are the famous medical men who have Incited us to our plain speaking. | “A little while ago 40 of the | most prominent doctors in Eng- land signed a memorial appeal- ing to the public to demand the appointment of a royal commis. sion which should investigate the facts concerning sexual disease and recommend steps | to be taken to cope with It.” | ‘A JOB FOR DOG?) W YORK, Nov. 28.—Dr. H |W. Wiley is mentioned as probable next health commissioner of the | metropolis. | | | EAT 8,763 HORSES BERLIN, Nov. 28.—In_ the first eight months of this year 8,763 horses were eaten in Be ln, according to the government meat inspection reports issued today. This is a reduction of 600 horses as against the same || period last year | | Beautiful Silverware | | For Star Readers | A net of six beautifully decorated French gray finish Rogers Silver Tea Spoons free to mail subscribers to Tho Star, They are of beautiful | design and will last a Mfetime. A sot of these spoons could not be duplicated at any store for less than $2.50. We have bought them tn such large quantities that we are jable to give them to our subscribers. | | All that is necessary for you to do \{s to pay your subscription to The} tlents who will tell you that they | never knew that plates could be fit-| Star one year In advance ($3.25) tad ko perfectly until they had us do/and the spoona will be Bent you, the work Any work that doesn't prove ant fafactory will be repatred argo at any time. Come in MUON-today, If you wish for FREE examination an a) mate 12-Year Guarantee to All Free Examination free of | ean charges paid, If your subscription |does not expire for some time, you| joun take advantage of this offer |now and renew for a yenr from the time {t expires, or by interesting a friend in The Star and taking a year's subscription at the regular |price, you will recelve the spoons just the same. They will make « \fine Christmas presant {f you do not care for them yourself. This loffer does not apply to agents. FARM LAND Under the Hammer USE MY MONEY FOR FIVE YEARS This is the only way, the times considered, that I can sell this land. No one will buy it unless they know absolutely that the venture is a profitable one. | CANNOT GET AWAY WITH IT IN ANY OTHER WAY. As to what you will pay for it, this is up to you when you come to the auction that will be held at 114 James Street, Seattle, Wash., on Wednesday, December 10th, 1913, between the hours of 10 a. m. and 10 p. m., with continuations from day to day until every block and par- cel of it has been sold. The choice will lie with those who come first. Every man and woman in Seattle, from the water front to Capitol Hi years of wide publicity given Central Washington—HAS A PRACTICAL AND A SPEAKING ACQUAINTANCE both with soil and land values in Grant County. Particularly is this true of those districts so often referred to as MOSES LAKE and QUINCY VALLEY, but which, however, are distinct and entirely different sections of that fertile county, and, owing to the depth and the character of the goil, with an immense advantage in favor of QUINCY VALLEY, through which the Great Northern railway runs between Seattle and Spokane, and the Northern Pacific has surveyed the Ellensburg cut-off. THE NET RESULT IS THAT I BELIEVE—that every man and woman in Seattle well knows that if any tract or parcel of the land I am offering them today is knocked down under the hammer to them at any figure ranging from $10 to $25 THEY AR PTING A BARGAIN WHICH CANNOT FAIL TO N THEM HANDSOME PROFITS, EV THOUGH THEY NEVER ADD ONE CENT TO THE LAND FOR FURTHER DEV LOPMENT. } In fact, I absolutely know that were the State of Washington scraped with a fine-tooth comb for lower land values, NOTHING COULD BE FOUND that will equal QUINCY VALLEY. 12,800 ACRES AT AUCTION ‘The larger part of this 18 AN ESTATE that 1 | for grain, alfalfa, Canadian peas, potatoes and bought at bedrock figure and which 1 must | diversified crops, nor could the conditions be sell first and at once. I am enabled, therefore, bettered for raising hogs, cattle, horses and t. offer my purchasers land at BAKGAIN | poultry, and as to fruit and berries, the long COUNTER PRICES, and upon such terms and | open season that is free from frost, with the conditions that rything considered, better | soil and water, shows it to be better even than land than this cannot be procured within the | Yakima and Wenetchee, already famous. ttate of Washington, I shall put myself, infact, | The entire QUINCY VALLEY fs a natural in the position of an administrator forced by | reservoir for water that can be had in wells, crder of the court to offer the entire block at | shown by those already down in the neighbor. auction and UNDER THE HAMMER to the | hood, with a lift of but 65 to 126 feet, some of pablie, ie ie within ‘the QUINCY. IRRIGATION also je wi in e This is not hill land Lp! rg land, yes PROJECT, for which a preliminary bond issue or yet land with sand dunes on it 11 | has just been voted. When this is completed It 18 LEVEL, BUT SLIGHTLY UNDULATING | Wi) ‘aad not less than $150 to the face value of FARM LAND. |The soil ranges i one ss every acre I am now offering at auction and 2 10 to 50 feet. The underground drainage !8 ex. | believe there is no bank in Central Washington cellent, and it cannot, therefore, either sour oF | 1+ wilt be glad to loan §100 an acre on it when develop alkali. The altitude is approximately this irrigation project is complete. 1,100 to 1,200 feet. ANOTHER FACT: There are no foreclosures ‘This soll {s dertved from a weathered basaltte | on farm land in Central Washington. STILL rock, mixed with fine silty material that !s | ANOTHER FACT: Home and Eastern brokers locally known as Yoleanic ash, but which carries | {n Central Wash'ngton farm loans are able to such a plentiful supply of nitrogen, phosphates | handle them to better advantage than even raile and carbonate of lime as plant-food as to make | way bonds. AN IMPORTANT FACT: Hundreds of it, with water, one of the richest and most | of acres of this land that I am offering has al- prolific soils on the face of the earth, One por-| ready been under cultivation, tion of {t differs rot from any other any more The sun shines on QUINCY VALLEY 320 an two coins of the same denomination and | days in the year. The soil, with its water, will date, IT IS ALL SO GOOD IN FACT, THAT | grow anything on earth that can be grown in THERE IS NO CHOICE. this latitude, and the variety of which is um ‘There is no better land anywhere in the world | Iimfted. WATCH IT GO TO $250 AN ACRE Beef will soon go up to A DOLLAR A POUND. Retail prices on farm products have advanced 662-3 per cent in ten years. In the same period 90 per cent of all farming has been highly profitable and successful; and 90 per cent of individual effort in every other line has been a failure. Consumption has overtaken production, with SEVEN LEAGUE BOOTS, revolutionizing farm life and placing it on a dividend-paying basis. In 1880, 10.2 per cent more people lived on farme than in the towns and cities, In 1910, 23.4 per cent more lived in towns and cities than tn the country—a difference today of more than 83.6 per cent. As to urban, suburban and rural property, the farmer builds the cities. If you wish to capitalize your own efforts and opportunities, MAGNETIZE YOUR MONEY BY STICKING,IT IN LAND. City property raises taxes and assessments, while farm property produces profits, peace, plenty and pleasure. One is a Hability while the other is a Hquid and convertible asset. THE FARMER OF TODAY WILL BE THE MONEY-LENDER OF TOMORROW, Don't for get this! REMEMBER THE DATE, DEC. 10, 1913 This offering at AUCTION will be tu 40-) discount of & per cent on the principal will be acre tracts and upward. At the PRICH it wit | allowed. Others with nothing but brawn, brain be no more than pin or elgar money. The ee srt have made ot in QUINCY VALLEY, TERMS, one-fourth cash and the balance tn oy Dae RO Bute RAE Do ONS ee ee have both. five years at 6 per cent, principal and Interest FOR BIG PROFITS THAT I AM SHARING payable annually, For CASH on deferred pi y- | WITH YOU—meet me on the floor, Wednes- ments within one year from date of sale, inter- | day, December 10, 1913. A. McKAY JORDAN, est on future payments will be remitted and a’ 114 James St. Seattle, Washington. All sales, other than for cash, will be by contract. All transactions will be concluded with the Northern Bank and Trust. Company, of Seattle, acting as trustee both for myself and the purchasers. Their integrity as an institution is a guarantee as to the safety of your money and your business. I can offer noth- ing better on this score. TAKE THE TRAIN AND SAVE MONEY (Registration and Map Coupon) oe . ose 1913. DEAR SIR-—Please send me your maps and literature, If nothing prevents me, I will be present at your auction, If I buy, 1 shall avail myself of your offer TO REFUND THE COST ™ OF MY TRANSPORTATION OR ROUND TRIP FARD to Seattle. Name .. Address .. eerererry sees BtAte ...cseeseeee (Since there will be a large number present from out-of-town points, early registration will enable me to amply provide for the refund of fares.) .