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i 5 3 3 Weodhouse-Grunbaum—"“USE YOUR CREDIT"—146424 Pike St, *| FOUR INTERESTING ITEMS From the PopulanPriced Home Furnishing Establishment, at Prices Which Will Repay You to Investigate at Once. WE CHARGE NO INT patent drop sides and Natio springs; fintshed tn white « Bale price ......eveeeseceeess 22-inch combination coal Heater, heavily ated. Sale price g18.50 The f0-Inch sie... 815.50 per 4167 424 - Telephone—Private Metal Crib, similar to picture, $16.50 solld Chiffonier, plate oak Colonial with French mirror: tintaned mal Blectric Reading Lam trated, fumed oak fi ass with comple chments. Sale pri @.- ine ike Street: Exchange—Elllott 3096 WASHINGTON STILL HEALTHIEST STATE ‘The state of Washington holds tts place as the healthiest state in the Union, according to the tenth bdt- ennial report of the state board of health. Washington's death rate from September 30, 1913, to September 30, 1914, was 8.4. The year before the State's score was 7.9. FOR HEAD COLDS OR ANY CATARRH ILL Burely use Hyomet; it quickly clears the Gisagreeable the tnflamed lining of the alr pass- agee—you feel better at once. ‘When your nostrils are clogged, you suffer with dull headaches, or have that constant frog in the throat. | Hyomet! ts the remedy that will give! the quickest, most effective and last-/ fag relief possible—tt goes right to) the cause of the trouble and quickly ends your misery. You simply breathe Hyomet, ustng the small inhaler that comes with every complete outfit Hyome! immediately reaches all| the raw and inflamed tissues lintn the nose and throat, dri out the polsonous secretions and healing the fore spots—dull headaches vanish— you breathe freely. riven the worst eases respond quickly. It !» impos. sible to use Hyomel and not be im- mediately tite: Hyome! can be had from Hartell Drug Stores, and is very tnoxpenstve. Annual Dance MRS. BURNSIDE PUTS IN A BUSY DAY'S CAMPAIGN Mrs. Nellie M. Burnside, candt date for election to the school Doard, was a busy woman Tuesday Her schedule for the day was 11 am —Address at pariiament- ary law breakfast, in the banquet room of the Y. W. C. A. 1 p. m.—Addresses meeting of Mra. Pansy V. Shafer’s residence, 5233 16th ave. N. E 2:30—, Woman's Civic clab, at the home of Miss Alice M. Vietch, 4550 18th ave. N. E. 4:30—Addresses West Seattle Im- provement club at the home of Mrs. R. E. Thatcher, 4507 W. College st. Evening—Addresses Carpenters’ union, Carpenters’ hall, Fourth ave. and Stewart st. One of the finest deeds a woman can perform ts to serve on the school board, in the opinion of Mrs. Burnside, who Monday night, at the Grand opera house, deciared that tion ts a serious one, and one where & woman on the board would pro- vide the needed balance tn the con sideration of every subject that | comes before this governing body.” GRID FANS WON'T GO NEW YORK, Dec. 1—A Lon- Given by the Cigar Makers Local 188 Tonight Dancing From 9 Until 12:30 Souvenir Program Tickets 50 Cents e Heal your skin | : : with Resinol hi p bore rttete oe fv Bosom by. itching, burning, raw or scaly skin humors, just put a little of | that soothing, antiseptie Resinol | Ointment on ‘the sores and the | suffering stops right there! Healing begins that very min- ute, and In almost every case your | skin gets well so quickly you feel ed of the money you threw | o || know, how to || how to samplt | to Join the army. | horted many thousands of spec- | tators last Saturday to join the | colors, and the result was one | recruit. iC. E. BOGARDUS GIVES ADVICE TO PROSPECTORS AND MINERS “Thet are & great many funda- mental points in regard to ores and minerals that every pector, miner or operator should know. It | matters not how much practical | prospecting or mining he has had |he needs some of the fundamen. | tals, namely, what kind of miner- ‘als m ‘occur in, what grade | they are apt to be and with what associated. The method of mak- ling simple tests in the field so as to know what ores to send to the assayer to have assayed is of great importance. All will realize what this means to the man way back in the hills. “Then as to the new man who done no prospecting. In order {}to start right, he ought to know how to locate his claims, how to also what is nec every prospector to take his samples, a ag! or mine. | Every one should be je to la: out his work to obtain the best results, how to her and present data if he wishes to sell or inter est capital. “The best way to get such knowl- edge is not to try to get it solely by practical experience; it 18 too costly and involves too many lost chances and too much time. The best way is to take such A course asx the Y. M. ©, A. offers in their course of Assaying and Mining. In \three months a man will know how to do things right by studying under Mr. Burly, who heads this Y. M. ©, A, course, Mr. Burly's training and experience has fitted him to know wi the miner and prospector needs to succeed, 1 cannot too strongly urge the ad- vantages to be derived from tak- ing this course under Mr. Burly at lthe ¥. M. C. A. by any one who ts | connected or wants to be connect- ed with mining, “C, BE. BOGARDUS.” New class forming, Take Mr. Bogardus’ advice and enroll today. | Room 210, ¥. M, C. A. Bldg. | Q—t will appreciate it very;and thie chum to take turns about; gonsip, but ft usually stops of its much If you can help me to decide | spenaing two month lly the friendliness and goodness always what Is the best course for me to| holiday won, at the other’s| make their own appeal, and though pursue. home, During our friend's visit to own accord, ff the subject of it For nearly a year | have been|our home | have always acted as given no reason to continue True housekeeper for a bachelor, my sen-| her escort to theatres, dances, par-|people may be prejudiced and un lor, and about two months ago, we ties, etc., endeavorinn to make her fair at first, they find out thetr beoame engaged with the Intention, visit pleasant as possible, | mistake and then’ feel very cheap. of being married next year, Yet,| She Is now visiting at our home.| As long as you possess the confi sometimes It seems as if | do not |! take her out as | alwaye have./dence of the girl you are engaged y, and other| She knows | am engaged, but neith.|to you should go on about your to give |e" of Us feels that should make any |own affairs just as you have al to my| difference with a friendship which|ways done, People who would child 1|'8 @ fiancee | criticise you for “an act of pure! r really | KM id be-|courtesy live in glass houses and Iteun be te) Ghella ten ane man | fore -| shouldn't throw stones | marry, but whenever | think of | going away from him, | quickly de-|'"% “eurtesy te my friend. le am ay Gide he te more te me than | re. rumors been circulated | Perplexed Wife of 46": Dial wane throughout t eighborhood and) | Will you kindly send me your " in our cirole that brand me as| | address that I may answer are ago, | loved a man ny | \. ou | made, then ae my own opposed to him, | gave him up. Yet, how much | regretted it | cannot explain, Now, | ask you, should | marry | the man | am engaged to, as he can | provide for us, and | might learn to care more for him; but cannot believe that | shall ever love at |firet. Thanking you, DF. A-—-Tho last thing on ear I would ever advise any woman or girl to do fe to marry for a meal Ucket. Unless you can respect and love the man you are to marry for what he is, rather than what he has, or becaw matrimony appears to be the jest road to traverse, you | will do well to sever those .vows |at once. No phase of life affords }continual happiness, or even con: tentment. We must accept the bit | ter with the sweet. We have not |the power to avoid the tnevitable. | The love of youth or the first love | fs maddening, fascinating and usual. ly carries victim up, up into a paradise of tnexplicable joy and | short-lived. It ts the calm, | forting love that steals gently into the being, the love that comes with com- complete understanding that Is | lasting. | Unless you con submit to the tn- jovitable and make the best of what Ufe has to offer, and realize full you will never love again as you did the first time, you will alwa: a disappointed, discontented happy woman. Forget the past nearly as possible, present and what it affords. Q—! am a young man of 22 and in an unpleasant predicament. || am engaged to the dearest girl, who ie in the East at the present. time attending echool. Prior to taking up our In thie city, about five ye: 0 we lived in a email city where | grew up. My sister, who Ie three yeare my junior, left a dear girl chum there. The three of us had | Qrown up together and were insep- has been the custom for my sister STAR—TUESDAY, DEC. 1, 1914, Letters To Custhio. Grey false and unworthy of a good gir! love. Miss Grey, belleve me when | say the character of my girl @ — —> friend, a well as that of my own, ee has always been beyond reproach,| @—How can | keep my nails free and we have known each other too| from white spote? K. ©. long to warrant such remarke, || A.—-White specks appear when could not feel differently toward|the nat! is bruised, or when It ts her than | do my own sister, and ||not evenly nourished, As the nal! would not have her h grows the white spots may disap. marks for the world, pear, If they do not, keep the nail out and t do to| wrapped in a bandage wet with spir jut the mouths of these gossips. HONEST YOUNG MAN, A-—Nothing can be done to stop PAGE 5. | you privately? CYNTHIA GREY. | its of wine and camphor, or soak finger tips 10 minutes daily in olive ofl. ALL ABOUT TERRIBLE ROBBERY! “Hark!” said the captain ;Mo hit burglar alarm, ‘Scuse, Three sturdy officers, tn plain | please.” clothes, harked } De “It's a burglar alarm,” exclaim ed Frank Olmstead, brother of | Roy, the Brilliant Boy Bull. It came from the Specie bank, 304 Fourth ave. Bide by with revolvers drawn, Olmat nd Officers Get ter and Barr, left headquarters, ready to do or die, It was 6:32 a. m. by Frank's In gersoll, The morning was dark| and dreary, Cautiously they ap- proached the bank, They glued thelr ears to the heavy door, They could hear voices within Never such a the dark glesmed the steel of cakes and bis elr trusty revolvers. “Let us in!” they demanded. The oe “Go on away,” came a voice, Sign muffins and from inside, It was a Japanese| of rolls — never voice. | Per such joy inthe “Lot us in or we'll fire,” shout-| fect kitchen, such o4 the officers, in stentorian tones.| Bak- . “Go on away,” came again, smiles at the plaintively, from within. Then somebody inside called up police headquarters. The police- could hear him talking to the captain The t hone confab ceased, and K. Koga, Jap porter at the bank, smiling a yard wide, unlock ed the door and the cops walked in. “What the ————~ fs the matter?” they demanded “Oh, him not much,” said Koga. “Me push button for electric ight. Second Floor at John Panton Co. to Have Big Sale Three mine workers reported at- tacked in Prairie Creek district, Ar kansas. since Made right here in Seattle of Pure Cream of Tartar; not an ounce of alum fn a barrel ot Sublime. At your grocer’s. wy, . ", Second and Pike, ac | Jougall 2 forthwick Go Store oS the Orristmas Spirit R. B. GAGE, Receiver Ayattley, Open From 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. 42 Men’s Raincoats Greatly Reduced Formerly $17.50, $20, $22.50 and $25 Reduced to $11.95 HE majority of these Coats are fine Gaberdines, every- one of them is English made, from the famous house of Mandelberg, which, as you know, is famed for the excel- lence of its tailoring and the superior quality of the cloths used in the coats, In the various shades which are offered in this assortment you will find only finest woolen craven- etted materials. The weight of these coats is just right for Seattle winters, so that they may be used as either raincoats or overcoats. You may buy them in both military, storm and lapel collars, and in sizes from 34 to 44, at the reduced price of $11.95. —Just Inside the Pike St. Entrance, Prat Floor. Odd Feather Neckpieces Reduced HIS assortment consists of about 25 handsome Neck- pieces in the lighter evening shades and combinations. The scarfs are beautifully made, feathers all carefully se- lected and of exceptionally long flue. The reduction is oc~ casioned by the fact that we are slightly long on evening shades and ‘are willing to sacrifice them at ¥% price. : $25.00 Ostrich Stole ........ cece ee - $1250 ; 2 yards long, in the new French-green color. $15.00 Navy Blue Ostrich Set.............0...+- $750 This has an extra large, deep, flat ruffle with a satin. lined muff to match. 5 $20.00 Pink Marabou Stole. .........+sse0+00++ $10,006 2™ yards long, extra heavy strands. $27.00 Chinchilla Set of Marabou ..............$13.50 $20.00 Red Fox Marabou Set.. $10.00 $18.00 Chinchilla Marabou Stole ...........++++--$9,00 $12.50 3-yard Ostrich Stole... 0... cee cece ee eee e $620 $10.00 Gray and White Ostrich and Marabou Stoles.$5.00 And many others in a wide variety of styles and combinations, all at Y2 price, —First Fivor, | Second Avenue and Pike St. mostly the latter, is the hit of the present week. Otherwise the bill is mediocre. The Dainty English Trio, high-kicking maidens and graceful dancers—good. Mildred The MacDougall-Southwick Co. STEWART HOUSE 06 Stewart Gt Near Pike Public Market Modern Single Rooms BB@ Large, Modern Outside Rooms for One or Two, BO€ THEATRES THE METROPOLITAN There's a wealth of good things fm the threeact play “The Poor Little Rich Girl,” which opened at Grover, songs and sayings—good- night. Spinette quintet, novelty dancers—fair, Billy B. Van and! Beaumont Sisters, comedy sketch | —fatr. “the question of schools and educa-| Second Floor of John Panton Store, Whe Dresses, Etc., Starting tomorrow morning, the Jobn Panton store inaugurates a} big cutprice sale on the second | floor, The season has been somewhat backward on_ ladies’) etc, and the John| eves that this | is the psychological time to reduce the stock floor down to where it Prices have) |been cut For tn-| | stance, the ladies’ coats have been| |divided into three lots, Those} | worth up to $10 will be priced at $9.98, while the finest 24. will be put into this sale at $16.60, And the sults are marked lke this—$15 values at § Snow White and Sweet No Knots—No Tears 24%, Cents Per Lb. Dry Weight ROUGH DRY deren" Minimum Bundle 50c Each bundle washed im = separate compartment. No rubbing of the clothes, because we use the BEST Inundry soap. LAUNDRY Queen Anne ‘A coupon ta each bundle tells about The Washing our special dinner set offer. Fine ! CENTRAL can Auto Service |regularly up to $8.50, will be sold at| stock, #0 a8 to | $5.98. Those worth up to $16 will| new |b: ones, which have sold as high as|morning and full detalis will be | Sunday), #100, 10:20 & m. Vittucci Importing Co., 309 Occidental Avenue. Eliott 276. GRANDMOTHER KNEW There Was Nothing So Good for Congestions and Colds as Mustard But the old-fashioned mustard plaster burned and bilatered while it acted. You can now get the relief and help the rd plasters gave, without the plaster and without the blister, MUSTERO = does it nt, 2 It fs a clean, white ointm made with ol] of mustard. It {is sotentifically pro- pared, #0 that !t works wonders, and yet does not blister the tenderest akin. Just massage MUSTEROLE tn with the finger Upe gent! Se quickly it brings reilef. tly the pain disappears. And there ts nothing Iike mUS- TEROLE for Sore Throat, Bron- chitia, Tonsilitie, Croup, Stiff Neck, ma, Neuralgia, Hendache, Con: ton, Pleurtsy, atiam, Lum- » of Back or lea, Brutson, . Colda of the Chest (it often prevents Pneumonia). At your druggist’, in 260 and boc jars, and a special large honpital size for $2.60 re you met the genuine MUS- fuse imitations—get ou for. The Musterole ompany, Cleveland, Ohio Coats, Suits, Furs, Are $22.50 values at $13.50 and $27.50 values at $18.75. Waitsts worth up to $2.75 will be closed out at Thc each, and the finest ones, worth go at $3.95. $3.98 silk petticoats will be in the sale at $248 each. The ready-to-wear department will be one of the principal features of the reorganized John Panton when the present plans are com- pleted, and this a is an added reason why the management de- sires to close out the present start in on the/ with a complete new This sale starts tomorrow | stock. found in the large display ad which appears on page 2 in to- day's Star, NAVY YARD ROUTE Steamers H. B. Kennedy an@ Tourlst How to Shed a Rough, Chapped or Blotchy Skin This ia what you should do t bad complexion: Spread evenly the faoe, covering every Inch of skin, @ thin ce 4 ing it off @aily until your oft and beautiful Lanve Colman Dock, Beattie, ¢ cept Bunday (Sunday 2:30), Saturday, 11:45 pm. Time table subject to change without si80 usually suffices. It's « ver exoe! im An ounce of It, dissolved in @ half-pint witch hasel, makes a ro- freshing wash lotion. This renders the skin quite firm and smoot! very firet Hines; the a vertinoment. Cured HisRUPTURE I was badly ruptured while lifting « trunk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good, Finally I got hold of something that quickly and com- pletely cured me. Years hav t a wrinkled as employed by 606 OR 914 FOR BLOOD DISORDERS Come to Me for n Relinble Wasser- man ‘Teat I Practice the Up-to-Date Method of ts hing to sive full information al how you may find a complete cure without operation, if you write to me. I Treat All Special and Nervous Diseases of Men and Women, DE, DONAWAY it to any may savea life or at e mis~ ery of rupture and the worry and danger ont Cor, Third and U Private Kntrance on of an operation. -|the girl, battling for life, wander- ‘|naper"—very good. Billy ;;and Jay Herman, comedians, good. °| Fireman and the Chi Low, oh such low compar; | It got the laughs, though. Chas. De Haven and Freddie Nice, danc-| ers—pretty nifty. Brown and Ro-| chelle, acrobatic comedians—good. | the Metropolitan theatre Monday night for a week's engagement. ‘The story {t tells is intensely in- teresting, and the scenic effects are most beautiful Leonie Dana, who plays the lit JACOBS PHOTO SHOPS P.-L Bidg., Seattln tle girl, 1s a tiny girl herself, and | sat For Colds a splendid little — nyt me ree ie In Head porting company Is ail that could | ¢ oe cenerous treesampie—enenan | Cat be Temade into beautiful be wished for. “Poor Little Rich Girl” has ev erything money can buy—toys,| motor rides, dancing teachers, a/ governess, a nurse, ete, But her father is busy making money and her mother is climbing the social tree. So she gets no| CATARRHAL JELLY attention from them. | scolsmalelaee Belng rich, she is not allowed to| smhncemee ator 2s zears., 16,000,000 romp about the streets like other AS aaa Tittle girls for fear of kidnapers, | SAmed nasal passages, Get a 50, Bhe has no boy or girl playmates, | and euaranwee it’ Mosey ban and she's lonely. | Retuse substitutes, Neckpieces, Muffs and Fur Tur- bans, Model Millinery Co. Sth Floor, Second, at Pike People’s Bank Bidg. for several days’ treatment for cold in head, chronic nasal catatrh, dry catarrh, sore nose. KONDON’S | Original and Genuine Large size statue, suitable for Oi! etely heals in- eta dsc crsictsbe || club, lodge, etc.; also large cof- fee mill; hand power, 709 Fourth Ave. They are dange When her nurse wanted an even- | KONDON MFG. CO. Minneapolis, Minn, ing off, she gave the little girl an overdose of sleeping drugs. This brought on delirium, and ed off in the land of fancy, Her dream, showing people as they really| are, is presented to the as e S to onom audience. The girl's delirious fancies feveal to the parents the ceetiieimeianal pathetic loneliness of their child and they forswear their previous | gods. The Watchword of the Day RECENT extraordinary conditions and events have brought to public attention the ad- visability of cutting off useless expenses, and “Economy” has become the watchword of the day in domestic and business life. Human interest aplenty, a touch | of melodrama, and a lot of good character acting—that's “The Rosary” as presented by the Seat- tle Theatre Players. F. Keenan | Wallace, as the tholic priest sowing seeds of kindness, gives an lexceptionally strong characteriza- jtion of the role and brings out the human sentiment the author in- tended. “The Rosary” holds the {nterest of the audience through- out. It is worthy of note in this connection that arti- ficial gas has not increased in price or Fteriorated in quality, that there can be no shortage of supply or suspension of service, and that it is one modern necessity, the use of which actually aids the con- sumer in reducing expenses. ae THE PANTAGES | The Imperial Opera Co. has re-| turned to the Pantages theatre for & week's engagement and occu-| ples headline place. The singing| {s good and a further advantage is | the explanation of the scenes en- acted by the players. Selections from “Cavalleria Rusticana,” “Il Trovatore” and “Lucia” are given. Wintfred Sherbourne and Jack Montgomery, in sketch, “The Kid- Sheer By its cheapness, convenience, cleanliness and efficiency, gas easily displaces other forms of fuel, and in the saving of time, labor and numerous forms of waste, helps the user to accomplish a ma- terial saving in a practical way. The average gas bill is so small that in itself there is little opportunity to effect a reduction with- out dispensing with more or less of its great ad- vantages, but in the costs and burdens it removes and the work it does, gas is a valuable assistant in every man’s endeavor to live as economically Haley and Haley, song and dance, good. De Kock brothers, acro- batio and tumbling, fair, a —-——-@ Lida McMillan and company pre sent an act this week that has un- usual merit for a vaudeville sketch. There is opportunity for real act- ing. Lida et al. take full advan- tage of same. It's the headliner and it's very good. Three Dolce sisters, singers— good. Three Lorettas, song and musical instruments, pretty good, Brady and Mahoney, “The Hebrew ,” fair, Mile. cockatoos, good. Edwards burlesque strong men, as possible. SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY PHONE: MAIN 6767, Bessie’ Brothers, fair, THE OnPHEUM | *Violineky, fiddier and planiet® — = ee a