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mers a banker tn Seattle, for a n eat Was expressed in official circles STAR—THURSDAY, DEC. 10, 1914. Fels-Naptha Soap was not intended to be the “Fountain of Youth,” but it has made so many women better by making their work easier, that it has restored their youth as well as their health. Fels-Naptha makes every line of housework easier. the clothes out on the time, with half the trouble. cleaning days the vopiwash, On fn gang it gets alf the On house- line in it whitens the paint, cleans brightens up brass, and takes stains out of carpets and Hy When you wash dishes, grease and makes silver and it dissolves lassware shine. It does all these things in cool or lukewarm water. No need to boil clothes Mrs. Sensible Thanks Anty Drudge Mre. Sensible—“Well, Anty Drudge, I started m: housecleaning the beginning of the week, an today I finished it. I thought I'd run over and let you see how Fels-Naptha Soap works for me. I'm not even tired, and am through peg Bn in leas than half the time it used to whiten them. TOF says Anty Drudge—"T wish Mrs. Onceyoung could Afies $i BANS oo hear you tell me this. I was just talkin, her the other day and told her you used Fels- Naptha Soap now. I wish I could get her to use it; she'd be so much happier and better.” FELS @ CO, PHILADMLPMIA Ro i FEL NTH _ SOCIETY FORGIVES MAN, NOT WOMAN IVA MAY HENRY, 3 YEARS AGO A HAPPY MOTHER, IS TODAY IN SAN FRANCISCO, ALONE But she lost the battle. The courts took the children from her. She still had 8. Foster Kelley Life still meant somethin her even then—three y Perhaps she Mrs. Ivy May Henry, formerly) worth. Perhaps it is nothing to) Seattle, has brought suit in San/the world to get a glimpse of a! cisco against S. Foster Kelley, broken heart. There are so many broken every day. Perhaps {t ts nothing to learn of a romance shattered; made in vain; of a mighty lone some little woman for all the ap: that fs all the news Is parent radiance of a gay San Fran-| She dreamed of a life anew, of be jelsco surrounding her; of the ginning over again, of wreating wages of sin and the unequal bur- den of punishment which befalls ag po in the case. 0 knows? Per rt ae be worth telling spite of the sacrifices she was re Mrs. Henry gave up everything | quired to make. that was dear {n a woman's life| She had been unhappy, she be hae she might elope with Kelley. | leved 1 he gave up home; she gave up Her husband was only a clerk ta| Paco p yes, she gave up, aft the same bank where 3. Foster bitter struggle, her two Kelley was secretary. here today tn the Rome Idea | She fought hard for this last pos-| Her husband was not liberal Honale’s assertion, of which news |session—the custody of her chil-|was grudging with his monoy, was received in London in a de- | dren sald dispatch filed last Tuesday.| She kidnaped them when the| She had clothes, but they were | Prince Von Bulow, the kaiser’s court dented them to her not as many as #he ought ‘to od | an, ambassador to King Victor's) She took them to California, She|Kelley could furn ital, was authorized to arrange/battied with cunning and with|much more. He admired ber ‘the transfer of the Austrian prov-| physical force to keep the didn't harp about extravagance. ince of Trent to Italy in return for | smuggle them over to the M: He 2 automobile. the latter's promise to remain neu- | Hae, where she would be allowed| Together they would go—he tral throughout the war. to keep them. would leave his wife and children. hearts | | to ce of $7,275 alleged by her to be due ona $10,000 promissory ‘Bote. _ This is the brief wire in today's : Perhaps u ALY WILL GET _ AWAR REWARD :: LONDON, Dec. 10- 10.—Lively inter-| undoubtedly built of sublime love of eventual marriage, perhaps lteved had been 4 Pretty, vivacious, led her. young—Mra oe ahi “hel One Hundred and Sixty BICYCLES WILL BE BOLD AT LESS THAN MANUFACTURERS’ COST Standard Ma! Only, and Every Whee! Guaranteed $35.00 “Yale” and “World” $30.00 “Cornell and | $30.00 Ladies’ with “Snell” Bicycles, with best | coaster brake, vrake, we... $21.89 «$17.75 40.00 to $60.00 Bicycles—The best value in Seattle; have newest Nobby Tread tires, best coaster brake and mud guards I big bargain, cut to ‘ a ete $26.89 Sporting Goods and Cutlery of Highest Qua Quality at t Greatly Reduced Prices MAIN FLOOR Basement Salesroom and Girls’ with coaster $14.48 Bicycles, coaster Bicycles, brake, cut to ever shown . consoled herself | of sacrifices | with the wonderful air castles she | kinfolk, away from children, away |!mvaded the United States? happiness which she youthfully be-| She would leave her home. would go to sunny California, |the East, to Europe, perhaps. jthey ¢ 4 to And They! PAGE 6. POLICE SAY APACHES OF PARIS HAVE INVADED UNITED STATES offices of the Chicago CHICAGO, Dec, 10.—Have Three short years! Away from home, away from from friends, Mrs. Heary is today in San Francisco—alone. Kelley has abandoned ‘woman in the case. But the world will forget about |Kelley. Then again, he is a man. | He came back here a year ago and erbaps, after| Henry viewed the future rosily, in| *8" Welcomed into respectable so-| | ctety. But the world ts not so lentent with woman. It condones the man, bat condemns the woman. THREAT TO FIR ANGERS MEXICO EL PASO, Dec, 10—A statement from Washington th: the three batteries of field artillery sent to| the international line by President) Wilson will be ordered to return the fire if the contending forces do not cease firing into American ter ritory has angered Mexican offt clain Many of them sald they consider ed the dectaration a warlike act TURN LIGHT ON LOS ANGELES LO8 ANGEL! ES, Dee. 10. Charges of startling {mmoral con- ditions in Los Angeles gre made in) terrible Apache garrotere of Paris | The Chicago police, baffied by a series of atrocious murders, all com: re arriving at the conclusion that a band of the gar- | roters are operating in Chicago and possibly in New York. In both places a strange wave of crime is now prevailing. daylight murder of | Emil Emel @ wealthy hat | manufactui e eat at his desk in hie place of business, a few doors off State st, and the methods used by the murderers, coupled with the oe crimes, have etartied the po- the Apaches, ey believe that elther two or three of the men who committed |the nine atrocious murders in one | quarter of Parts in 1912 have reach- led Chicago. | The killing of Nicholas T. Burna |m wealthy rope manufacturer, the police now tneline to think can be jtraced to the same gang of or ganized murderers. To add color to the Apache theory the report has been received by both New York and Chicago po- | Moe, as well as by the police of | other cities, from the prefect of po | Iiee in Paris that to escape service |in the army many of the most no- | tortous criminals of Paris have fled to the United States by way of Italy and American police have been warned to watch for them. Scores were rounded up and sent fe the | sme line, but many others was they gone to England ‘ear! & report of the public welfare com-| mittee of the Munictpal league The report covers an elght-months investigation The report charges that vice and gambling exist here, largely through | | the failure of the authorities to en. force ordinances. |SEATTLE’S CREDIT | STILL VERY @ooD It's pay day at the city hall and all {x well While Seattle's knockers are do-! ing thelr utmost to discredit the city's financial standing, Thursday| rolled aroynd and #o did ready cash | | to pay the current bills. | Caretens & Earles, Inc., invest Flashlight photograph taken Just ae police and reporters arrived t factory wh led. Emsheimer ‘s body, with the peculiar rope still | about the neck, Is seen lying on the floor, Emi! Em the | would have been arrested and sent back to France as deserters. The United States was the | spot in the world open to them. The murder of Emshetmer bail one of the most brutal and mys the mitted in the exact style used bY) terious in the lon@ history of crime in Chic: The hat maker's office was only five doors from State st. on the second floor of the building, and/| at — of the busiest corners of the ef It belt Saturday, he released his employes at noon, even his stenog-| rapher, and remained in the de-| serted shop to work over his in-| voices, | He stepped out to lunch and re-| turned to finish his work. j EB the Apaches were perhaps, had slipped) office during his absence. Possibly they had been hiding} there among the benches for hours. | He seated himself at his desk and snapped on the lights, for the afternoon was dark. A noose tossed over his head,| dropped around his throat; he wae jerked backward and fell over with) his chair upon the floor against the partition, That evening when he failed to return home for dinner the alarm was raised and the body was found Not a clue had been left save the) short noose of pecullarly woven); rope that had sunk into the flesh of his neck. SHORT nEWS | ae | Funeral for E. &, Ainsworth held | ‘Thursday Northwestern Fruit exchange will make headquarters here. Ex-Mayor Gilmore of Nome ad- dresses University Sourdough ciub. Y. W.C. A. girls have annual ben-| jefit Thursday and Friday nights, Police get 20 men in gambling raid Representative Zednick propos bill combining school boards. Mrs. Jane V. Lehman will be bur-| led Friday Miss J. Vere, 4480 Barton at., de-| feats purse enatcher's efforts by screaming. $5.00 Gillette and Auto Strop Safety Razors, cut to $3.48 50c to $1.00 Finest Stee! Manicure Scissors, 6 to &inch Shears, and Embroidery Scie- 38 c All Community Silver, in Sheraton and Geor gian Patterns— AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES $1.00 Boys’ “Erecto” Sets, 68 c Cut LO «1666s Fla aehiight, exact reproduction of $1.50 Pistol cut to 78&c automatic pistol, (complete) ... 65c 10-4t. Electric Extensions, ott to. 38c $1.50 Fiber Flashlight, two-cell (round) complete, cut to 78c “Royal” White Ivory Sets Of Hatr Brushes, Mirrors, Manicures and Work Boxes. A large sample line now on complete display (no two sets alike.) AT LESS THAN WHOLESALE Cost sors, one lot, cut to | $5.00 All-Wool Ruff Neck Sweaters $5.00 Boys’ All-Wool Mackinaws, all colors $5.00 Boys’ Napatan Hi Cut Shoes 10-inch, two-buckle top $3.00 Flannel Shirts, with military or flat collar, cut to $3.50 “Duxback” Waterproof Pants, double seat and knees, cut to $2.50 Whipcord and Canvas Pants, cut to . $5.00 Cordurey Shooting Coat, out to 250 Whale Greas cut to $3.50 Boys’ Napatan Shoes, sizon 12 to 6, cut to $1.25 Tennis Shoes, white | rubber sole . $2.89 $3 89 $4.28 $1.89 "$2.89 ”..$1.59 9c $3 18 OD nee 89c 200 Sample Sweaters Salesmen'’s Samples from the Olympia Knit ting Mills are now on sale AT LESS THAN WHOLESALE CosT Shoe on, Shotguns, Rifles and Revolvers at Reduced Prices Store PIPER & TAFT 1117 SECOND AVENUE | Panama canal will benefit Pacific | slope more than East, says E. F.| | Henson, of E. F, Henson & Co., of Philadelphia Funeral services for Mrs. Julia E.| Johnson conducted Thursday Mra. J. 8. McKee advocates state raveling Mbrary board. Albert Smith, 25, killed trom steamer Orange Maver. Plan new auto bullding at Broad- way and Denny way to cost $20,000. THE PERFECT ALI- PURPOSE BREAD, CAKE AND PASTRY FLOUR. (SUPERIOR TO AN ALL- HARD WHEATFi.0UR or AN ALL-SOFT WHEAT FLOUR. FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS | ment bankers, turned over to the | ety $404,000 for the full amount of! the 5 per cent ight extension bonds, | and another $375,000 will be col | lectel from the county tn eres taxes Seattle's credit tn attl! good, in| spite of the vaporings of the Stone| & Webster mouthpieces. MAY BUY PAINTING A movement {s afoot among Al | kans to necure for Seattle the won- | derful painting of Mt. McKinley by Sidney Laurence, of Valdez, Lau- rence is exhibiting {t at the Arctic | club, NO WAR FOR THEIRS LOS ANGELES, Dec. 10.—Nine sailors of the British merchant ves- sel Dudhope are plaintiffs today be | fore the federal district court in ease in which they seek relea | from their contracts on the ground that their lives are endangered by the European war THIEF NEEDED SHAVE) A thief entered the room of | James Rice, 38 Green hotel, Wed. nesday night, and took a shaving outfit, NICK WICKED BY DIP A atranger picked Nick Chalis’ pockets while Chalis standing in front of the Milwau depot at la m. Thursday. in fait! | Dr. J. J. Chambers, per Alaskan, dead at Portland No settlement in sight in Ohio coal strike Sheriff Farr, Colorado, admits hundreds of deputies were hired in coal strike without investigation as to their quolifications American Mining congress in Phoenix meeting adopts report fa- voring uniform state workmen's compensation leg‘siation. Red Cross in annual meeting in Washington decides to discontinue collection ot funds for noacombat- ants in war times, Secretary McAdoo in annual re- port favors income tax extension, Price of wheat drops with news of Kaiser's illness. New bank opens in Centralia first of year, Lazar Tomich, who stole dynamite to Flow up miners’ hall at Bozeman, Mont., draws five-year sentence. 8. R. Ritchie, C H. Wright and W. L. Massey elected to Helling- bam council, 1332-34 Second Ave. 211 Union St. (hristmas (quits Our Liberal Credit Plan Makes Xmas Shopping Easy You will find an account with us a great convenience— no red tape about it, no extra charges for the accommo- Pay us in small pay- ments after the holidays. Shop Early and Shop Here dation. Terms made to suit your income. Surely you can find something for the men folks from the following suggestions: Bath Robes, Lounging Robes House Coats Underw Hats, Furnishings Handkerchiefs, Suspenders, Fancy Vests, Shirts, Latest Creations Ties, Jewelry in combi- nation boxes. Shoes. Select your gifts from our large assortment of apparel for men and women. EDISON PLANT IS WIPED OUT BY FIRE; LOSS IS $5,000,000 WEST ORANGE, N. J., Dec. | 10.—With the exception of the Inventor's laboratory, the world-famous Thomas A. Edi- son plant here ie in ruins to- day. it wilt ately. The loss was estimated to- lo day at $7,000,000, with Ineur- PORTLAND YOUTH IS Eleven buildings were destroyed, The firemen were hampered in |thetr work by the large quantities |of chemicals stored in the larger | buildings, Explosions occurre@ frequently, and four firemen were injured. About 6,000 will be thrown out fo P ie until the buildings are re be rebuilt immedi- ance of $2, Constructi perts were as- tonished over Ll g wae They had believed the plant was the last word in fireproof construc. | GUILT Y OF MURDER tion. — “Intend to start all, by | again,| PORTLAND, Dec. 10.—Convicted although I'm more than 6 years of murder in the second degree for ol¢,” said Edison today. “I'm pret killing Miss Emma Ulrich, who had u, semaraed gut ut tery Tal Peuned to mary bay Pad soon as the debris has cooled |son, 23, is awaiting sentence. A ficiently, it will be removed, and I| Jury found Tronson guilty late yes will go right to work to reconstruct terday, after deliberating five mine jthe plant.” utes. You Can Now Treat This Trouble in Your Own Home and Get Relief at Once. How the Remedy for Catarrh Was Discovered. HIS terrible disease has raged unchecked treated by ‘an for years simply bee Satie ics! cause symptoms have been decctly to the treated while the cause of ne “"" the trouble has been left to circulate in the blood, and bring the disease back as fast as local treatments could relieve it. C. E. Gauss, who experimented for years on a treatment for Catarrh, found that after perfecting a balm that relieved the nose and throat troubles quickly, he could not prevent the trouble beginning all over again. On test cases, he could completely remove signs of Catarrh from nose and throat, but in a few weeks they were back. Goes to the Root of Stopped-up nose: Constant “frog-in-the= throa: Nasal discharges Hawking and spitting Snoring at night Bad breath Frequent colds Difficult breathing Smothering sensation in dreams Sudden fits of sneezing Dry mucus in nose and any of the other symptoms that Indicate approaching or present eatarrh Elixtr, into the stomach, hat a direct influence upon the mun coms membranes of the body and cures the dis ease by remo ing the cause, Y Careful experiments and investigations have shown that as the troubles were expelled from the nose and throat, the real cause of the disease was overlooked and in a short time the Catarrh would return stronger than ever. Mr Gauss has gone a ahead of the ordinary methods of treatment provided a remedy that Removes the Cause and Immediately Gives Re- lief to the Nose and Throat Reese Jones, of piaye that after teving Many other treatments, he ‘used this new method and ly nose is now entirely clear and free and Iam not ithered by the disease any more. The New Combined eatment is worth its weight in gold.” Temporary relief from catarrh may be obtained in other ways, but the New Combined Treatment must inevitably be accepted for permanent results, Sarah J. Cape, Mount Pella, Tenn., says, “I tuflered the pains and distrees of cetarrh | fer thirteen years and meediess to state, every method. “Dut by your bew. method 1 wat gompletely cured and you cannot imagine ae Joy that has come over | Trial Treatment F REE! ‘This new method {s so important to the wel- fare of humanity, ao vital to every person suffer- {ng from any form of catarrh, that the oppor tunity to y fest it and prove its results, will be jended without one cent of cost. A large trial treatment, with complete, mi- nute directions, will be sent free to any catarrh- sufferer. Send no money, take no risks, make no promises, Simply clip, sign and mail the cou. pon end ihe teat Dacknge.of the New Combined Freetment will be seat, fully prepaid, together with the valuable book on Catarrh. Send the Test Treat- ment FREE c. E. GAUSS, 6335 Main St, 4 bring again, f without fon to me, send, fully Treatment and Book. Tame .... p Aterene