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7 Here’s a Show We're | Proud to Advertise! bines vivid story interest with mile-a-minute tion—a play of pleasant memories. smith” is a riot—as full of thrills and laughs as a plum pudding raisins. UNTIL SATURDAY NIGHT BERTY a latinees Evenings u 7PM... LOC moves all traces of heads, eczema, and and makes the skin sticky nor greasy, Tt is easily applied ifle for each ap- Zemo, Cleveland. FOR THE DE aon Admission 15 PIKE AT FIFTH Bessie Barriscale BULLETS and BROWN EYES A romance that com- ace A 3-Reel Keystone “The Village Black- is of Continuous 11 to 11. Children Se. After 7 P. M... 15c often used to say: culture intends to introduce a bill im the duma prohibiting the slaugh- ter of cattle on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and limiting the slaugh- ter on other days. - Tfastly refuses to do #0. two wome! left the country again and traveled abroad, until I was nearly 8 years jold mother died | at the convent. Kansas Druggists Endorse troduced tn truthfully say that it has produced OLYMPIA, March 23.-—Figures| nothing but perfectly satisfied cus- s STAR—THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1916. PAGE 2. LIFE STORY OF ISABEL CLAYBURG As Told to a Star Correspondent in Los Angeles, Where She Is Fighting Ex- tradition to Seattle for Trial in Connection With the Alleged “Badger Game” Camera Blackmail Scheme. As Told by Isabel Clayburg. “My Iife Is an open book! “lam innocent, | want the charges made against me abso- lutely disprown, “| want my name entirely cleared. “if anyone can show @ plo ture of me taken In an im. proper, Indecent or compromis- ing attitude | am willing to spent 50 years in jail! “There aren't any. | had one euch taken!” Thus Isabel Clayburg, the alleged “badger queen,” began her story to a correspondent for The Star, (It was tn the county Jal! at Los Angeles, where sho ts being never spiracy to blackmail! wealthy Seat- jtle men by means of sensational photographs.) Tells Story of Her Life is. born in Boston, My mother was a well-educated, true and beautiful Amertean girl She was engaged, while very young, to a very prominent attor- ney in Hoston. And after plighting her troth to him, she went abroad on a visit and |there met an Italian count who fel! deeply in love with her.” Ne Explained Cards (Her claim to royalty only half explains the visiting cards found in Mrs, Clayburg’s apartment at the| time of her arrest. They bore the name of the Countess Catherine Calsigani, but Mra Clayburg bi never told why she had them or how she came by them, and : keeping with some of the other traits of the mysterious beauty.) Opposed Her Marriage “My grandmother was = very averse to the idea of her marrying him. “But she reciprocated his love and eloped with him when still but 17. “They came back to Boston and ved for a time, and I was born. “My mother and grandmother could not agree about my father, for he went thru a large amount of money in a very brief time. “After a quarrel between the my mother and father “They came back then and my soon after, Goes to Convent “My grandmother took charge of me and placed me in a convent in Boston. From that date till | was practically all my life was spent ber the sistets ‘WHEN YOU INTO THE WORLD, EN YOUR TROUBLES BE- How well Pond Lech ine ae Stenogrep! ouy Seatuntner fed, and at ) t remem! This Kidney Medicine have been selling Dr. Kilmer's mp-Root ever since it wa tn- this City and I can given out Wednesday by Secretary|tomers ever since I have handed of State Howell show that 33,314! {t over my counters. when || ™Otor vehicle licenses have been|trons say | dealt out for the fiscal year begin-|in kidney, This means that! ble, and I believe it must be a fine ning March 1. All of my pe it is a remedy of merit liver and bladder trou $175,418.75 had been paid into the| remedy else my customers would state treasury by motorists. WASHINGTON, March Ac cording to figures given out yester-| day by the Insular bureau, the Phil-| dar year of 1915 reached a total o! $54,000,000, en increase of $5 000 over the year of 1914. ‘U’ TEAMS TO DEBATE | Debating teams representing the Universities of 100 ,- | day night question of naval preparedness AT 3:15 EVERY DAY SEBASTIAN BURNETT Children 5c CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11 COLISEUM not all claim that they were bene fited. Dee, 18th, 1915, ippines export trade for the calen-| prove What if i le | ple size bottle. fany one. booklet of FENSE Very traly yours, L. J. HAINES, Drugetet, Galena, Kansas. Letter te De. Kilmer & Co. inehem ¥.) Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & ‘o., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sam- It will convince You will also receive a valuable When writing, be sure and Seattle Dafly Star, fifty-cent and one-dollar sale at all drug EVERY REEL IS A ROLL OF . HEART THROBS Loges 30c held for extradition, aceased of con-| This {8 19) pene. | 191 the age of 21 I took and comes of a very good family. A Trip to Alaska “Wo started on one mest wonderful trips I hy taken band and 1, formed the party, took the inside p: |to Alaska. I have ever seen. | rious! | “But two weeke afters! was mar. | ried | knew that my husband and | |had made a mistake In marrying. | He wae selfish and self-centered. 1 loved the qutdoors and wi led to take jong, exploring hike |into the wonderful woods. He wanted to sit down, comfortably, and re. She te Divorced “When we came back from our honeymoon trip I knew It would be only a matter of time tit! my hue band and I should have to part com “We settled down, however, at Prince Rupert. “Our domestic troubles grew |gradually, He did not treat me 1 could not stand it, and to 3 we were divorced | I've always beep able to trim a |hat, even before I knew anything about making one. So I determin ed to go into the millinery busi ness up atenog raphy, Then I took up hairdress ing and mantouring “While | wae etill in the hair dressing busin: 1 met my hue band, R. L. Clayburg, and married him In 1911 “I belleved we should be most companionable.” “Mr, Clayburg 18 a college man, bas been abroad three or four times f the ever . “Another young couple, my hus We age and went “It was a six months’ outing, the way we planned it, and tt was thru some of the mont beautiful country Oh, it was glo- “A much older woman than |. well kno’ set up a millinery establishment with me as a partner in Seattle “We had a millinery school, “People came and had their work them done there, We charged much less, of course, than the reg ular milliner would charge. we received enough to make a com fortabje living. Meets Miss Coots “it wae while | wa work that | be with Miss Coots, with a sister, “When New Westminster, Coots and | took She was a stenographer thru Mies Coote that met Miss Peterson, who, | belie was a schoolmate of Miss Coots. Tells of Miss Peterson Paul. Mont she was going to be married. lived on a farm “She has always lived at home. I met her when she stop sister in Los Angelos, BLE.” the facts into that part of her o: reer which led up to the now f. mous Seattle bungalow episode.) Confessions of a Wife JUST WHERE | STAND IN REGARD TO DICK I don't Just quite understand It, little book, but Jim comes over here almoat every night with Dick and they both try their best to cheer me up. It makes me feel as |tho they know something about me) that I do not, “I'm going to be devilish lone some when you take Dick away from me, Margie,” he sald night f “It doean't look tho I was go- fog to take him away very soon, Jim. Every time | mention being moved to my home, the powers | that be recommend that I remain jhere a little longer. You haven't A | | Pyramid | world today, and fixed it up with the doctors, have you, so that you and Dick can live together a little longer?” Jim laughed, and Dick exciatm- ed, “I should say not.” Poor old Dick! Isn't it queer, Uttie book, how we label people in our own minds? Some people like Aunt Mary and Mra. Selwin are al- ways “dear” to me, I never think Be Rid of Piles }friends are congratulating him on Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treat. ment Will Amaze You With Its Resuite only fair to yourself to TRY File Treatment—the moat popular home pile treatment In the that has ate the teat of time. information, | telling about the kidneys and blad- | de: shington and) mention The Oregon Wi'l meet at 8 o'clock Fri-| Regular in Meany hall, on the| size bottles for stores | elst about four ounces of Jad Salts; | will act fine, | fervescen' | nobody Mall the coupon NO & 600 box of Pyramid. from any druggist tute ad FRED SAMPLE COUPO: PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, Pyramid Bidg, Marahall Mich.: Kindly send mo a Free samplo of Pyramid Pile Treat- ment, in plain Wrapper. ‘Treatment Take no substi- Name Street city MEAT INJURIOUS TO THE KIDNEYS ers —Meat forms uric acid We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns ua to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating eld, but become weak from the verwork; they get sluggish; the jeliminative tissues clog and thus |the waste is retained in the blood to poison the entire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have stinging paine in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the bladder is , irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have severe headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleepless ness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharma take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morn- ing and in a few days your kidneys This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kid. neys, to neutralize the acids in urine so it fs no longer a source of irritation, thus ending urinary and bladder disorders, Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- not injure; makes a delightful ef. lithia-water drink, and n ke a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean and active, | thent,” last | tant jas women 3 | done so | stre, jof them without that prefix. 1 |never thought of Eleanor Futrlow |without the word “fascinating” bobbing up and nettling Itself be fore her name. I alwa Eltene an “sweet,” of “charmin, “briliiant, of Annie a of Jim w faithful, of Mary as “true blue,” and of Mill Tenney as “fickle.” Sometimes I change some me adjectives, but in my mind my friends and scquaintances aro cardindexed with a-word or two that simply describes them to jme. Dick, in the first years of our marriage, was “dearest,” then he “thoughtler: For a time 1 never spoke to him-—never called his name—that the word “cruel did not come tnto my mind, and after that the word “false” used to make me shudder for months when. ‘er my lips framed his name. Yet guch fs the queer quirk of a wom- an's love. There, | have written the word “love,” but I am not sure that I love Dick any more, at least Tam very sure | do not lore him in the way that I used to do. I never think of him now that the words “Poor old Dick” do not end with a sigh. Poor old Dick! grown old, and, while perhaps his his better financial success, he is poor. Already bis hair has begun |to whiten at the temples, When || James |highwaymen here Dec. 24, lant. | noticed ft the other day I really think {t hurt me more to think that I did not want to run my f any more, All it meant to me was poor old Dick. In one of John Galeworthy's books, he remarks of a woman of |24, who, being Informed of the rob-| ship companies today.” She expected to find|bery of the drug store at 18th ave. she and the streets, the joy of life, and instead only found the Ife of Joy, which ts a very different men find ont this is so as well 1 know that Dick has For him as well as for me flu sion has fled. 1 am satisfied he on life. and, like many another man, he is trying to forget his follies in the} fever and stress of business Just now, he ts doing penance as vigorously as a flagellant, and, while his outside garments are in the latest and smartest fashion, yet his soul fs feeling the rough than sackcloth does the flesh, and his heart, Anatead of his head, is covered with the ashes of lost de- Poor old Dick! your friend, and yet all desire to has fled!, Poor old Dick, I am really sor- rier for you than for myself, for you have to fight two devils, Re- morse and Regret, and I have only ove. I only regret that I married you without knowing more about your life and your loves. And yet--oh, Httle book, it fs so hard to be honest with oneself. i was just about to put down here that if 1 had known about Eleanor Fairlow I never would have mar. ried Dick; but even as my pen was poised to write the words I knew T was lying to myself. I know that 1 would have married him had all the women in the world stood in line and said that he belonged to each one of them, Oh, little book, those early days of living and loving were glorious beyond belief. Time, place or circumstance not take them from me, (To be continued) can: OAKLAND GREW SAFE EVERETT, March 8, Dent and the o masted schooner in this city Thursday is sunk off the Oregon coast, hav- ing sprung a leak in a heavy sea, The crew arrived here on the steam schooner Saginaw, Capt ARREST ROBINSONS | Louls and Joseph who formerly store at 1434 Third ave. arrest Thursday in Chicago, accus ed of defrauding creditors in bank ruptey. ” B. Robinson, n in the Kastern Star, But doing this acquainted She was living © sleter went home to Cc, Miss an apartment. the “Miss Peterson's home is tn St. She has a sister in Billings, “L had a letter from Miss Peter fon about four months ago, saying “She described the man, ber ring and the home she was going to live “Mins Peterson's people are old- fashioned farmers and have always 4 over on her way home from a visit to a “| KNOW THE GIRL 18 JUST PROSTRATED OVER THIS TROU. (In the next chapter of -her story | Mra, Clayburg will begin to weave | think of Mollie as of Donna Tenney as “wensible,” of Pat as “pa! of Gray Enameled Ware at 25c Gray Wnameled Steel Rice ers (factory seconds) | Quart Dish Pans, Covered Tt ers and 6-quart Berlin Kettler at 10c Yd. 7 yards. customer at 100, t show alight imperfections white and colors Dress Goods Remnants 1-2 Price cluding coating, suiting material for skirts lengths and colors Women’s Kid Gloves | 98c Pr. 6% enty of white, tan. ray s and some A foon the new butter whaden. ” Soiled 25c Neckwear With Many Underpriced Specials on Every | Floor—Here Are a Few of the Items Bat You Will Find Many More When You Come to Seattle’s Big Store on Friday Rotl- » 14 15¢ White Cambric at 100 @ yard for White Cambrie excellent quality, tn lengths to Not over 10 yards to a | Men's 25 Cotton Hose {upPER MAIN FLOOR| Every Wool Dress Goods Rem- nant in #tock to go for half, in- and destrable $1.26 and $1.60 values, tn sizes | SECOND FLOOR THIRD FLQOR | Skirts Worth to $10.00 Women’s Combinations at $5.95 Extra size Wool Skirts, worth : ; up to $10.00, reduced to $5.9 6 Drawer Co: in the lot, in navy, brown and a edged with with lace few b bands 20 to 86 Inn $5.95 to $12.50 Dresses | at $3.00 Women's Lingerie, Voile, Or- gandy and Linen Drenses, em-~ | broidered and lace trimmed with taffeta and allk girdles. Special at $2.00. lk Waists to $4.95 at $1.25 ut 6 dozen Silk Watsts tn sizes and lote- na crepe fe chine, tub #i few lace W at $1 Colored Waists are Going at 15c Women’s Watsts, a few linger- fon, also colored Kitchen Walsta of gingham, biack lawn and flan nelette; size 34 only; at 16¢ coke; 35c Brassieres for 29c Ea. Women's Branste: atyle, of heavy camb deep reinforcement un sizes from 28 to 46, at 2%¢. b Stamped Bath : Towels at 25c Bize 18xt4-inch Towels in white with pink or blue borders, and stamped with scallops and simple designs for embroidering FOURTH FLOOR No. 24% Cans Tomatoes 7 1-2c Can Women’s Trimmed Hats Alta Villa Brand Tomatoes, No. at $2. 7: 2% size cans, large wize, at 7%e 4 a can Friday Delivered only Hundreds of with other groceries fn this lot of newest shaper, adorned with —_- flow k n@ ribbons. 50c Garden Sets for Untrimmed Hat Shapes at $1.25 All the newest shades are to be found among these Wome Hemp Hat Shapes at $1.25. Pretty Satlors, Turbans and Mushroom Shapes Girls’ Princess Slips at $1.50 Ea. 39c Set Small sized Sets, consisting of Spade, Rake and Hoe—well made with ‘strong handles; just the right size for small children. Imported Sand Baskets, v s up to $1.98 in Princess | made of imported bamboo, with Slips for girls 12 to 16 years strong handle; nicely woven; slightly soiled in handling, but | priced at Z6c each as long as we all prettily trimmed te, have any. BON MARCHE — Second Avenue——Union Street-———Elliott 4100 BURGLARS FACE galling of a fabric that hurts more | 1 want to be| : |Urges Every One to Drink be your sweetheart and your wife} i G.| bad taste ow of the threo-| rheumatic stiffoess, or have a sour Oakland are safe! Their craft| conducted a shoe! pores do. March 23.— be filed SAN FRANCISCO, Murder charges may against Murray, convicts, as the result of confessions made by Howard Dun- ningan, alleged former member of the “jitney bus bandit" gang. Dunnigan is in the hospital to- day, recovering from a gunshot wound recetved during a holdup in He certainly has|a saloon here e He was arrested tn Los Angeles. Dunnigan told of “jobs” in San | Francisco, Sacramento, and Seattle. | killed | He claimed the Shade, shot to mang death by He also alleged Green killed a Seattle policeman, following a drug jmers thru it and kins the gray locks |store robbery. The Seattle policeman referred to was L. E. Kost, a young man of Yeser way, accosted suspt- cious characters three blocks away thing’—I think from the scene of the robbery. The /Capt, Stimson of the 8. S. Fulton, strangers shot him. | WILL VETO CLAIMS blames himself for Eleanor Fair-| low's death and my dreary outlook | Hie has plunged Into work, | Ordinances appropriating « lump sum payments of 000 to each of three injured employes of the light department will be vetoed by Mayor Gill. He said that the pay- iments were too high SAYS BODY IS A POISON FACTOR Glass of Hot Water Be- fore Breakfast Just as coal, when {ft burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken day after day leaves in the alimentary canal a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not completely eliminated from the system each day, becomes food for the millions of bacteria which in- fest t bowels, From this mass of left-over waste, toxins and pto- mainlike poisons formed and sucked {nto the blood Men and women who can't get to feeling right must begin to take inside baths. Before eating break fast each morning, drink a glass of |real hot water with a teaspoonful of Mmestone phosphate in it to wash out of the thirty feet of bow- els the previous day's accumulation of poisons and toxins and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean; pure and fresh, Those who are subject to sick headache, colds, biliousness, cansti pation, others who wake foul breath, b gassy stomach after meals, are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store, and begin practicing Inter nal sanitation, This will cost very little, but {s sufficient to make any one an enthusiast on the subject. Remember, inside bathing ts more important than outside bath ing, because the akin pores do not ab- sorb impurities into the blood, caus. ing poor health, while the bowel the skin, so bot water stone phosphate act on the ston ach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Tom Green and claude! | problem,” said P. B. Gill, agent of jother county improvements, up with Just as soap and hot wa: | are under! tor cleanses, sweetens and freshens | and lime: | So [MAY SETTLE STRIKE |Union Offers to Make Concession escort him from the J. & M. i Toom, First ave. 8. and Washington st., to pier 4. He said that he had been chased into the place by strikers. P. B. Gill said Thursday that Stimson went Into the lunch room to “get away from a heated argument.” No further reports of violence were received at police headquar- ters Thursday. > police were stationed along er front, however, to guard against trouble. “CASCARETS’ FOR be sanctioned by the strikers. Police officers were called Spend 10 cents! Don’t stay bil- ious, sick, headachy, constipated. Can’t harm you! Best cathartic for men, women and children, Enjoy life! Your system ts filled with an accumulation of bile and The Puget sound steamship- men's strike, which called out 400 Seattie marine workers, may be settled Thureday thru compromise agreements drawn up by the strike committee Wednesday night. The men waiked out becau some of the steamship lin: would not pay a flat minimum wage of $50 a month to union members. They now have agreed to go back to work In the stewards’ and fire room departments on a sliding scalew. “This compromise on the part of the strikers ought to help solve the the unton, Thuraday. “We expect to settle with some of the steam- by owned by the Border Line Trans portation Co., Wednesday night, to WANT SCHOOL FUND Demand probably will be made on the county commissioners for 25) per cent of $34,447 of the forest re- serve fund authorized for school and road purposes. The matter has been referred to School Di- rector Winsor and Attorney H. W./ bowel poisen which keeps yout Pennock. Miss Lucy R. Case has|bilious, headachy, dizzy, tongue charged the county commissioners} coated, breath bad and stomach have spent most of the money for|sour—Why don't you get a 10-cent | box of Cascarets at the drug store jand feel bully? Take Cascarets to- night and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever AIR MEN VOLUNTEER | le jexperienced, You'll wake up with NEW YORK, March 23.— Gov. |*, clear head, clean tongue, lively > y sk O ernors of the Aero club yesterday | fecling fit. Byres sg ha sent @ telegram to Secretary of} whole Cascaret to a sick, cross, War Baker, announcing that 15 1i-| pilfous, feverish child any time— censed flyers of the club have vol-!they are harmless—never gripe or unteered for Mexican service. sicken, SS Best of Wearing Apparel for MENand WOMEN ON CREDIT To charge at the Eastern costs you nothing extra, “It’s an accommodation.” 211 UNION ST. As soon as your bill is paid for (either WePay You 1332-34 SECOND AVE. Cash or Credit) our INTEREST DEPT, will issue you a check that you can cash anywhere; 5 per cent of the total amount of your purchase. Buy at the EASTERN & Collect Interest