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HURSDAY, NOVEMBER | aoe = LADIES—YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO MISS THIS Our Greatest Aluminumware ——Y | — We have given you som@ wonderful bargains in the past few months, but never before have we made any such pric tomorrow—Friday an fine, heavy imported Aluminumware Stew Pans and Frying Pans. Please remember that this Aluminumware {s our very finest and heaviest quality, and those of ft who have attended our previous sales and examined this splendid ware know just what is in store for yo bargain. To those of visited us, we say a awaits you. We quote you our bargain prices for this Aluminumware. Read them and then we ask 16, 1922. es as we are making for d Saturday—on these u in the way of a great you who have not yet most pleasant surprise you to try to duplicate this quality ware at three times the price we ask for it. STEW PANS, with rein’ 8}- ; 69c our for we urge you to come no disappointments. In fairness to our many, many friends who have sale, as well as to those who the first time, we wish to say that a limited number of both Frying Pans Stew Pans—and, as this is really a great bargain forced wooden handles-- . 29c 39c l-qt. .). 1}-qt. .: 2-qt. . early so that there will be Not over six pieces of this Aluminumware sold any one person. We retailers from buyi do this to prevent other this Aluminumware in quan- ng it at heavy advances. ij 1422 First Avenue ESTER IMPORTING CO. N Between Pike and Union Central Public Market—Up the Incline Condemned Men Jest on Way to Guillotine MARSEILLES, Nov. 16—“Nice @ay,” said Gilbert Buoy laughingly, fas he was led to the guillotine with | Jerome Marcheselli, “Prettiest 1 ever saw,” replied his companion. ‘Then both were beheaded for mur- der, Stop That Pain’ With “Deo” are suffering from rheuma- a yen ‘ant relief. You know chronic ease of rheuma- tiam is seldom if ¢' possible to obt the torture-—and that's worth from your A xy piace. where you feel the wer with flannel and then ‘ot water bottle to the spot oesn't relieve the pain at o back to your druggist and 6 will refund your money, “Deo” stands for Dennis’ Euca- remarkable com- yptus and other get a large Jar of “Deo” 4 your money back r sale by leading 30, Makers, le Application That — _ Blackheads inching ntly blem- is one sim- y to get them that is to dissolve them. ut two ounces of calonite rom your druggist--sprin- er little on # hot, wet cloth—rub | ly over the blackheads for « seconda—wosh the parte and blackhead will be gone. nehing and squeczing out biack- is make large Pores and you nnot get all of the blackheads ou Fe hile this simple applica- r and water of them and ores in their ao | thick coating Peer Svecsted tie Aiding Drunken Man LONDON, Nov. 16—Lord Brooke went to the assistance of a drunken marine and was attacked by a crowd for spolling their fun. Then jhe was arrested for disturbing the peace. He was freed when the court heard the facts, Hunting Hounds Go Up 100 Per Cent LONDON, Nov. 16.-—-The price of Well-brea hunting hounds has in- creased 109 per cent, Free to Asthma and :'Hay Fever Sufferers \ Free Trial of Method That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a method for the control and we want you to try vi tter whether | nding or re- it ta] sthima or Hay ou should send for @ free our method, No matter in what climate you live, no matter 17 age or occupation, if you with Asthma or Vay ever, ©: ethod should relieve lyou promptly, We especially want to send | apparen oleae ¢ all forms to joplum preparations |amokes,” etc., have failed. to show every one m all difficult breathing, jand all those terrible "This free offer is to |negiect @ single day. V and begin the method at once, Send no money. Simply mall coupon be- low, Do it Today—you even do not pay portage. FREE TRIAL COU! FRONTIER ASTHMA €O,, Room 289-¥) Niagare and Hudson Sts, Buffalo, N.Y, Send free trial of your method to: |the bill, in the “lame duck” session |former Spokane teach: [before the present heavy republican [ditions and if he steers the Poin. jwill be a big talking point tn hin| Daughter of Scotland Peer This is the latest photo of Lady Jean Hamilton, 18-year- old daughter of the Duke of Hamilton, greatest of all of Scotland's nobles and the 18th of his line, Webster to Push Basin Plan in National House ‘Has Governorship Ambitions and Support of | Irrigation Project Will Aid By Tom Ellis Miles Poindexter’s defeat may help put the Columbia Basin in- vestigation bill thru the housa n be used to put Stanley into the governor's chair, whence he can emerge etx to contest with Dit for the senatorship. s the latest angle in the po littea! use of the Columbia Basin, | With Jim Ford already in Wash- |ington and Fred Adama on bis way, a fight will start at the special ses }wion to shove thru the Poindexter bill for $100,000 to investigate the project's ponaitilities, | The Dill has pansed the senate. Even before the recent election of: Hfictals of the Columbia Basin Irtt! Onty one republican }eation league predicted that tt | nounced candidate. That’ | would be a “tough job to put Itlw. J (wee) Coyle. Coyle is a wai thru the house. The senate paamd| ver popular, @ good campaigne the measure by agreement, thinking |put a mere youth. His policies are it would help keep Washingtoa in the | unknown; bis following is purely pe republican column. leoned, Representative J. Stanley Webeter| Besides, friends of Malcolm Doug: haw agreed (0 work strenuously for|iaa, King county prosecutor and don't want Coyle to get ahead of Douglas, It ta understood Malcolm has dropped the idea of’running for governor in 1924, but he will likely support Web dexter Dill safely thra the house It |ster rather than Coy It is presumed that R. Ff. Hartley favor in 1924. After four years ax|of Everett and George Lamping of governor, Webster would be the | Seattle, both defeated tn 1920, will logical candidate against Dill for the |try again. Hartley is considered a senate—a conservative republican | little too reactionary to be “safe” tn against « progressive democrat. the country’s present temper, and Republicans are practically /) Lamping has apparently forfeited the agreed that Gov, Hart t# done for. | rupport of progressive republicans by Judge Stephen J. Chadwick, «| his antics in the late senatorial carm- conservative democrat, is regarded |paign. Thies would Indicate tha’ today as the most likely democratic | Coyle is the man Webster really has candidacy against Webster would be aectional—coast ya. inland, rather than progressive against conserva tive. Mayor Fleming of Spokane and Mayor Brown of Seattle have been suggested as demo- cratic candidates, Fleming does not consider the suggestion seriously, and Brown, who ts ao Uberal and a» former soctalist, has antagonized so many ele ments during his few months aa mayor that even his friends now admit he couldn't be nominated. It would seem that of the three —Chadwick, Fleming and Brown —the latter would stand beat show of beating Webster, But he can't be nominated. | majority is unseated. Webster i understood to have governorship am- THE SEATTLE STAR |eandidate for governor in Why English Police Are Able To Solve Murders |down tn the police blotter as “un ‘}many witnesses will be brought to| Ht BY NORRIS QUINN NEW YORK, Nov, 16.--How should m murder mystery be solved? How can the increasing number ef American murder mysteries that 6° solved” be cut down? These two questions were an-) |wwered today in an exclusive inter-! view with N, B, A. Service by one of the world’s greatest ertminologists, Sir Basil Thom#on, K. C. B. Sir Basil for years was head of |the famouq criminal investigation | department of Scotland Yard, Lon don, and during the war was British director of intelligence, He now is lin the United States on a lecture to beat. ie Meted at headquarters, If {t's etill unsolved on the second day, it ts | listed tn red ink, That red ink reo-| ord stands until the case is solved if it takes years. “That's why we da not cease ac- tivity In a murder mystery as soon as public Interest wanes, You'll hear nothing about a case in the press for monthe—then suddenly there will be an arrest. We never forget a crime, “One difficulty Amertean police face is the enormous size of your country which enables a murderer easily to ‘lose himeelt.’ CLOSER POLICE tour, PUBLICITY I8 BIG HELP Hall-Mills murder, he outlined the general principles of criminal inves- tigation which he believes should be | applied to mystery murders. “The whole success of any mur- der investigation depends on the steps tuken at the outset,” Sir Bast! sald. “Three steps are most im- portant. “First is the examination of the neene of the crime, This should be done with especial care and, in some cases, the locale of the crime should be carefully shut off so that evi- dence will not be destroyed or the investigators confused by curiosity seekers. “Second ts the holding of an effi- clent autopsy and the securing of reliable medical testimony. To my mind, the autopsy should be held open as long as possible, for fresh facts will always be uncovered. “Third is giving to the public In certain cases most accurate knowl} edge of the crime. That means that ght who otherwise never would! have known their knowledge could bo of any value to the police. “The inductive methods of Sher- lock Holmes and other fantastio de-| tectives of fiction are generally use- lees in real criminal investigation. “To detect real criminals one needs @ thoro organization instead of the lone-hand activities of a Sher lock Holmes, hard work in place of and tobacco, full publicity of dark secrecy. ‘Unsolved murders, you know, are very rare in England, 1'll tell you how they're out down there, tho I want you to bear in mind that I While the British erminal expert | refused to comment directly on the} CO-OPERATION “You ean overcome this by bring: | ing about closer co-operation be tween police in different cities and I understand you are doing this, Close association and contact be tween police heads is desirable but contact between police subordinates ia more advantageoun. “I brought this contact between | subordinates about in England when I admitted provincial detectives to GS IN THE STOMACH (5 DANGEROUS Recommends Daily Use of Maj je Causes eata by | Gas and wind in the stomach ac- | companied by that full, bloatedsfeel- ing after eating are almost certain evidence of the presence of excoanive hydrochloric hy, leadin serious monts and sou the dis- tressing gas which distends the stornach and hampers the normal functions of the vital internal or- gans, often affecting the heart It in the worst of folly to neglect uch a serious condition or to treat with ordinary digestive aids which have no neutraliaing effect on the stomach acids. Instead get from any druggist @ few ounces of Bisurated Magnesia and take @ teaspoonful in & quarter lies of water right, after eating will drive the gas, wind and bloat right ov of the body, sweeten the stomach neutral- ize the excess acid and prevent formation and there i# no sournesa | or pain. Bisurated Magnesia (in owder or tablet form—never liquid or mill) is harmless to the stomach, fnexpensive to take and the beat am not trying to tell American po- lice how to run their business. When a murder is committed, itgo more fear o! form of magnesia for stomach pur- poses. It im used by dhousands of people who a thetr meals with indigestion, 4 VERY STOLEN CAR RECOVERED San Francisco Polioce Make Fine Record ; ®AN FRANCISCO, Nov, 1¢-—flan Francisco's polloe department at tained @ record unequaled heretofore in any large city ta th untry two weeks ago, according to reports, During September of this year 148 cars were reported stolen, In other cities thruout the country from 20 to 50 cars unrecovered ts the normal loss, In San Francisco the average of cars never recovered i» four a month. | In @ report fust published, ft was revealed that the last of the 168 cars stolen during Boptember wae recov ered by San Francisco police two weeks ago, | Credit for the work goos largely to Captain of Detectives Duncan Matheson and the automobile detail of the detective department, com- monly known as the “shotgun squad,” becnuse they have a high powered armour-plated machine, and y shotguns tn addition to other firearms when they set out to run down auto thieves or bandits, HAWAII OVERRUN WITH JAPANESE Half of Population Is Now Made Up of Citizens FONOLULY, Nov, 1¢—The num ber of Hawalian born citizenJapan | one In Hawell is almost exactly the same as the number of alfen-born|@ E Japanese in the territory, according $ to a computation made by Dr, Ro manzo Adama profensor of econom fos at the University of Mawalt, The total number of Japanese te! $ eotirnated at 117,047, Of this number | @ approximately 64,000 are Hawatlan| $ born. Of this nurnber about 9,500 are| of age. The rest are all minors,| |The number of alten Japanese is also) approximately 68,000 e Most of them | @ are adulte, only about 2,000 alten | $ children being them. In 1910 It was estimated that there Were 44,000 allen males ard about 16,000 alten Japanese femaies, In the mame year there were only abou 10,000 Hawaltan-born Japanese males and 9,900 females, indicating the crease of Japan hs cttize numbered among @ | j the London detective school, where they studied side by side with Lon don detectives, You are now doin things like that here and should continue to do it mo Sir Rasit has had reer, Born In 1861, chbishop, he was nd Oxford and ca He entered the jand became prime | & Pacific inland. e % minister of Ton. He was gov- nor of Dartmoor prison, of Worm. wood Scrubs prison and secretary to the prison commission. He has boen in the criminal tn- Yestigation department of Scotland Yard sinoe 1913. SUCH PAING AS THIS WOMAN AD Two Months could not turnin Bed | LydiaE.Pinkham'sVegetableCom- pound Finally Restored Health Seattle, Washington. — ‘Thad drag- ging pains first and could not stand I ma ss ane IH \| 9 way for over two months, ing t me a bottle of Lydia ham's Vegetable Compound. 1 it regularly until all the hard pains had left me and I was able to be up to do my work 7 . The hard jump left my side and I feel splendid fn all ways. I know of many women it has belped,’’— Mrs, G. Rictarp- SON, 4640 Orcas St, Seattle, Wash. This {s another case where Lydia F. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound bronget, roasts strat ring everything any one me failed. If youare suffering from pain, ner- vousness and are always tired; if you are low spirited and good for noth- ing, take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegee table Compound, ~ __payertisement nqake Hits W HEN colds are going the rounds and la grippe and pneumonia are prevalent, you must exercise precaution, You can’t escape exposure, But you can strengthen your ree sistance by taking Hill’s Cascarg Quinine Tablets regularly, Colds spread in the sneezing crowds that pack cars, streets, shops and theaters, Play safe and keep fit. Take Hill's before and after exposure, At All Druggists~-30 cents W. H. Hill Co, Cigaret Cases for comminaars, as sples and executioners, have been Presented at watches, cigaret cases, eta Girls Stop to Eat Cake and Are Taken Two incorrigible girls escaping from rAGE 9 Every One Will Want One of These Pretty Velvet Dresses We have only a few of these modish Velvet Dresses at the special low price of $17.45. There are both Panne Velvets and Costume Velvets, and they include the drape effects, circular skirts and lace berthas. them at $22.45. Tomorrow —and Saturday, too, is $ 1 7 45 if we have them till VALUES then—they go at That Can’t Be Equaled eecccecescosesesesesessccoesees A day or two ago we sold A Few Slip-on Sweaters Still Left at $4.95 —worth more eececscecces Courteous, Intell’ gent SERVICE A Large Selection of Dresses at Our Special Price of SNe g 1 As values that match the Poiret Twila, Trico Not more than three of any design Market Blouse and Dress Shop 107 Pike Street o e ° e e r r e e e ° e e e e ° ° ° 4 4 e e o e e tsh Laces and Ma telasses which we offer at our specihl $14.85 price, All sizes—navy, black and brown, COSC CEOS OLE CEE COOLOOOOEOE e 80 Shoplifters Are Caught in One Day BERLIN, Nov. 16—Bighty lifters were arrested in one day et pedo sales held in an Alexanders ye pa department store. Their Own Prices -) SHERINGHAM, Engiand, Nov. 16. Firgt Penny Kills —Residents of this town have estab- 4-Y) Old Boy Ushed a vigilance committee which meets weekly with retailers and| ST. PAUL, Minn, Nov. 16—Foeur yearold John Pinson swallowed the fixes prices, providing a fair profit) rst penny ever given bim 18 in every case. strangled him to death, an Institution at Aylesbury delayed . to eat some cake offered by a farm- Russ Executioners | ers wite and were recaptured, RIGA, Nov. 16.—Three hundred soviet agents who act Town People Fixing Moscow with gold KINGSTON, Engtand, Nov. 16.— Willard The New “CONPO” | System of Battery Charging XS LOWERS “ COST 50% LOWERS TIME TO 8 HOURS Your Battery in at 9, out at 5—cost of recharging cut from $1.50 to $1—a rental Battery at 25c for 1 day instead of $1 for 4 days!! That’s what the “Constant Potential” System of Battery Charging means to you. 0! s And Ha: this won It is a Service QUICKER, MORE EFFICIENT and TREMEN- DOUSLY MORE ECONOMICAL than anything ever before offered to the Battery owner. r-Meggee are proud to be the first in the field to introduce rful new “Conpo” system to the Motorists of Seattle. And it not only saves TIME and reduces COST, but {t actually ADDS LIFE TO THE BATTERY because of freedom from excessive Gassing and Overcharging. Harper-Meggee have installed the new equipment at a big capital outlay, but believe they will be rewarded by increased business from appreciative Battery owners. Glad to go into fullest technical details with anyone who wants to know the er-Meggee BE. “In at Out at 817 EAST PIKE 3RO ann BLANCHARD 3222 EASTLAKE 5” Harp note nearest