Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT 18, 1914. PAGE 10. | if H You are the one who must pay the dentist and 4 the one who must care for your teeth, and you owe it : to yourself to demand painless dentistry. Without pain i a dentist can do better work and save time, which is saving you money, and, besides, you are not exhausted and a nervous wreck after every visit to the dentist. MY PAINLESS : \ a mani] 1 yer x the old style painful jo matte and the That { I give just @ painless wo A ¢ pend uyx Closed Sundays. 205 they wil! revive a glories of the ro: AND THE GIRL” “THE MAN Ballard at the me t as Tom Moore AT PIKE THE@)TRE % 5c—ADMISSION—5c D B we wit side of nu son the ave k as they ja the: what you want d ft should b eason | can L. D. GRANT, D. D. S. LIBERTY BLOG.—OPP. P, 0. Ruler of “At this grave moment In our na-| ain and of her empire in the hour of tional history | send to and through trial. you to the officers and men of the fleets of which you have assumed command the assurrance of my con- fidence that under your direction renew the old| and prove id of Brit- “THE MYSTERY OF SLEEPING DEATH” A Two-part Kalem. “THE EUGENIC Selig Comedy. FROM THE PAST” Blograph Drama. Piano ENTISTRY MEANS ENTISTRY t dentiat he the our ow « “8 dentist in the ssoctat fata © rside # oot t The rea do as good know how to do, ts Lecause of using » in dentistry, I do tt without patn, done. | 6 my work h patient in dentistry My charges are insure careful, to without charge and you can de King’s Navy | Ruled in Turn by His — | } Three Wee Daughters |, | GEORGE, R. 1.” | The man who received this splen did message from the king of Eng land on August 4, the day that war was declared between Great Britain and many, is Admiral Sir John} Rushton Jellicoe, | | No man since the hero of Trafal-| gar has had such absolute power| over the marine forces of England as this tall, quiet, shrewd-eyed man |of 54, whom British sailors call the | “future Nelson,” Jellicoe has been at sea ever since }he was 13 years old. Born tn 1859, |he entered the navy in 1872 | At 22 he had his first whiff of gunpowder tn the naval attack on/ Alexandria, Egypt | Im 1886 he gained his first navy medal. This was «iven to him for gallantry In attempting to save life. Jellicoe saw distinguished service fn the Chinese Boxer rebellion in| 1900, and was severely wounded in} the advance on Peking. For this he} was made a Knight Commander of the Bath, and received the Order of the Red Eagle from the katser From that time on Jellicoe rose rapidly in his profession. He was largely responsible for the great tm- Provement in gunnery practice shown by the British nary tn recent | years. From 42 hits ont of 100 rounds of ammunition, Jellicoe tn- creased the average percentage to 70 tn less than one year, For this | the king made him a knight. Like Kitchener, Jellicoe believed | | for a long time that “Down to Gehenma or up to the throne, He travels the fastest who travels ALON He used to say that a good hus band can't be a good sailor, and vice versa The admiral chanted his mind, however, when in 1902, at the age| of 42, he met Miss Florence Gwen- j dott Cayzer, dauehter of Str | Charles Cayzer, and fell in love [with her. After an impetuous woo- | ing worthy of the great Nelson, the| jdaughter of one of England's | wealthiest shipowners accepted jhim, and they were married. They | jhave three little daughters, who| |rule the supreme admiral of the} world’s greatest fleet with an iron | severity WHAT THE PRESS AGENT SAYS 2 Mr. Rainey has a dog among his hunting hounds that climbs trees after treeing a cheetah. One of the films in Mr. Paul J. Rainey’s latest hunt shows this dog, Pets by name, climbing the tree and {biting the cheetah’s toes. The , will be shown at the | Moore for two weeks, commenc- ing Sunday matinee, Sept. 20, With {ts 7,000 players, its sym- phony orchestra, special chorus and its Old World setting, “Ca biria,” the great photo spectacle | now at the Metropolitan theatre, is proving one of the most success- | ful offerings ever seen in Seattle. | Few photodramas have aroused so much enthusiasm as “Cabtria.” William Shilling, at the Pan tages this week, was booked out of Chicago in a laugh piece called |"Oh, H ying th was billed as all over the ctr- it. Upon ing this city, | however, Manager Ed Milne, of the | Pantag sked Shilling to switch |to “Destiny,” a dramatic act shown here with great success last |season. This was done in a great hurry. Although the company had not given this latter act, it put it |acrows Monday afternoon without a flaw, Nome awalte arrival of 8. 8. Cor win to celebrate rescue of Karlu' survivors. MAIN 507. Family Washing 6c Pound Model Electric Laundry | SCENES IN BERLIN, GOAL OF ADVANCING RUSSIANS | WiihelmPiatz, Adorned With 8t | Geandenburg Tor, or Gate, at West End of the Linde © HUSBAND TOLD FOLKS SHE WAS HOUSE SERVANT | SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 17.--Be- cause she was a working girl, and had married into a fashionable fam tly, 1s the reason given by Mrs. Ida Fleck Sisson, 20-year-old bride of Albert W. Sisson, for the collapse of her romance, after only a year following a secret wedding. In his complaint the husband charges cruelty, Mrs. Sisson denied her husband's allegations, 1 was a working girl,” she sald, j“and married into a fashionable family, That ought to explain the trouble. That, at least, explains why our wedding was kept secret for a time | “Leared for my husband, and still do, even though the family passed me off as a household employe when | company called.” | Every day that THE STAR \is published, builders list their bargains on THE STAR WANT AD page. 1201 FIRST AVE. atues. in Background it Focade Is Palace of Hall of the Imperial Diet, or Reichstage- Gabaude, Showing Colossal Bronze Statue of Bismarck in From of w ina an Entrance to Town From the Tlergarten | SALE STARTS} A, Sale of the Most 10 bm Attractive Women’s Suits $16.75]| AND ALTERATIONS FREE ord of Saturday, 9 a, m, Open to 10 p. m er HERE these are genuine $35.00 IS not a w statement ou claim that the styles dig / tinctly fashionable, but the v I “3 model of the season. THI Hil, ~. W COSSACK, THE . 4 itary front model effectively trimmed brown and Russian gr A Stunning New Coat $14.75 The “Traveler” is one of those big, warm, comfort. able coats for general utility purposes. This model, in the variety of colors and materials offered, will prove to be a particularly good buy at this special price. It is in fact a regular $25.00 garment. Made of velour plaid, designed with princess back and finished with broad- cloth collar and revers. SPECIAL $12.50 New and Beautiful Dresses Yes, they are new arrivals, and they typify the most advanced Frederick Leopold of Prussia . ideas the New York designers have to ¢ One special—g stunning Basque model of Blue Serge with mahogany beaded belt and designed with long tunic skirt and black charmeuse drop skirt is $12.50. Others are $15.00, $17.50 and $25.00 Cloak & Suit Co. 1418 Second Ave.—Opposite Bon Marche. Open Saturday Evenings Till 10 rere Special $5 Values to $10.00, Saturday only— $5.00 Values to $3.00 200 just arrived, "$1.95 | |PAY CHILDREN FOR DEAD JANESVILLE, Wis. Sept. Official figures given out by committee in charge of the swatting,” by members of the for Civic league, give total fig of 18,700 files killed during campaign which closed last These flies were paid for at rate of 10 cents per 100, and children received $18.70 for tl work. | The Junior Civic league ts | hes “ |AUSTRIAN WOMEN TO WAR ON FLIRTS VIENNA, Sept. 18.—-Women in| Vienna have begun «4 crusade) against male flirts, Frau Marian }ne Hainisch, founder and president fof the Austrian Women's club, jdrew up a slashing indictment of the offenders at a recent meeting, | which resulted in a resolution to petition parliament to make an end of the Mirts’ pursult by legislation. Today girls here are constantly exposed to the impertinence of men. AUDIENCE TIRED; PREACHER QUITS NORWOOD, N. Y., Sept. 18.— In tendering his resignation to the congregation of the Free Methodist chureh here, the Rev. George Mayer gave a8 a reason for his action the fact that the church members slept instead of listening to his sermons, “I counted 33 persons sound asleep during one service,” he sald, CHARGE MIKE PULLED WIRES: TO GET BRIDGE Charges and countercharges filled the council! chamber Thureday afternoon at the | meeting of the streets and sew. | ers committee when the sub- | ject of the 20th av. N. E. bridge came up. | Originally, the estimate for this | bridge included $20,766 to be paid by assessment of the property owners. However, the property | owners are now asked to pay $35, 079, and they filled the council lobby with protest. The committee adopted a resolu | Gon by Councilman Marble asking the mayor to investigate the qual ifleations of the bridge engineers who made p the original timate w.uT rincipal as sistant arked that po litical p brought upon the appropriate 1,000 for this bridge. and, if that had not been done, the council would never have consid ered building a bridge there. Tiedeman practically implied that Mike Carrigan, a candidate for county commissioner, who owns a lot of land in the Ravenna district where the bridge is to be built, was the political wire puller in the case FAITHFUL DOG HAUNTS GRAVE SAYVILLE, N. Y., Sept. 18.—Tot, pet dog in the family of Mra. Clara BE. Brown, of Sayville, has been kept chained the greater part of the time ince his young master, George Brown, met his tragic death in Great South Bay three years ago. But Tot has be: 6 #0 aged and feeble he hae of late been allowed |to go fre on several ooca sions hi bsen h caused search for hin ach time he has been found lying on his mas ter’s grave Ann cemetery Tot was chained to his kennel, but it Is believed he watched the procession, as he could have seen the cemetery from his kennel. The dog now will pass around the several graves of different members of the family and select | from all the others the grave of | George Brown, on which he will! lle for hours. HE’S BUSY PLOWING; THEN HE HAS FISH BIRMINGHAM, Ala,, Sept. 18 John Blow, a farmer in Escambia |county, has devised a new method for catching big fish without con: | suming his time. | For years he has been taking) large catfish and trout on trout | lines.." His home and truck farm are om the Conecuh river banks. By an alarm device he continues | his plowing and other work with jout da of his fish escaping when hooked. On the ends of the trout Hines he fastens small bells. When they ring during his work | hours or in the night he steps down | to the river and pulle in the fish, The device works like a charm nd saves much time, ‘ oP | posed of school children bet) the fourth and eighth grades, 10 BUCKS A WEEK t#s, from the fy swatting prin planted pA for at the clone of the meeting, will be i. NEW YORK, Sept. 18—A wallet | presented to parliament in the| MELBOURNE, Sept 18.—Thomas themselves and improvements containing $2,000, lost by a Col-/June session. Several hundred | Robertson of Ballarat, too old to g0| property in ‘which they take —— miner, was returned tntact thousand signatures are otineees tio the front is paying $10 a week to ite owner, after dancers in a/to tt. The Austrian Women’s clubs | oney Inland’ “tango palace” bad! do not feel overconfident of its be-|fF ® year to & younger volunteer Kicked it around for an hour, ing adopted. serving for him. ————- |If a policeman is asked to protect | DANCERS KICK poms Be enly. laughs, or perhaps | $2,000 AROUND | The petition, which was drafted | Two miners killed, three three missing in gas coal mine at Lansford, Pa $100,000,000 New York City 6 Per Cent. Revenue Bonds and Corporate Stock Notes Maturing as follows: $57,000,000 6 Per Cent Corporate Stock Notes Due Sept. 1, 1915. 6 Per Cent Revenue Bonds Due Sept. 1, 1916. 6 Per Cent Revenue Bonds Due Sept. 1, 1917. Price 100 and Accrued Interest. These three issues are direct obligations of the city of New York. Exempt from the Federal income tax. Exempt from all taxation in New York state except for state purposes. Interest at six per cent per annum, payable semi-annually on March.Ist and September Ist. Principal and interest payable in gold coin of the United States of America of the present standard of weight and fineness at the office of the Comp- troller of the city of New York. Coupon form in denominations of $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000. Registered form in denominations of $500 and multiples thereof as desired. Coupon and registered forms interchangeable. We are advised that these bonds and notes are available for the following purposes: As part collateral for circulation, under the Aldrich-Vreeland act of May 30, 1908. As security under the workmen’s compensation law of New York state. As an investment for savings banks and trustees in New York state and elsewhere. 334 Cm eae, es eee reiact_ ||| 6C syndicate of banks and trust companies of New York City has purchased these bonds from the city at par and accrued interest. A large part of the bonds having been with- drawn from sale by the subscribing banks and trust companies, we offer the remainder, en their behalf, for public subscription at the cost price. e242 Subscription books will be closed at 12 o'clock noon, Tuesday, Sept. 22nd, 1914, of | earlier, in our discretion, without notice. The right is reserved to reject any and all appli-” cations and also, in any case, to award a smaller amount than applied for. Applications for bonds should be accompanied by a remittance in New York funds of” $50 for each $1,000 bond applied for. The balance will be payable at the offices of the undersigned, Monday, Sept. 28th. If only a portion of the amount applied for be allotted, the balance of the deposit will be applied toward the amount remaining to be paid. J.P. MORGAN & CO. KUHN, LOEB & CO. New York, Sept. 17th, 1914. Wy SF RESET ESLO AZ 2