The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 1, 1914, Page 3

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& te Are a Business Asset as Well as Good Clothes You should u the utr t care fn selecting y Do not be gove oe ast the known reputat at to wh entrust yourself. It is very easy dentist who claims cheapr bis patients as the den When your wa Jeweler and you ac i) ata at as tt may ba But then you are s f dealing with an honest mar if his prices ar Somew?h they are not obta by That ts if you va , How much more care. erefore. the selectic of your dent Yo to you than the most expensive wateh, repair you muet be as d that ¢ the best material only will be co So out a dentist of proven experieace TWELVE YEARS OF STEADY PRACTICE IN DENTISTRY IN SEATTLE. ALL WORK GUAR. OUR PRICES ANTEED 12 TRAKS yey ele .. $5.00 ..... $5.00 Regular $10.00 Bridgework TRUE-TO-NATURE TEETH $5.00 $10.00 $15.00 Per set, according to quality of materials used. Our Painless Method, Oralthesia, Banishes All Patn. _ORALTHESIA—The Victorious Enemy of Pain It amazes people who have been used to ordinary painiess dentistry. There is o one way to demonstrate it thor- oughly, and that is to see a patient emiling after having teeth extracted or worked on. If your wife fs nervous or timid about dental work, we Invite you to visit our offices and converse with our patients, who know the truth of our statements regarding ORALTHDSIA. DON’T PAY IF IT HURTS BOSTON t022 DENTISTS | ‘SHE RUINED ME’ SAYS MAN WHO | KILLED WOMAN “l tried to do so different. But this woman set me crazy. She took everything | had and r Dentist h as tab and the nest with for a denti Mishonest, barge. to your o trouble at you are workmanship or 1 aid you exer and honesty SEATTLE'’S PIONEER DENTAL OFFICE | First ay, on June 20 last. Abrams roomed there. quaintance with the woman cov-| ered a period of a little over one month when the tragedy was en acted. Sergeant Ryan testified he found man aod woman lying prostrate upon the bed in her room, whither Adams had crept, {t is charged, in the early dawn. The woman was breathing her last. The man was only dazed by the shot he had di tected at himself. He will be sentenced today. /A TRIFLE PREMATURE NEW YORK, Oct. 1—A number} of Turks, members of the crew of | theabove letter to Chief Griffiths, |the British tramp steamer Isle of| killed the woman he had loved and| Mull, charged by Capt. Stewart of attempted suicide, according to ev. | that vessel with mutiny on the high} idence presented today by Deputy | %¢@%. are held in the Tombs here. | Prosecutor Evans to a jury in Judge Mackintosh’s court. His ac.) turned me. down. | am a fiat failure and unfit to live. So ls the woman. She ruined me. | am no good to myself or the world.” Charles Abrams, after penning after the ship aniled from South/| Abrams was found guilty of mur-| America the Turks received news dir in the first degree, that England and Turkey were at He is accused of firing four shots| Wr, and refused to work | and killing Mra. Besse Poole, land-| He claims to have frustrated an| lady of a rooming house at 2223 attempt to murder himself an a} _—_——_— | family. Pile | Wonderful Invention stores Health While You Sleep. Re- Free Sample of Pyramid Pile Remedy! mailed free for trial gives quick relief itebing, bi roding morrhotd rectal | in the privacy our own ome. ie ® box at ali droge! Free ple for trial with book: mail ein plain wrapper. , FREE SAMPLE COUPON |PYRAM DRUG COMPANY, | Ole Pyr 1 Bidg.. Marshall, Mioh, |} Kindly send me a Free sample of | |Pyramid Pile Remedy, tn piain wrapper. Name . Street strength ble, nerve wealenean ism remedy that quickly and sdy ie gives life and strength to the huma hady. Woar Electra-Vita while It feeds a constant ty to your nerves, Wed. Thurs, Fri. and Sat. 5c NEW CIRCUIT fe 2ND, NEAR MARION 4 Universal Stars 4 Florence Lawrence Mysterious Mystery. Two-part Drama. Pearl White Perils of Pauline No. 9 of Her Adventures, in Two Parts. ILLUSTRATED FREE Arthur Oretega The White Wolf. Pictured Am A Story of rican Indians North XTRA! XTRA! Billy Jacobs Three-year-old Comedian. The Battle A Two-Part Comedy Scream The Electra-Vita Co. ver, heom 200 Rmpress Theatre Ballding ” Cor. Apring . Wash Inorth are converted Into freezing | HOW KING WINTER SWEEPS DOWN UPON WAR ZONE | = . ‘ 8 I i % epweoser aa “~ o so eo of How cold weather aweeps down jfrom October untl! January |ature of 40 degrees or colder This CLOTHING BIG. ARMIES FOR WINTER WAR LONDON, Oct. 1—-The | plague of cholera and other ie se reported among the | armies are only the beginning! Autumn Is not two weeke | old. The dead of winter le almost three months away. While winter weather tn the theater of the present war is not so cold as ¢ encountered by Napoleon, {t ts the worst imagin able for men compelled to live in the open. The temperature ts higher than that of corresponding latitades {tn America, but icy winds from the fogn which penetrate to the very | marrow, Pretty Chilly In Spote. Everything to the north of the! battle lines shown tn the design ts/ subject to an average temperature | of 40 degrees or colder. This !s the weather which pre-| vatls in tlhe central part of the; United States in January | The country covered by the aver.) age is wide, however, and the/ mercury varies from an average of 17 degrees In Petrograd, where the temperature often drops to 20 below zero, to an average of 38 Capt. Stewart said that shortly|degrees tn London, where It rarely |. gets colder than 10 above. } Armies Will Stop Fighting. «| Pverything possible is being done | to tn the comfort of the tere. enon of all classes all over) Europe are knitting woolen caps| and socks and mitte Factories are turning out over | re coats and sweaters by the hundred, |; ix to ten million men | but to supply by the time cold fn the field quarters as the Americans did dur-| ing the Ctvil war, and as the Rus-| sians and Japanese did in 1904, but such strategy ts hardly prob able In 1914 Foot ts too scare on both aldes, money {s too tight, the job to be done too dig WILL GIVE TALK ON WASHINGTON To acquaint people of the Pa cific Const with the Interesting | sights of Washington, will F. Thomas, & Washington newspaper | man, wn on the Coast for} having bee chief of publicit of] the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific expost tion, has arranged an filustrated| the with on at talk stion pictures, | hundreds of exqui colored views and vivid r Thomas will give this taik for] the benefit of the Seattle Press Friday night. | club at their the N. W. TEMPLARS TO MEET HERE The W. 8, G International Or session in the I. O. G. T, hall 1109 Virginia st., October 1 to Seventy-five delegates from Ore-| gon, Idaho and Washington will re Templars in these three atates This evening an open air tem ance rally will be held tn Cit Hall park !n connection with the meeting. MUST LEARN TO | TALK RUSSIAN LONDON, Oct. 1—The people of Galicia have a tough job cut | out for them, according to a | Petrograd dispatch, which says the Russian tongue will be ine | troduced into the province re- | cently ocoupled by the Russians, | and the people will be require to conduct business in that lan. guage. \ eT) | ew, ne 3H) Wey Ail territory north of the succe }P th STAR—THU it > Wey ® BERLIN 9m fromthe Arctic to central France lve “bat' is the winter weather of Everybody Loves a Lady Fair And a Lady Can Have a Fair, Clear Complexion by Using Stuart's Calcium Wafers After Each Meal You women ought to hear some men rave over a be ally clean and shell clear aki There ts nothing that so charms a man or a woman a © blood with im and these f ones, That is what Stuart's Cal cium Wafers do almost beyond be lief. | “She Was a Pimply Person Once! Upon a Time” Stuart's Calctum known to hundred men and of the faces made beautifully blemishes by fers. You Won't be always worrying about what your friends and trangers think of your xt ferful little wafers a chance That's because they go right to . the blood, ing out all impurities, strength ening It, toning it up. And when he blood ts clear the skin is free rom blem! Stuart's are nsands of admire now were free from skin Stuart's Calcium alctum Wafers are per \weather sets in is a hopeless task./fectly harmless and may be taken \"‘The armies may go into winter| freely by any one. They contain no poison absolutely no mercury ous drugs, no oplates Stuart's Calcium Calctum Su ative and a mild alter doctor prescribes them a hundred times a year. 1 are the most effective blood-cleans to map. blackheads have ‘something awfa and rash, carbuncles spots or a muddy cr Stuart’s Calcium Wa surprise in a short time. ecre Buy a box from your druggist anywhere, All druggists keep them in ntock re 600, A small sam ple package will be mailed free to any one who will addr Stuart Co., 175 Stuart B shall, Mich F Via Rock I In Low Kate And Proport! Eastern agent for delivery, by w details. Call at Office or phone for a GEO. Main 1004 DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1914 aps some | “broken: | face, {f you give these won Wafers contain | C. D. McNAUGHTON, C, P. Agt. PAGE 3. | , ” In Irresistible monthly marches tle lines” is subject to a temper central United States. NEW AUTO BUS SYSTEM WILL OPEN SUNDAY | Another strong proof of Counciiman Erickson’s conten- | tlon that the age of the motor bus Is upon us will be offered | Sunday forenoon when the Du- | wamish Valley Transportation | Co—"The Centamile Lin: begine serving points between cattle and Renton Junction, in | the Duwamish valley, with a connection through to Kent. The new line will be offictally opened by a formal christening of the company’s buses, “Tukwila” and “Duwamish,” the first to be christened by the daughter of the) |company’s president, W. Engie,! jot Tukwila, and the latter by the daughter of the vice president,| | George B. Jones, of Duwamish. | ‘The company controls four buses! fn all, one operated by Price Bros.| ne by Fred B. Lazzant, which runs through to Kent, and their two new ones | How to Make the Quickest, Simplest Cough Remedy DON’T PAY MORE THAN $5.00 FOR YOUR HAT. You Women Can All Wear Perfect { Duplicates of Paris Hats $3 and $5 This has been a wonderful week, even for the Lan Hat Store, of $10 to for noted, » for If you haven't selected your Fa or Saturday with burn ee those to for se h feather $2 mec tri before than which we are for Then you'll want to see the ot 1 hat you have ever seer bef lic hat © {uction ire The feathe grour $5.00 we id-floor store the complete OO hat Frenc , costing $10.00 to $3.00 3 are exact in P 1,000 hats to che alike MISS ose from ES’ and CHILDREN’S School Hats, trimmed with ribb DRIOS nc cikbscs’s vegncsnevesses Others elaborate VELVET, HATS, trimmed wi Others at more 4. | ‘Ind. Floor PANTAGES B 00r 2d Ave & Senece: CORDUROY and th ribbon, ¢ Imported 4 offering exact _ $3" $5 Il Hat, come in tomorrow te French m 25 00), dels, trim lels 1 pre never but her splen from what at $5.00 hat copies’ of from Our and no twe Felt yon bands, ‘ 50¢ . B5e CLOTH orice THE new leading styles PHOTO PLAYS f THIS WEEK'S EPISODE OF “The Million Dollar Mystery,” en titled “The Borrowed Hydroplane, is at the Colonial theatre. In this SOR sce ce chapter the Black Hundred has (Copy . by Jones, the butler, in a tight corner. terpeice Assoc! Footsteps are heard, and the plot- MARGIE CONFESSES A VERY | ters’ plang fall again. A thrilling DEEP SECRET Mra. Bil! Tenney yenterday. After admiring my house to an extent that satisfied even me, she remarked with a sigh: Waverly, yo! very happy woman.’ “L think I am pretty happy,” I answered. “I certainly enjoy my littio home, although I find keep- ing house more expensive than I thought. I am just about choosing between a new fall sult and a maid to help me with the work this win. ter.” “A man would choose the maid,” said Mra, Tenney. “How do you asked. “Well, in the first place, a man will be comfortable whether his lothes are the latest style or not. If most men kept house they would ave certain things done for them selves just as most men have their shoes blacked or their faces shaved. “Men care more for comfort than beanty for themselves and more for beauty than for comfort for the women who must sit across the breakfast table from them day aft- er day. called on me te should be a w know that?’ I M. ob a pi tal rocky waste. appear in this little tragedy, Harry, Plain drama; Snakeville comedy. rescue of Florence Graves by a hy. droplane {8 a feature in this chap-| r. George Ade's latest comedy-in- slang, @ pastoral drama, “The In vestment,” News-Pictorial, are all interesting. Prof. W. H. Donley ts now at the erent organ, giving splendid mus- ical interpretations of the pictures, and the Hearst-Selig MARGARITA FISCHER IS PINK armed. Those arms are now badly scratched. So are her ankles and toes. n putting on a one-reeler “Nieda,” {n For Harry Pollard has b hich Margarita {s a child of the Only three characters argarita and Joe Harris, as an id man. Most of the scenes were taken beyond San Marcus pass, at high altitude, and make a notable cture, Excellent silhouettes on the sky line prevail. cee Clemmer Untl! Saturday Night “The Cricket on the Hearth,” ken from Dickens’ play; “A Song,” a Mary Pickford “News Pictures” and a eee Colonial Until Saturday Night ing dis-| “No matter how ragged a man| “The Adult Girl Who Got Busy,” | 1 {hroat) gots, It seldom enters his mind to|® George Ade comedy fable; “The ‘’ dass; mend the rents; no matter how | Investment,” drama “Hearst on iebe. 2% cos tt tn syrup ves you c « full pint of b | than ould but a | direc | =! which r "2 t accep’ to antista: tly refuaded ation. The 1 | Wayne jher home {n such fashion that her sland Lines Through and connecting service from Chicago, St, Louls, Memphis, Kansas City, Omaha, St. Paul, Des Moine Chiengo $28.00 | Kansas Clty $10.00 | Momphis Bit.e9 Poort $56.06 | Dew Moines $92.84 | Little Rock Ries Bt. Louls £25.60 | Omaha s+: 820.00 | Okla! $45.25 rom All Eastern Points You may deposit money here, and we will arrange with our ire, If necessary, We arrange all ditional tnformation desired P. CAVE, General Agt. 712 Second Ave., Seattle dren and about |dear Mrs, Tenney |she interrupted {mpulsively lirty his shirt, he seldom thinks he ‘an wash ft. “Whatever el & woman does, she usnally does all these little per- sonal things, not only for herself but for others. “Men usually do one thing and do it well without making life a bur- | den, but we women try to do 80} many things that we get the repu-/ ation of doing everything tn a si{p- shod fashion.” “Well, what are you going to do, Mrs. Tenney,” I asked, “if you are| t a widow as was a friend of ne? Her husband died suddenly and left her with three little chil $6 in money. She iad to earn money enough to sup-| port those little children—she had, to do the dead father’s work and yet sho was their mother and she must give them all the care that a mother givea them, | “This brave little woman did this with no asking for sympathy or re- Nef. She worked all day M m. n¢ |w to earn| ered her children, put them to bed, | tu heard them aay their prayers, made | ro and mended their clothes, bound up their childish hurts ts to m e them well She, my had to do many things and she did her duty outside employers valued her work and she| lid her work Inside her home so well tuat her children did not miss 1 mother’s . “No one seemed to think this wo: out of the her old-| eak-} ely ,/ and she as man was doing anything but in sc a boy of 10, ordinary me ild apprec when he came down to way est ¢ ast he always greeted her g ,0d morning. Fathe ravely replied ‘Good morning, 1 Then he said: ‘Good morn-| = ing, Mother, and she answered " a kiss, ‘Good morning, my| boy.’" That ts Just the point I want to make,” said Mrs. Tenney, “no one thinks that wonderful wor ing anything extraordinary Th are her children-——she must care for them, But if she died and left the children to the father’s care no one | would have thought for a moment that he could be to them a mother and father “Do you anything an is do-} too.” know, it I Margte, I had would children,” I be. that Will and I would still b And even if we were , a8 We are now, I would hav the children to comfort me. “Why don’t you have children, | Selig News Pictori: | cold |then red, for not even to you, dear little book, have I before confessed that the greatest disappointment of | he 1s wishing for them, come to us been married so ‘SOUR STOMACH, COLDS, HEADACHES, REGULATE YOUR BOWELS—10 CENTS and kissed the | tress | sour, food and that misery-making gas; |ful for months. “The Bor. argie?” I felt my face grow hot and then I know I turned white and y married life is that there seems » probability of children. I have never even discussed this ith Dick, but sometimes I am eure too. I keep hoping that a child will After all we have not very long—only a tle over two years. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) AMPLE MILLINERY Silk and German Velvet Shapes in all the Prices range 95¢ and up. HATS TRIMMED FREE OPEN TILL 9 P. M. SATURDAYS. }rowed Hydroplane,” latest chapter — of “The Million Dollar Mystery.” cee | Class A Until Saturday Night | “The Viper,” 4 two-part Allee | Joyce picture; “Twins and Trou | bie Edison comedy; “The New Re Mascot,” Biograph drama ce. Alhambra Until Sunday Night “A Prince of Bavaria,” two-part comedy drama; “The Boob's Leg- acy.” comedy; “The Man Who Was Misunderstood,” King Baggot drama. cee Melbourne Until Saturday Night “Swamp Fox,” three-part Kalem drama; “The Counterfeiter’s Dangh-» ter,” Blograph drama; “A Case Ingratitude,” Melis comedy. Grand Until Saturday Night “Protea IL,” five parts, eee * na Alaskan All Week b: mn Making of Bobb; Sai with Henry Abeles, oe eee Mission All Week “Burning Daylight,” a Jack don story, eee Ps Cireult Until Saturday Night = “The Mystery,” a two-part Flom ence Lawrence drama; Bate ue,” two-part comedy Pauline,” chapter No, 9, in twoe parts; “The White Wolf,” with Are thur Oretega. . A At the Home Until Friday “The Trey o° Hearts,” No, 6, two “A Modern Melnotte,” two- “The Danger Line,” the Hand of Jane,” oo | | parts; part drama; drama; “For j comedy, ee t Hour Until Friday nt of Venice,” four. “At 3 o'Clock,” com- At the Pleas: The Merch | part feature; j edy. CARDINAL. STRICKEN | ROME Oct. 1.—Cardinal Ferrata was stricken suddenly with appendi- citis today, Dr, Marchiafava was called to attend him Turn the rascals out—the head ————— | their bread and at night she moth-| sick, sour stomach and bad colds ALL COLONIST Low West Bound Rates Until October 8th rn them out tonight with Casca ts, Don’t put fn another day of dts- ss, Let Cascarets sweeten and your stomach; remove the and fermentin, culate undigested BEFORE A dollar or so spent on do as much as four dollars for a new pair. BRING IN YOUR OLD ONES REGAL SHOE 1124 FIRST AVENUE Corner Seneca 10 Cents. [er and carry off the decomposed Jache, billousness, constipation, the | Waste matter and consttpation pol |son from the bowels. Then you feel hab) ea | A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning—a |10-cent box from any drag store j Will keep your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular jand make you feel bully and cheer Don't forget the take the excess bile from your ltv-| children. Never gripe or sickens, SCASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.” an old pair of shoes may REPAIR SHOP Telephone Main 4136 £ ae 4

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