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i MODEL LAUNDRY ORGANIZED LA Btx hundred people attended the} “house warming” Friday night S@iven by the new Mutual Laundry fm its own building N,, between M The place fooned with tric Nghts ‘The music was lively The floor was not as pol ance floors are, minded that? Seattle is going to have a laundry Owned and operated by union labor Organized jabor in its entirety ts Behind the project .- “To raise the standard of work and wages and to make the Laundry union effective That was the purpose Saniszed labor pitched in out the men and the ployed in laundries. Tt required a ‘oximately $: capital. Labor unionites q Tesponded. Shares were offered for wale. They were subscribed and patd for. One year ago the laundry workers gave a ball, and the ball, so to as started rolling. The Movement for a mutual laundry ‘Was begun, and not a moment was allowed to be wasted since then eee brilitan shed ar aally but wh and so or helped women The Electrical Workers’ unton fixed up the lights for the dance Friday night. Tho Cooks’ aud Waiters’ union prepared the refresh. ments. A union band furnished the music. The laundry fund was thus en a. Mo@ern Artificial Teet! Greatest Dental Discovery of the Century. EDWIN J. BROWS, D. D. 8. 705-713 First Ave. ‘Union and Washtegton Blocks. Wer thousands of years dental of some description has been and is today being done, and, course, will continue to be done, fashion, by some, “to get the i nl t i you hear or read about eged tist having some do away with £ 3 if his practice. under before you get operated on by the wonde: ‘al landers bridge hich methods of re lacing teeth. He knows that any o1 sie 3 The greatest practical and scien- ‘tifle minds in the world's dental ro. droagnt forth the erned after nature's ow in full consideration of jon" each h bears to all a - teven performed Batural teeth. “True Bite,” nat- Ural bite teeth. PROPHYLACTIC BRIDGEWORK. ‘The first bridgework was ma bone and teeth and from mals, and was made to rest upon the siveolar because when any artificia letely co ‘8 the alveolar ridge impossible to cleanse {t and Femove small seeds and food par- from under it, causing a ter- File odor to come from this foul, Butrid debris. I have removed hun. ls of so-called alveolar teeth and ea them with prophylactic ework. ‘TRE ONLY 1 METHOD KNOWN TO WORLD. RoE ire pistewory ond PRO- tistry. to substitute h with den- tal work other than bridgework and Piatework are bogus and false, and he one making such claims should be prosecuted criminally for obtain- ing money under false pr PAINLESS EXTRACTING OF cases it is a ple matter to extract teeth without | Bale ie the dentist knows how) applied in the proper place and come in con tact with the right tissue, if pain | to be avoided. This is why a knowl of dental anatomy is indispen le in ti ful operation of Painless extracting m BE. ptieal Office, @ noticed was being made a es were being without that’ careful accurate examina- tion of the eyes which so vitai| and necessary, For many years 1 it optometry side issuc, and th old optom op 1 office pes Busrantee re e next question tent optometrist. I had been wear ing en for twenty years, and for the past seven years I had been ing to the same optometriat and new him to be a most compe and reliable man, and |t so hap pened that when flees were Feady for opening Dr. ©. T. Know!- ton, this very eye specialist, w available. 1AM NOT MAKING I decided not money on m the first very hard t thee If one fiei from t new 1 anteeing my patient fro: have an optical bu Year old, that #0 you see my this departin q Iwill have al practice that will be well worth striving for when it 1s two years f 1 do not make but a little pre 1 each patient, 7 1 provided i] was @ compe MON finesse lews than a paying expense un is correct nes to gr If ces tor myself. Phene Main £640, connecting all Gepartments. | sulting in the destruction of the lat- COMPLETED; BOR DANCES jriched by a fow hundred dollars. | dance arranged by the ing committee: C, W, Doyle | yan; A, A. Pillar, ©. ©, ¢ Lanning, Ed Levi wan represent unell The uded T. H P. List-| Rust, 6 r Mra. Mae Miss A O'Connor, Mrs, Hilts, comfortable building Mutual Laundry will com ation about January 16 cupies an ordinary half block wher the most modern and 1 laundry woat of Chi} A. Scott, secre will be aqulpp deciares C There will be a rest room for the dressing rooms roperly And wh as the large last ni wil be eventually the Inundry prospers attendance at the dance | ht promises {t will, additions | de to the building, and a roof garden will be pro Jed for the summer months | At present the ground floor only | will be used. As 8 as possible | the second etory will be built. The} P nt ure is of two-story height. F ually there are to be four floors. About 75 will be employed at the Drivers will soon be out it business, a branch office located in the Labor Tem and perhaps at some other downtown point ' The officers of the Laundry Workers’ union, who now see the realization of a fond dream, are W. H. Becker, president; ©. A Scott, recording secretary; F. A Martin, treasurer; Harry Gardner. vice president Johanna Hilts, the girl who war | fired by the Troy Laundry because {she had told things, as a member } of the mintmum wage conference at | Olympia, which apparently grated jon the ears of the Troy manage | ment, was a member of the recep. tion committee at the dance. She has been one of the most earnest workers for the success of of the Mutual Laundry. “Tt is gotng to be the best laundry in the city,” she vouches. “The standard of wages and working con ditions will be higher, and so wil the workmanship, We will have the most up-to-date machinery. will have the moat willing workers.” And Johanna Hilts, who didn’t need a minimum wage law for her self, but stood up for the needa of her sisters employed at the mangle Aoserves the success sho sees for the Mutual Laundry. 2,000 SHRINERS HAVE BIG TIME AT HIPPODROME About 2,000 attended the Nile Temple annual grand ball at the Hippodrome Friday night. ig, large night, and ev- ide coe was duly advised of the big national gathering of Shriners in 1915 at Seattle. In the very center of the roof, the electrical effect: re the le. gend: “Shriners, 1916, Between dances, movies were thrown on the screen showing the Nile Temple pilgrims to Mani! and Atlanta. Miss Beryl Lytton gave solo se and Mrs. N. V. Jacoby and Mr. Thompson gave an exhibt- tion of the maxixe and other late “Dance with Nile.” THANKS FOR THE LOBSTER LONDON, Dec. 12.—The admiral ty will neither confirm nor deny Buenos Ayres reports of Inst Tues day's battle off the Falkland isl- ands between Admiral Sturdee's j and Admiral Von Spee's fleets, re | ter’s squadron. | Beyond its first statement that no British ship was damaged, it had nothing to say relative to the re port that three British vessels were sunk. It was silent as to the story that a Japanese squadron helped Sturdee. \ 4 ALBANY Pain ESS Special Discount, | For 90 days the Albany Dentists | | will give a special discount of 10 | per cent on prices quoted below. | We do honest dentistry at tonest | | prices, and with our painless meth: - | ode which are entirely harmless, we guarantee the painless extrac. tion, i'ling and crowning of teeth | No students employed, only skill | ed graduates of years of experience. NO HIGH PRICES FOR EFFECT, |NO IMPOSSIBLE LOW PRICES TO DRAW A CROWD. Good Red Rubber Plate Best Maroon Rubber Fiate. Gold Oust Rubber Plate. . Whalebone Rubber Plate $5.00 $8.00 10.00 «,\the world) Goid Crowns (extra heav/). Bridge Work (extr | tooth |Gotd Filings Amalgam Fillings Our Wark 1 Guaranteed ‘tor’ 10° Yen | ‘ALBANY DENTISTS PEOVLE'S BA | Second Ay. Open Sundays #:50 ull 4, Pho NOW SHE THINKS SHE MADE A MISTAKE) By CYNTHIA GRE In the foliowing letter, th business girl adds a brand new interest to the question to whether a girl should accept attentions from her emp! er, Her case should rove of general concern be- cause It ie an exception. Here le her story: The recent discussion of the question whether or not a girl should accept attentions from her employer prompts me to re late a one-time experience which will ever haunt me as the great- est mistake of my life: I accepted a position in an of- fice as stenographer. It proved to be the most pleasant and sat- lafactory of any position in sev: eral years’ work. My employer was kind and considerate, prais- mg me & good girl, and as- suring me that I would never be required to do anything to be ashamed of, He had {moplicit trust in me and I In him. We were together in a most reapect- able way many times; but I al- ways felt that I was not good or STAR—SATURDAY, D pretty enough to expect serious attentions from him. He asked me on different occasions to promise to marry him; but I de the advice of friends “not to marry He has since always been as good to me as ever, except giv ing my position to another girl on a alight appearance of indis cretion on my part with my young friends. I often see him and, although he bas never married, I feel that he lacks the onetime confidence fo me which can never be re- stored. And II am «@ very good ste- nograpber; but an old maid. Most of my old friends have married, 4 some are still working, spending half the time looking for positions and the other half dodging the bill-col- lectors. 1 have come to the conclusion that a girl, if she wants to be decent, is better off with ber employer, as « rule, than with the usual “bunch.” NEARSERE. ‘SQUARE UP’ DAY IDEA TO BE OBSERVED IN The “square up” iden is taking hold with the churches as well as! with the grocery man and the tallor. | Sunday morning in 50 of the} churches of Seattle the members will see in the vestibule, on the! bulletin board, a big card, printed by Bull Bros., calling on them “to bury the hatchet,” “to settle the score,” and “to harbor a grouch no longer,” and to make “December | the squareup month,” and “Jan-| wary 1, 1915, square-up day.” The Men's Fellowship club of the Y. M. C. A. is planning to make the last meeting of the year a iad up” meeting. 30 CHURCHES Churches tn Tacoma, Spokane Everett, Bellingham and Olympis and smaller towns are taking up with the idea, In another year the movemen! |may take on a nation-wide aspect so that the American people, in time, may come to do what Is an established custom among the Chi nese, square up and be squared uy jat the beginning of the new year, The success of such a movement would be, it is held, equal to a re vival in business and religion. The board of directors of the |Commercial Club has unanimously endorsed the movement, and har urged its members to fall tn line. |ADMIRAL WAY PLAN | IS VETOED BY MAYOR Mayor Gill Friday vetoed the on! dinance for the improvement of an| 80-foot strip from W. Spokane at.) and Alki ave. to Alki Point, known | as Admiral way, a distance of four| | and a half miles, | The mayor objected to the pro-| t vision that the general fund may | be called on to pay part of the ex penses, and also objected to the | general terms of the ordinance. TESTIMONY OF DEAD MAN IS ADMITTED Testimony of a dead man was al lowed to go into the record in the | Tape bribery case, on trial before Judge Cushman in the federal court. The testimony of the murdered Lum Kong, as it was offered before Jaited States Commissioner Whit lock, was introduced by the gov ernment, and over the objection of the counsel for Tape, was allowed to go in, Kong has testified he | gave Tape $25. BRIDE OF 7 MONTHS SWALLOWS POISON Without leaving any word, Mra. H.| Beck, 17, a bride of seven month: took earbolic acid Friday afternoon and ended her life. She was found| by her husband outside their tent | at Spokane ave. and East Water.) way Her husband fs 22. Mrs. Beck the daughter of Frank Snider, 219 57th ave. THIS IS PETROL WAR LONDON, Dec This ts a petrol war,” writes a young officer! on the staff of Sir John French “Everything {# done by machinery, | and victory will come to the side) that has the most petrol. An army) crawls on {ts stomach, and the up-| cg AR keop of the stomach depends on the| petrol supply.” President approv LAeut, Hume of Trinidad, Col., drinking and taking leave of ab-|‘ sence without permission, Wife of former Sta’ Supreme Judge Sweeney of Nevada sues for divorce. |GOLD-FILLED SPECTACLES And Eyegiasses, Fitted With Sphertoal Lenses, $2.5 Examination Fr BINYON OPTICAL 4110 First Ave, ©0., Hinyon, Dr SELBOE DANCING PARTIES HIPPODROME iniversity Cleam Amusement Homelike Surroundings 1e-PIWOR UNION ONCHENTRA Health—Longevity Do you weothnt, nine tenth of al maladien ar om Innidic ” n by Davitt ving irene Col you know that Yoouunr the means to destroy the to poor oles ppendicttin, ete, CO., BLAINE, WASH, C, 12, 1914. PAGE 2. ~ | BATTLE ON FOR POSSESSION OF CITY OF WARSAW LONDON fate ‘ on the result of reported fre veloping between Ruselans | De Warsaw oday to depe new engag 1 Petrograd to be the Germans the Bast 4 ment de atd hi and It w Niche 1a to cod |telbuting Accor dr weconnts, thi | Miaw Mre. W. R. Ewards, the Bride, and| Miss Ada M, Cox, the Breach-of Promise Girt. CHICAGO, IL, ruin him soetally ically and fina y Such was the threat attributed to Ada M. Cox, stenographer, against William Rufus Edwards, St lumberman. She has made good," declar Mrs. Edwards, the beautiful young | bride of the man indicted as white slaver.”* William Rufus Edwards, his bride ways, 1s a wreck in @ private sana tartum in Hayden Springs, Wash Here ts his condition SOCIALLY—Indictment under the Mann act has ruined his reputation. MENTALLY—He His mind is a blank. PHYSICALLY—He Is a ner. vous wreck. In five months his heavy black hair has turned snowy white. FINANCIALLY~—Miss Cox le living on breach of promise judgment against him. So have the words of the prophet ’ if they are hers, come true. Then up from the mire of scanda! rises a herote figure—the faithfu’ young bride, SHE WON'T BELIEVE IT! She.married Edwards when the shame of an alleged violation of the Dee. mentally, “1 will phys is insane. Paul} ~ Gerr Jisorter however, that this gain dectalve It was from the Slave hi movements 0 and south The Austro raise the Russian sie) too, Was flared to Automobiles were uring extensively in Poland The having mode repented attacks on the enemy with armored machines On the other hand, it was sald that his av wheoibe transport serv lee wen what enab! Hindenburg, the kalse er, to bold line jave’ numerically ted alae capital ked the Warsaw > in dispatches that the Germ from th rman attempt to of Cracow ave failed raid to be fig in the campaign against the superior foree The “legitimate” houses will practically lark all next week, The Moore theatre will have moving pletures until John McCormack will appear in concert Wednesday night. The Metropolitan the Si tle theatres will be dark, The Met will open Christm with Disraeli, and the will remain dark untit Dec, 27. THE “PANTAGES Eleven whirlwind American b tes, In a spectacular singing and dancing diversion, will be the head line attraction of the new bill at white slave law was upon him. Sharing the stigma of a crime that the world views with upltfte; eyebrows, she has made his fight her fight. She faced the accusing glance: of the people of St. Paul with » fortitude that was fi Instead of her city, she went among them. She appeared before the women's [clubs and told them what she be | Heved to be the truth about her bus bey They argued with her—a ret. Finally they were convinced. Now no one in 8t. Pav! believer Edwardes guilty. The United State: district attorney refused to prose cute the case. But the federal officials in Chi cago thought different They would prosecute. That is why Mrs. Edwards, ¢ niece of Senator Moses Clapp of Minnesota, now has filed affidavit: with the federal officials, with the oe vag that the indictment be set “Tho case dates back to 1910 when Edwards, as a single man came to Chicago to close some deal: with the Mogg Coal company. There he met Miss Cox, a stenog ee for Mogg. F repeated refusal ly zor Junch with Bawarae A few weeks later Miss Cox went to St. Paul for a visit. She testified Edwards sent her # tieket from St. Paul. His testimony was that he gavr her $5 for tncidentals, but no ticket Miss Cox told a story in he: breach of promise suit of going to a fashionable St. Paul restaurant with Edwards, and waking up the next morning in a disreputable house. Edwards did not deny this, but the government needed evidence that he paid her way to another state to obtain the indictment. Tho breach of promise sult ware instituted tn St. Paul before the white sinve indictment was forth coming. The case was remanded for a new trial In the second trial Misé Cox won judem In the interval between the two trials Charles De Woody, an investi gator for the department of justice looked into the case for its bearing on the Mann act. The United States district attor. ney refused to prosecute. It is alleged that De Woody ob tained a confession from Miss Coy in which she told of intimacy with several other men before meeting | Edwards, This, it is said, for some reason was suppressed. This confession, if true, might have defeated the woman's breact of promise suit, ZEALOUS SOUVENIR COLLECTORS HURT PARIS, Dec, 12.—The war office has found it necessary to issue + special notice warning people not to play with German shelis. picker upon battlefields. Several souvent | collectors have been badly hurt by exploding shells. SAME COMPANY TO The Puget Sound Bridge & Dredg- ing Co,, who have the contract for building the courthouse, were ulso awarded the contract Friday by the| county commissioners for putting up the extra two stories for the use of the city. Fred Scheidler, farmer, says trap in shed which killed Wm, Hoffman was set for tramps. GET CITY HALL JoB | jact, | Princeton ‘eae’ Gienpeon, at he? oe ol Pantages, opening with the matinee Monday. For the added feature of the week Manager Pantages will bring on Cora Simpson and her players in the comedy sketch, “We Want Our Rights,” a playlet dealing in a humorous way, with woman suf- frage. Other numbers on the pro- gram will be Mme. Remi and Sig Ballingeri, in operatic duets, the Baker troupe, comedians on wheels, and O'Ne!! and Walmsley, the two ghtning bugs. -— f THE MOO! Ea Curtin” photoplay, Land of the Head Hunters, be continue to be the attraction at the Moore theatre Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday night the famous Irish tenor, John McCormack, will appear at the Moore in concert un- der the auspices of the Ladies’ Musical club. -— THE EMPRESS o- The Melnotte t ini , Who made a hit here last season, will make thetr third visit to Seattle next week as the headliners on the Empress bill, beginning Monday matinee. They will offer a new collection of songs and dances. A spectacular will be the musical offering “Bower of Melody,” Russtans were described as | P ANTAGE Unequaled Vaudevitie—Our Polley Never METROPOLITAN Dec. 25 to Jan. 2 ¥; Matinees—Saturday, Wedoesday and New Years Mr. George Arliss DISRAELI 00 to Boe 60 to BO “MAH Kvenings Matiners Charges BEGINNING MONDAY. MATINEE 11—WHIRLWIND AMERICAN BEAUTES—11 Ina peciae tise singing and gancas revue, - OTHER BIG | FEATURES 10c and 20c | AMUSEMENTS new song hits and dances. Nipp and Tuck, an acrobat and a contor tonist; and the Aerial La Valls will perform on a trapeze, The third Installment of “Zudora” will be given at theYmatinees ° THE METROPOLITAN | George Arliss will be seen for the first time here in ‘his produc \tlon of Louls N. Parker's comedy,| “Disraeli,” at the Metropolitan theatre, for an engagement of eight nights, beginning Christmas day,| except Sunday, with matinees on Saturdays, Wednesday and New Years, Mr. Parker shows the eminent |Statesman at the zenith of his career. Mr. Arliss’ comyany includes such | | well-known players as Ernita Las- celles, Florence Arliss, Margaret) | Dale, Letia Repton, Lilla Campbell, | Vincent Sternroyd, Charles Har-| | bury, Henry Carvill, Arthur aie jand St. Clair Bayfield. HE'S LIBERATO By Henry Wood | | SALONIKA (Via London), Dee.! 4. (Delayed.)—A 33-year-old Turk,| who thinks himself the Ottoman empire's “man of destiny,” forced) the sultan into the war. | This man is Enver Pasha, better known as Enver Rey, the real in- spiration of the revolution which hurled Abdul Hamid from his throne. As minister of war and leader of the Young Turks party, Enver is/ the originator and moving genius of @ supreme effort to free his coun- try of all foreign interference in its internal affairs. When I left Constantinople, he had succeeded in arousing the peo- ple to « fever for his program. He is now in Egypt. =| 1400 LUNATIC ROAMING ABOUT BERLIN, Nov, 15.—(By Mail to New York.)—German officers say the most distressing, and at the same time astonishing, message tha has come into thetr war office was sent from Von Kluck’s army, France “Send me nurses to take care of 1,400 lunatics,” was the gist of the! message, which came from an offi cer of the medical corps. The asylum buildings were mis taken by the Germans for a chateau and the officers who rode up were astonished to discover over a thou-| | sand hopelessly insane patients in LS One of theMeinotte Twins, at the Empress It consists of a with ten peopie. picked company of instrumentalists and soloists. Jack Princeton and Agni Yale will present a comedy) ‘600 Miles from New York.”! js styled the “Daniel Webster of slang.” He wrote the Ketch himself, Stanley Warner and Pauline Corbett will pronent| the buildings and grounds. Some valiant nurses had remain ed, but many patients were with nut attendants, | The German medical corps took | charge of the place JOHNSTON SINGS AT HIS OLD SCHOOL The new auditorium of the Lin oln high school was crowded Fri lay evening by students and their varents to hear the first concert of the season by the 40-plece »hoo! orchestra, The concert net ed close to $800, which will go to the ald of self-supporting — stu ‘ents, Songs by feature Theo, Karl Johnston, a Lincoln student, were the of the program A PERSISTENT cuss The burglar who entered the home of James Murray ave. 8., at lock Friday must have liked the place, for, ai cording to Murray's report to’ the police, he was visited four times | during the evening, At midnight, on the man’s fourth | visit, Murray took his rifle and fired several shots at what he be. leved was the retreating figure of the burglar, He thinks he hit him, Tonight Moore ir. 830 Kaward %, Curtis’ Photodrama IN THE LAND OF THE Nights, 25¢ and Ste. Matinees, 25e. All Seats Reserved. SEATTLE THEATRE THE SEATTLE PLAYEKS IN “EAST LYNNE” Kvenings ia, Se, He Matiners, Wed. and Sat. “ EDWIN FORD Co. ZUDORA ‘eek Days’ Matinee Only “OTHER ATTHACTIONS. STEWART HOUSE Stewart Near Pius Pubiie ‘sinrket Modern Sin; s 25¢ Large, Modern Outside Rooms for One or Two, BOG ‘32-YEAR-OLD TURK THINKS R; FORCES WAR It 1s his ambition to bring his meteoric career to a Climax by be- coming Turkey's great liberator, the restorer of its lost African prov- Inces. Already he is a popular idol. To his power of swaying public opinion, Enver adds the enormous advantage to himself of domination over the sultan, whose favorite niece he married. As I left Constantinople he was eradicating every vestige of Euro- pean educational and _ political power in the country. It was he who ordered that all | Subject of the allied powers at | Smyrna, Beirut, Jaffa, Mersina and Alexandretta be held as hostages under penalty of death in case any of the ports named were bombarded. ma —7 GERMANS FIND °HIROPODISTS MEET special meeting of state chi- | opodtaws has been called for Seat- {tte Sunday at which important leg- islative matters will be considered The meeting will be held at the Savoy hotel. INSPIRATION for their daily work many men get by keeping before them a photograph of wife and children. “’'m working for them,” the husband and father says, and bends to his work with renewed energy and increased deter- mination to SAVE as well as WORK for them, knowing that money in the bank would prove e true friend to them should anyt pen to him. DEXTER MORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK SHCOND AND CHERRY