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'WIFE BRINGS PAINLESS DENTISTRY At Cut Prices Until Further Notice. ALL WORK GUARANTEED FIFTEEN YEARS Porcsian Grown... $3.50 $3.50 $5.00 $8.00 Ginnanted $5.00 Solid Gold Fillings... Up Other Fillings . 50 = OFFICE HOURS: | Dally, 9 to 6; Sundays, 10 to 12. BOSTON [ou curt RATE | DENTISTS 1420 Second Avenue, Opposite Bon Marche. Bring this ad with you. Heavy, per tooth $25 Set of Teeth by Guaranteed ATTENTION! Reason for catering Market, formerty Little Misfit store of corner Sixth and Pi shoes, ‘We guarantes « saving of & on & dollar on old and na fecond-hand clothes at your own p: Don't forget the place ECONOMY BASEMENT” 04 Stewart st. Between First and Western Avs. on on Stewart et. Ne steps: Just level entrance Bpecial for three Gays from date Bring this ad and get s discount of AM per cent on each $1.00 purchase, AT BARGAIN PRICES Stationery Co. TIS First Ave. Near Columbte St. AT DREAMLAND 10 Dance Tickets for 25¢ Everyone Welcome dust Around the Corner at 1622 Fourth Ave. {Best House Paist $1.50 per gal. Floor Varnish, highest grade $2.00 per gal. Kalsomine, asougs for a room seereees 256 SUNSET PAINT & VARNISH Cc List your Real Estate in Star, Want Ads. Douglas and Just Wright Shoes. SENSIBLE RIVAL UNDER OWN ROOF inter who mar much f girls air We have read with est the expertences o! have fallen tn love with t ried emp! and of the emp ers who returned their love, Now 4 wife of such an employer speaks The following letter came to Cyn thia Grey today Dear Miss Grey: | have been reading your letters, and, as a wife and mother, beg to be al lowed to say a few words. We have two children, 9 and 11 years of age. My husband is a business man and employs two stenographere. Nearly three years ago | discovered that my husband was Infatuat ed with one of these women What did | do? 1 did not fly all to pieces, but studied the whole thing out the same as | did my lessons at achool. | found that this wom an was helping to make my husband successful and also happy. REAL LOVE cannot be bought, stolen or traded for What, then, did | do? Weill, | invited her to our tor A HAMILTON PHOTO The photo of Miss Clara Christie, the Butler hotel cigar stand girl, published In The Star Thursday, wae taken by the Hamilton studio, Through an over sight, The Star falled to give credit to Hamilton's with the pleture, and has tens to make amends ——_————$_$_— | house as often as she wanted to come, | made her feel | un derstood. She has learned to love our children and brings much good and happiness Into thelr [ittle lives, coming and going at will As for my husband, he ls ae kind am can be, and | am sure we at home are not neglected He appreciates my ability to keep our house In order and at tend to our children. 1 In re ‘U.S.NOTREADY FORWAR, SAYS WASHINGTON fea's preparedn today Dec Amor. 6 for before by Rep 18 cur the house naval Jardner of Massach Amerte he dwaddling, It has of building It should wine and pound fe butlding program. Twelve completed battleships committee a demented pol warships for cold not be penny lish tm ite naval fey | storage turn am satisfied with his ab solute truthfulness and ability to make more than one wom an happy. We are all planning on our Christmas holiday — together, with a tree by the fireplace, and | fee! sure it will be as happily spent as It was last year, A HAPPY WIFE, AND FRIEND MOTHER The Call, new socialist weekly, off “8 jare now tn cold storage because of | ning them Rep, Gardner also told the com mitteemen that nine battleships many other lesser craft still be unavailable for use t 8. been involved tn the w Bighty of the fighting of our modest navy,” h ‘are unavatiable for battle emergency, Th f it an think of how of you talk about Amertoa | war, some being BLACKSMITH CHARGES GERMANS’ GUNS ARMED ONLY WITH HAMMER NN ) a ff The Giant Blacksmith, Astride a Horse, Charged Forward Toward the Guns, Waving Hie Sledge $2,535 IN COUNTERFEIT COIN "FISHED OUT OF ELLIOTT BAY: With the arrest of Mrs, Ava Ha ris at a Western ave, rooming house, and the recovery of $2,526 in counterfeit $5 and $10 coins out of the waters of Flliott bay, Capt ‘Thoms B. Foster, United States secret service agent, today believes he hes rounded up the last of a gang of counterfeiters that have op erated on the Pacific coast for nine | years. the confession of Capt. Foster, t Powers, Capt. Lichenbers and Engineer Pinkham, of the launch Scout, dragged the waters in the locality of the Union Ot! Co. for two packages of spurious coins which had been dropped there. After an all-afternoon search. with large fishing hooks, the offt cers brought to the surface @ pack age containing $2,535 tied in a towel The money was dropped into the bay, according to McDavitt, follow {ng the arrest in Tacoma of George Upon McDavitt, Marshal [| Matiory and Stetson Hats. PRESENTS Suits, Overcoats and Balmacaans at ~15 All the new and Shirts and Underwear from. We can clothe you Special Union Made Ne Westerman up-to-date styles. a fine selection to from top to bottom ckwear at popular prices & Schermer choose Seattle’s Two Big Union Stores 220-222 First Ave. S. 103-5-7 First Ave. Ss. “Where you get the most for your money.” leharge of pa Roberts on « counterfeit Kane ) and Harry © ing coins. Captain Foster recognized Kane as Henry Hargens, a man with « criminal record extending o period of years. Mrs. Harris is a step-daughter of Hargens Hargens {s also wanted tn Call fornia on a counterfeiting charge, it is declared by the local anthorities. HERE’S WHERE FLEET OF GERMANS GOT ITS eee C > 1s The above map shows the region around South America where the re cent naval activities resulted in the sinking of the German cruisers Scharnhorst, Gneisenau and Leipzig Figure 1 indicates the spot off the coast of Chile where, on November 1, these German naval terrors sank the British ships Monmouth and Good Hope. Figure 2 Indicates the Falkland islands where the British have just had revenge for their loss. Kansas City Is to have a de vice that will make stock yards odorless. | suggest that the National league buy one and hold thelr meetings under it. ‘This te the fourth of » by Ml. J. Phillipe, ‘The * in Europe, formed im gach of the warring armies. Teday’s hete is = Meigtsn. BY H. J. PHILLIPS PARIS, Dec. comes to turn the swords {nto plow shares before peace is assured the| the usual price | warring nations must agree that | E4 Lemons’ blacksmith’s hamm | must go in with the swords | Lemons fs blacksmith of the Sixth | Dragoons of the B the i and the armies of France, and managed te check the German wave of troops in that first magnificent rush toward| | Parts, reached the line of Mons to |prepare for the final sta Sixth Dragoons were worn an Ponte from six days of constant “Thelrn was the duty "5 rear. a, of protecting rmans cavalry, carriers and] re mounted guns {n an attempt to prevent the fleeing French and | Belgians from entrenching. The batterfes came into action that morning as soon as the post tions were revealed—and the allies got the range first of steel onto the battertes. The blacksmith, mons, had been working at his field forge al night shoeing horses, for the fate of a dragoon depends larg condition of the feet of his mount Lemons w at work, leath apron on shoeing charger when the firing opened The Dragoons to prepare for the charge command came, Lemons ipon the animal he had been shoe ing. The bugle sounded the charge. As the Dragoons started down| the road, across the bridge, opening out for the charge across the open| field, there was a thundering nolse behind, a wild shout, and they saw the giant of a blacksmith, black from head to foot with the soot of the forge, astride a horse, riding for. ward at a gallop. Lemons was standing in the stir rups, his arms and head bare, his lack, his leather apron waving and tn his hand he held a big mer, which he sw he sh fired agai blacksmith, un eached the German lines to bayonet him down on the lines 1 when the the 11 were motor were As the A Germ and the t hia skull, beat down a guards swept up to capture guns on the helghts, the t with his hammer, was fightin nother gun, standing upon his which been bayoneted man head he ang era rode ove gunner, ar horse, and cracking every ( could reach Lemons w TOBACCO OWOSSO, Mich., Dec has been recelved her in Sanilac of practically unhurt IS FATAL 18.—Word of the death count El Sawden Al years old, from nictoine polson ing, the result of being locked up with a eireutt court jury in a small room for more than two hours Sawden never had used tobacco in any form, The other Jur smol ed almost continuously while in the jury room, The fumes of the to bacco made Sawden violently 11 an rules county au: to establish court right Supreme thorities have game preserves, REP. GARDNER war was dis-| Jour refusal to pay the bill for man-| grade | Way for $237, prepared for | accumulated tn the When the time advancing | * pouring a hail] a the| commanded | leaped | kemith | at} 18, 1914, PAGE 11 There Comes a Time in Every | Business When [t Must Take a Loss attle Buyers Get the Benefit in ‘eintars This Great Emergency Salle | fire nnncans "Pay 'whes Yor tan tren Wane on fea \ clous sacrifice of highest Pianos by the representative ctories now in charge r ve for three piar the Filers house for every two n¢ Id $500 Weber Pianos $185, $550 Stein- two $575 Kimballs at almost half price. Brand new, latest M over mary at Eilers ff who are ord pair right $118. $98. sacrifice, reasons for and there it ORE been high-grade new Id durin than mer were piano hants Dav Stock Chickering, § in, Weber & rt a, Lester any mds. rs Music Steinway anol Kingsbury Player all in the House at price this right Pianos and y and surplus You will conditions which again exist again great sale nece have a chance like ombined to make t wary NECESSITY KNOWS NO LAW nown fact that fintst on in nation’s largest to a sudden up. Thus th stock With notive n quantities High-grade in cour not avold ac confidence in future f thi It is a welbk od P ge no ot} Instruments factories a well-founde #s that the v House has agreed to take a portion o ading manufacturers, under an agr t that expense of disposing of y instrument ativ a now tf e. Th J ow on. Their proposition is to !mmediately t these Pianos foto cash or time-payment contracts, Shipments of the surplus stock from Eastern factories a: already on the way THIS IS THE FACTORY AGREEMENT The agreement Fastern manufacturers ts that every time | the factories’ representat! 1 two pianos, Eilers Music House agrees | to buy three me But this is for only a limited time Bo Bpecla | prices are made for immediate sale, | Importam: Nearly all Pianos in this sale are Intest styles and brand new, not even shopworn; the few that are used are in the very ig t and guaranteed condition. All Our New $300, $325, $375 Pianos, Now $6 aMonth, and Prices Reduced to $190, $168, $228 AND PLAIN CASES ONLY $118, BRAND NEW Why not buy a Player Plano while It can be purchased for lese than of a straight plano, and on less than half the usual pay-| Stay at home and enjoy the evenings. come ste finished surplus of asic factories cannot k must be cumulating ¢€ at the future revival will verify. Eilers M surplus stock of several le the manufacturers assu Thus manufacturers’ represent They do not care for profit a near the 8 KO with ments? Free music rolls. ‘Let Us Solve Your Christmas Gift Problem for You tht anbel >pportun: * much as with prt are almost tainly presents |oive the Christe in every way funded. Any Je fe now tn full swing, De at once of on Christ i toward payment on one Aifferent bange agr extended for an additi ea mistake in buyin, t at Eilers Muntc permit «ivin Be |NOTES OF INTERES FROM WASHINGTON { By Gilson Gardner ASHINGTON, Dec. 15 the authority of the states over railroad rates be wiped out and all authority vested in the In terstate commerce commission? | ‘This question has been raised t the so-called Shreveport rate case All the leading railroads have start ed cases ing to divest the | states of authority Tho state commissions and 5 rs are opposed to this move hey contend that interst rates ought to be left to the author ity of the state commissions and that the al commission would not be equal to the task of rato making carried to the extent which uid be sary if the state | |commissions were wiped out. | s 4 the j struction of larger machines or to}! offer the reasons for believing that they will be remain for «in the alr travel at speeds higher thar with which we are famil “Nor 1s there a ideration clal value Shall to any room to enter on of thelr commer. or of those applications | which will probably first come in the arts of war rather than peace; but we may at least that these may be such as change the whole conditions warfare, when each of two oppos ing hosts will have its every move ment known to the other, and when no Unes of fortifications will keep out the foo. 80 4 the The six-foot model of the Lang: | ley aeroplane first flew in 1896, and | problem “was finally work out ¢ 2 man-carrying scale by the Wrights in 190% and 1904 Although Langley’s man-car plane failed when tes lower Potomac river, € within the past year d 1 that its failure was an accident, by flying in the ofiginal machine con structed by Langley | ‘The effect of the aeroplane new adjunct to war was cle foreseen by its inventor, the Prof. P. Langley, secretary | the Smithsonian institution. In an article prepared for deliv in New Y k city April 12, 1901 before the American Institute | Electrical Engineers, and published in the 1900 report of the Smithson-| Jian institution, Prof. Lansley said: There is no room here enter on th considerati of | RUSSIA HAS THE BIGGEST WAR FLYING MACHINES OF ANY NATION IN THE WORLD A good deal has been heard concerning the British and German aeroplanes, but the great Sikorsky biplanes used by the troops of the czar © been overiooked. These machines, invented by a famous Russian named by far the biggest aeroplanes being flown in the war they are the largest in the world, ‘They stand 16 feet high, about 100 feet wide. ‘The Sikorsky can carry almost as many passengers as a Zeppelin airship. Twenty men can be accommodated in the large passenger cabin, which 1s constructed of metal and contains numerous winjows In this machine three engines are fitted, which give a total of nearly 1,000 horsepower, for, owing to the Sikorsky biplane weighing in it self one and a half tons, and having so large a crew to carry, it de mands high power to pull It off the ground and keep it in the air Tho weight of the machine has ne itated an elaborate landing chasais, compe 1 of numerous springs and pneumatic tubes, so that the huge biplane cen alight safely on rough ground at speed of 60 miles an hour List your Real Estate in Star | Want Ads. ie mn the con orsky in fact and are are model $250 mahogany up Some for even This sacrifice means uo tee) That Time Is Now, for the Piano Makers and Thrifty Se- Choose Now, Pay shed Music House has terms of or player an best sults nd records, will new instru- plano for $36 or ckerlngs, or Play- o Player Pianos ng, is the time Don't fail to see these and many others. If you cannot come to Se attle, write for actual photo- graph and complete descrip- tions. Any instrument sent on our free trial offer to any home in Washington Eilers Music House, Eilers Bldg., University and Third. Other © Only ¢ $1,150 Acmelodte A good supply of music rolls free privilege. The tions ever made “: Never Such Low Prices Never Such Easy Terms © gnvz.z~¢ Spend Christmas With The Sublime Family Native Seattle Pure Food Youngsters, all in cheerful, happy red packages, invite you to the best Christmas Cookery you ever tasted. FOR BREAKFAST Steaming Hot Griddle Cakes, Appetiz Waffles, Feathery Biscuits and Delicious Fried Cakes, all made with Sublime Baking Powder, Sublime Syrup, fresh the Vermont maple trees, and in the velvety Sub- lime Coffee that is so good that you never tasted real cof- fee before. CHRISTMAS DINNER Made up of the most savory flavored dishes imaginable. Hot breads and biscuits, raised with Sublime Baking Powder; Sublime Spices, with their frag rance and pervasive garnishment, Light, from add- every portion; with skilled and there; and deliciousness to Syrup, used hands, add flavor Sublime Goffee, richly stimulatingly good; then sorts, ices and fee cream, flavored with Sublime Extracts, and Mince Ple, bet ter than mother ever made, from Sub- while the Christmas ict of Sublime Baking ing Sublime to here fragrant dainty des- lime Mincemeat, Cake is the pro Powder. Accept the Invitation of Sublime! Don’t Permit Your Grocer to Give You a Substitute Vittucci Importing Co. Elliott 276 309 Occidental Ave. It All Helps the Seattle Payroll