Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘ b » AY SUNKINIO MINUTES LONDON, Jan tleship Formidab! sunk Friday, was torpedoe: it was considered certain to day, This was not official, but it was the Judgment of compe tent naval authoriti The admiralty was withholding de taille. It wae coming in for more sharp criticiam, too, the popu jar view being that German @ubmiarines have made a much better jowing in the present war than have Great Britain’ Latest accounts were that 15 the Formidable’s crew had been counted for as sav Some h were still held out that fishermen bad made a few more res but they were not very st " Assuming the survivors to have numbered Si, the deaths must have totaled 559, taking as a basis the admiralty’s figures concerning the number of men on board the lost ship. j The Formidable, it was learned, sank In ten minutes, after the ex Plosion which destroyed It Picked Up in Open Boat ‘The trawler Tor Bay of the survivors The Tor Bay picked the men up from a smal! open boat, in which they had been tossed about for hours. The men were badly ex hausted. It was while hastening shore ward, in quest of shelter from a mountainous sea, that the trawler Fan across the helpless sailors Waves 30 feet high constantly threatened to capsize the craft Some of the men were so weak The bat which w rescued 70 they required immediate medical attention. No sooner had. the last man ferambled aboard the Tor Hay| when the cutter sprung a leak and eank. Ellensburg has liabilit fn excess of assets | 2 Shock of wife's death may kilt) ghn Wagner, Centralia. Yor Grip, Influenza, Coughs, Sore Throat COLDS ‘Two sizes, 25c and $1.00, at all or mated. Health—Longevity | arise from insidious seit poison ing of the system by Bacilli living in the De you know that YOGHURT ts the to destroy the Intestinal | to your digestive & sufferer from liver, kidney. | throat troubles, nervous y malady due to poor ctr qulation constipation, appendicitis, ete ‘Write for information. YOGHURT CO., BLAINE. WASH. St. Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co. of and ' backs and cotls put in and connected. Gos PIKE AT. Main 678. We Make Motion Pictures Finest Equipment in the Northwest . Jacobs Photo Shops P.1, Building, Seattle Dr. Macy Cure You Chronic and | Cenditions, eh eu mat iam Nervous Disor ders, @tomach and Intestinal s, Kidney ders of the Hair, Skin, Acne. Ee- zemas. Pimples, Pile Rect Hiood Polson orders, 608, 9 My trent: Vita fale. i you meet the Pleture. in the office Pande back of every to# p the unpardonable asin Montect in DR. MACY, Specialist In Advanced Meth pte Sooene Ay. & Pppesive The notes . Eatrance as ie, Waabs | oppoaite Are STAR—SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1915. W ARSHIP ‘How You Can See San Francisco Expo for Three Dollars per Day Pacitic Fair, Surp. Staff Specia SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jan. A world’s fair for the man average means! Not man’s pleasuring place. Teat’s what the Panam exposition, opening here on ary 20, 1915, has kept constantly tn mind, Hotels, restaurants, railway and steamship companies have co operated in the same spirit This $50,000,000 exposition can b fully enjoyed at a minimum of a week, or $3 a day, after the vist tor has reached San Francisco. This schedule has been worked out by left Western avenue 2| of deserts only a rich| the Navajos and Zunt Indians Vert! ed Only by the Beauties of the Plants and Flowers it Sheite lot 4 | Tahe ithe north the/the hints in an itinerary peaks Canyon Yellowstone park in Arizona; the of New Mexico. the Grand paint home of great it Lake; Glacier park in } nation southern California and the Redwood fore these are but America first 6 1915 fair. in conn Complete Report of Market Today A delay in shipment practically without any the exposition people with the fol-| bansnas tn stock Saturday and put Amusements, etc. . Total, per day . . $3.0¢ Reduced transcontinental rates on all railway lines will prevail dur ing the entire exposition period, with inter-routeing arrangements. Sample rates from Mirsissipp! river points are $57.50 for the round trip, with stopovers from Rocky mountain points, $45; Omaha, Kan sas City and points In that zone. ). Opportunity to.see the wonder nts of the United States has nev before bee 80 6conventently linked up with a great nationa event. Any one of the half dozen rail way lines which traverse the con tinent will carry the exposition visitors to regions of grandeur out anking the show pl *« of Eur. ope Prairie lands still dotted with buf falo wallowa and ranged by great ere bands of cattle, cowboy - tended; | pe re in Colorado's titanic canyons and’ carrots The Circle club has another of its ever-popular contests to nounce today, and ¢ sidering t nature of the contest, Circle re ords probably will fall The contest is a simple one, as is along the same line as the sert of puzzie contests recently conduct ed. Any bright boy or girl bas a fine chance to win the prize To the winner there will be awarded a pound box of delicious can The winner will be decided lot The contest follow Behead where pers buried and get to “wand: 1 Behead w is in the in clear weather, and get a substance used for roofing Behead what is used in conn tion with t meaning anger. read a conc a vehicle jephones and get a elted fellow and get wishes to thank the sent bim Uncle Jack Cireleites who Christmas cards. pretty | bargains druggists lowing items: | many dealers on the anxious seat : PO et Homeo. Medicine Co. me. ae ee be $1,00/A fresh suppty {# expected on a Street, New York.—Ad | Lodging, per night.. cs 1rd due from the South Sun en Sonne + 88). A boustifal sapply of California celery and caulifiower in evidence along the avenue, may have a ten dency to bring about a lower price, although there was no material change Saturday Receipts of dressed poultry have been low Many dealers restocked with the arrival of a big shipment of Call fornia radishes, brussels sprouts and artichokes early tn the morn ing The day's business was good, con sidering that most merchants are busy taking Inventory Prices Paid Profurere for Vegetables and Fruit. w LW RITES conte MacKay, B. 60th and 26th ave, N Her poem, ine a jingle Let t hope the year we've entered cle per May restore to us again F 6 on earth with all its blessings, th my little nd in Peace on, earth, good-will to men wee € eee But it's hard to jing Now, I send you all the greetings When we think upc Of the season, Uncle Jack With its warring and arring And my love to all the Cirele, Vith !ts bloodshed and its crimes Yours as ever, Lois “Mac. i THANKS FOR CARDS) every aay that THE STAR| builders list their THE STAR is published, on WANT AD page. DANDY JINGLE IN CONTEST PAGE 3 CONVICT LIFE ALL CHANGED OSSINING, N. Y., A convict court, In Prisoners themselves w''| put on trial and punigh their fel lows for acts of Inaybordina tlon, hae been established in Sing Sing by the new warden, Thomas Mott Osborne The only difficulty in the op eration of the new court is that there are now absolutely no cases of insubordination to be Jan. 2 which the tried by It! Heginning on the day when the reforms and privileges asked for by the prisoners were grante dis jorder stopped | In the first 24 hours after | Warden Osborne's new regulations went Into effect, there single violation of prison the first tin Institution when a day of perfect order and obedience has been re Gorded! Sing Sing convicts formerly con Isidered thémselves the most un was not rules a |fortunate of all inmates of state institutions, Het today they are the happiest. | They have form an organiza SING SING ISN’T A BAD PLACE TO LIVE Among the new privileges granted by Warden Osborne t« |] Sing Sing convicts are the fol |} lowing Moving pleture shows will be held on Sunday afternoons. Members of the brotherhood in good standing may receive vie |] {tors on Sundays and holldays. Postage stamps may be bopaht with funds on deposit. Hereto- fore prisoners have had to de 'T pend on friends or relatives for |] stampa. Special letters will be provided for inmates whether or not they j] have stamps to their credit, in unusual cases, such af mer gcoing up for parole, or death, or serious {ness in their families Dally newspapers may be re tained so long as they are not if permitted to accumulate tn celle passages or the yards. Members of the brotherhood may recetve sweaters of prisor gray and shoes from the outside lAghts in the cell block ant dormitory may be kept on untt! 10 o'clock #o that those who de sire may read or study. known as the Golden Rule brotherhood. | ton, Through this body, the men re- cently asked Warden Osborne for | BOYS, HERE’S THE FIRST STAR’S IDEA Cut shows how watch-lighting de vice Is made, Smaller diagram in dicates how wires are connected, one running from the push-button to the lamp receptac! BY EXPERT ELECTRICIAN | No more shivering jumps out of bed on dark winter mornings to light # match and see whether {t's |time to get up! Here's a comforting little device which will permit you to He luxuri ously in bed until the very last min ute. Keep it by your bed, and at any time during the night you need only press a button beside your pillow to have a bright lght cast} on your watch face, instantly re} vealing the hour | The materials can be purchased| at an electrical supply store. Ask] for « two-volt battery lamp and re-| » (40 cents); ten feet of No. and then back to the other binding post of the push » in the history of the | button, the only gap being at that point. 18 double conductor lamp cord (10 cents); & pear-shaped push-button (15 cents), and a dry battery (20 cents) A plece of board 6x3x%-inch, an other 6%x3x%-inch, and a third %x1x2% inches, complete the ma terial, The boards should be shaped and fastened together as Indicate in the {Ilustration, common wood screws being used Three smal! staples will serve to secure the wire o@ each side of th strip to which the lamp 1s strewed, and a hook may be used to hang the watch on. A metal strap holds the battery in place. The lamp, batt and p@sh-button are connect@d « shown %n the small diagram | | WANT MY BABY ' (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) | 1 guess | am growing hysterical, for after my talk with Annie this morning over the coming of her baby I don't remember very much |what I did until I found myself up- stairs on my knees at the side of lthe bed, crying. My body was fair ly shaking with sobs, and I was jsaying over and over to myself |"Why should Annie have a baby and I not? Can you tell me that? jCan you tell me that? } Again I heard Annie say those words: “His ttle nakedness,” and I shivered with pure joy as I im |agined the softness and satiny tex |ture of baby flesh against my heart. | All over my breast I could fee! the dew of rosebud lips; little uncon scious hands seemed to grope about my face. For the first time I thoroughly understood the long-| ing of Eliene when she was so mis-/| $$ | certain reforms. erable because she did, not have He han just replited at length, | children. ° } Malngas in keee tee | granting 13 of the 15 points asked Again I heard Mra. Selwio’s Mananas on” The new regulations give them | words “My dear Margie, I hope) Crenseesie® = oo bw: practically seitaevernsment which! you will never have to know the takes {ts most striking form in e jon , the almost Prices Paid Producers for Eggs./tie new court—the uangaroofrotine ae rater adien th Poultry, Veal and Pork court,” as convicts call it in other|the childless wife.” | Nees ice? ” | prisons where it has been tried Back in my brain there started | Figen g + 1: @ 4 |. The court will be held from/an uneasy feeling that grew as it 3 the and under 1S | to 4 tn the afternoon. became uppermost. Dick was dis 1s | It has power to autherize its ser|appointed because we had not had 12 | geant at arms to procure the atélchildren. He was disappointed e ey ltendance of witness it maylwith me, 1 remembered he he! 126 | discipline as it sees fit thore whom nad looked, with what pride he @ 194) {t convicts, suspension from the/ reached out his arms for that coo § 12 | brotherhood andsits privileges be-|ing, trusting baby of Elfene's who *? | ing recommended by the warden ‘4 seemed to single him out from Selling Prices for Butter, Eggs and) one form of punishment; but th = “n vesgelh he oak love. Che + |is always the right of appeal tothe| The whole. world talks of ma rected daily * Bradaer Co) , ” neh a Bate penn shineton reamery, brick : Natlve W inaton Cheeer enon triplets “ en Battle. Four million members of Chris tian Endeavor society will pray for peace President New Year's. received no callers) of the UNITED STAT warden’s court, allke to the man disciplined and to the warden's resentative, who is to be present at the trials . UNGLE JACK TELLS HOW JOHN JONES WON THE FIRST NAVAL FIGHT ANDY OFFERED | BY CIRCLE CLUB By Uncle Jack CHAPTER Iv. HEY were soon broadside to broadside with the muzzles of thelr guns touching each oth er! The confilet was terrible! The smoke was stifling! The boom! boom!: of the guns was incessant! And both ships were nearly shat tered to smithereens with shot and shell! At one time, so flerce*beéame the onslaught of Commodore Jones, the Serapis canght on fire in A DOZEN PLACES AT ONCE and seemed>as if it must burn and sink within thg jhour! Just as the moon rose over the tlery combat the Bon Homme Rich ard took fire, too. Joes saw that bis ship was In such a dreadful con | ditton {t could not stay afloat much longer. But he was game and he |m ait to win the great naval bat |e WHATEVER THE COST! | He thought Ike lightning }acted just as fast! “Hand to gand combat,” he shout ed. His voice carried above the din. His men followed him, Bayonets and guns and pistols were all brought Into play! All this time the flames were creeping up the mainmast of the Serapts. By the Ight of this fire Jones could see that one of his shot had split the Serapis’ mainmast He took a chance and fired an other, cutting it almost in two! Capt. Pearson saw the danger | realized that he must surrander and haul down his flag! John Paul Joags hat fultuled hir wish to make the foreign powerr recognize the handful of ships which were the REAL beginning a8 NAVY, (The end.) and | | ternal tnstine r love and even man himself has grown to be: |Meve that there fs an angelic self |sacrifice about the love of children ——|that belongs exclusively to wome Little Tam glad you are jnot able to back, for if you Jecould you would probably volce in tones of thunder that 1 am al} and a traitor to my sex) that I believe that} ep are just as many women who Id not. be mothers as there n who do not deserve to be} fathers. It is because nature takes! |no account of these we find a great | |many wafit mothers and fathers in| |this world | Would I have th capacity self-sacrifice, the equabl@ ment, the nayerending that is necessary to a real mother So many children seem to scram ble up any way. I have seen in| scholars, that came to me while I| was teaching, so many little’ lives Spoiled by mothers who thought} when they had supplied the ma of judg patience | |terial needs of their children they |had done all that —t Was necessary Confessions of a Wife that I have come to the conclusion that more children’s lives are wrecked or lost through silly moth ers than through sour lack of santtation Here my brain is going off at a tangent on the sclentific care of children. My thoughts are leaping over the years from my son's Sirth to his aghool days, but all the while my arms are aching for the feel of his “little nakedness,” the warmth on my breast of that palpitant tiny miracle; I want to hear the sharp ery of pain, the gurgle of infantile content—I want to stop its impo- tent groping hands with kisses—tI want——with all my soul, will all my body—I want MY baby! (To Be Continued Monday.) FIRST HUSBAND OF MRS. LODER SEEKING SON Where is the 15-yearold son of Mrs. Annette Loder, who was con victed Christmas eve by a jury in the federal court of having used the mails to defraud? Mrs. Loder’s first husband, Frank Hartsell, of Monmouth, IIL, has com municated with the federal officials here with the view of locating the boy, who had been attending a mill. tary school at Portland until re cently When Mrs. Loder married Dr Loder here in 1911, even intimate friends of the couple did not know she had been married before. Learning of the danger of losing her boy, Mrs. Loder sent him away New Year's eve with a friend Hartsell claims the boy was wrongfully taken from him by Mrs Loder, The latter is still in the county jail while awaiting a decision on her motion for a new trial TO DISCUSS STAGE Sam Atidénson will commence a new ries of lectures in Stevens hall, Fourth ave, near Pine, Sun- day evening He “The Rational Tendency of the Modern Drama,” showing that the stage has done more than any oth er agency to revolutionize moder thought Arms and legs found in buriap bags in Brooklyn marsh, | The Woman free from poisonous with headaches, backache, ural sufferings. All women Who Takes the proper help to keep her digestion right and her system accumulations, is not troubled unnat- languid feelings, tried who have | BEECHAM’S PILLS know this famous remedy to be the proper help for them. A few doses will make immediate difference and occasional use will cause a permanent baproverens cleanse the system and relies on ham's condition, Pills, Bee with Sold everywhere. purify the blood not . hte quieter nerves and brighter spirits, but she in health and strength, They and every woman who only enjoys better physical Enjoys A Clear Complexion Directions of Special patente Women with Every Box. boxes, 10c., 250. DIRECTORY ‘ACCESSORIES AND SUPPLIES | || BALLOU & WRIGHT MOTORCYCLE, BALLOU & WRIGHT G. & J. TIRES—NOBBY TREA | Some of these taken in on new 5,000 M GUAR, KE, Pike St., near fone Kast 471 MOTORCYCLES NEW AND SECOND HAND, ALL MAKRS Indian Motorcycles Phone Bast 471. BIT BE. Pike 8t oe | | near Brondwey | milk and Pe will speak on} DOROTHY ARNOLD FOUND? LO8 ANGELES, Jan. 2—Rumors that Dorothy Arnold, New York heiress, who disappedfed in 1910, is in Los Angel were revived to- day by the finding in Sunset boule vard of a diary which may have been kept by the young woman dur- ing the 4 she has been missing. The diary was found by a Japan ese servant of Dustin Farnum, actor and is now in the latter's possession The alleged chronicle of the girl's ife tells of four years spent on the Chinese coast, and contains com- ments on the life there of American girls “But | am not weak; I am stron; the following entry says is always the muddy W | In addition |the diary contains many addrgsses and telephone numbers. It makes references to members of the Arnold family and their friends, Late Judge Godman honored In state public service commission re- port rT I will pay $100.00 for information leading to the arrest and con of impostor who is tra through the country ewindling peo- ple by selling them worthless : spectacies strength of representing connected with me or my partment. I have no representative on road doing this work. All amination of the eyes bony md oe yen! of 8 dene only in my tical t_ in the Wi the years patients have telling me that some Dentist or tometrist claiming to be Dr. Brown had been out in small representing himself as Dr, Brown or an authorized Dr. E. J. Brown. I wish to t 4 impostors, er an allow any Den’ Opt: i my name. * BOGUS BRIDGEWORK, There has been, and is today, graft and abuse in crowns bridgework than any other éivision of Dental work. In my vast colleo- tion of Dental junk, bri which I have removed from mouths, some is made on the cal [principle that bridgework was made after five thousand years sea, but even some of the crude bi f work shows the honest effort of Dentist, while some of the work Senttle Dentists who claim to be able to put in teeth without plates or bridgework, shows that the work was done with intent to rob the patient, — I have taken out bridges which cost the patients two and three hun- dred dollars, and only been in a few months; and which coy: the al- veolar ridge and to two or three old loose, decayed teeth, . . 3 I have removed hollow bri | that was sold for alveolar teeth, the stench from It was so terri that it would make a tan yard 6 like @ spring garden of HMiac bus! in full bloom. I have remo \bridgework which had a saddle cov= ering the entire alveolar ridge, and the seeds, food and filth which yr collected under It was beyond ription and would destroy [health and happiness of any ma: HOLLOW BRIDGEWORK. Many Dentists make bridgework hollow so as to‘save gold, but if = Dentist has any business or hor he cannot afford to lose his time reputation making hollow. bridge- work. Time is more valuable than gold, and reputation for honest @ Ing ‘cannot be acquitad by making hefiow bridgework and selling it for pure gold. EXTENSION SADDLE RRINgE. WORK, . made when there are no back tee! }if the patient has teeth of sufficiel |strength for anchorage, This class of bridgework can be made prophy= lactic and self-cleansing by having all substitute teeth made so that the |toothbrush comes in contact with ail |surfaces of the bridges, the saddle jonly being allowed to rest upon the alvoelar ridge, and cover a space ual to one molar tooth, I have ex= tension saddle bridges now being |worn In Seattle mouths which 1 made 13 years ago in Seattle, My patients indorse them as giving come plete satisfaction A properly bridg | | | Bridgework can be successfully structed extension is much more sanitary an the average set af h. ‘This bridge does not alveolar ridge completely; at the end af |the extension is necessary, and that can be kept clean BEWARE OF FAKE CONTRACTS When any alleged Dentist tries to uu some teeth for $250 or $800, fers you a contract which pros if his work is not satisfac he will extract your teeth and you some oth th, look out? to make or you are stung, b ninety-nine chances to one y > teeth will Dentist thi to ; and then you will have pt some plates that you could have bought in the first place for $20 or Before you pay your good money to no one Whom nobody knows anything about, you had better eall jon some Known and rellable Dentist Jand be advised, My good mother always sald: “A fool and his money soon part company.” Se Optical Department, 703 Firat Ave. Dental Department, 713 First Ave, | Phone Main 2640, connecting all de= partments Largest Dental Offices in the World, Open evenings until 8 and Sundays until 4 for people who work, %