The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 18, 1914, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NATIONAL PIANO MFRS. 823 Third Ave., Near Marion St. SED We to close out our retail business in See announce- This will be the biggest piano j a F ' ES All day today to mark down prices. are going Seattle. After disposing of present stock, will do wholesale business only. ment of sale at 35c on the dollar im tomor- row’s papers. and player piano slaughter in Seattle. Sale opens Friday morning at 8:30. / NATIONAL PIANO MFRS. THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE ONLY MARRIED WOMEN CRY AT WEDDINGS CHAPTER 184 (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) Does everything always go wrong at weddings, no matter how careful- ly they are rehearsed? In the first place, Kitty's preach. er man was called to a death-bed In the settlement, and kept her wait ing at the church for a half-hour. could see she was nearly crazy Then, when at last he did come, he did not make any apology except to tell the bare fact of why he was d tained; but she, poor girl, was per-) fectly satisfied. DR. EDWIN J. BROWN LEADING DENTIST. My euccess te due to my painicss methods; telling you exactly what your work will cont, by free exam- ination; guarantee ing your work, and { \ working Drices that you ean af- ford to pay for the best there ts tn Dental Work. See me about your TEETH DR. EDWIN J. BROWN, 708 and Tid First Ave. nion Block and Washington Building In the Electric Treatment Is Curing Men and Women After Doctors and Drugs Fail. Rot suffer from nervous debility or troubles quickly and thoroughly. ‘This remedy is electricity, the power that gives life and strength to the human body. Tou know that all you lack ls force and vim, Anything that will put new life inte your nerves and bulld up your vitality will cure you. Blectric ity does that when property applied Electra-Vita ie @ scientific device for saturating the human body with & powerful but soothing current of tric ifs for hours at = time, without the least shock or unpleasant sensation. It generates a constant unbroken stream of electricity, which it sends coursing through every nerve and tissue of the body, restoring vitality and strength and giving to every wenk or inactive o power to do fits work as nai ned. When your body h lent electric energy to natisty the Gemands of nature, weakness and Ginease cannot exist. Men who are nervous, run down. weak and unambitious, will find that jectricity as applied by Vite will quickly put them tn condition. The man does not live whe cannot be made a better man by the application of Electra-Vita. Tho who have used it say that ft Is the grandest Invigorator of the aes, FREE TO YOU Call or write for our free 90-page iflustrated book, which tells all about Blectra- Vita, how it cures and what {¢ costs, This book contains many {n teresting facts for men. coupon if book, al 0- pi « *. Pp. mj Saturday | Bundaye, 10 to 1 The Electra-Vita Co. DEPT. 4 e 206 Kinpress Theatre Building fieoond Av., Cor. Spring Beattie, Wash. Please send me, prepaid, free 90-page Illustrated book your , Wedding ring as he passed it I could see his mind was not on ‘ marriage or giving in marriag hew nt through the ceremony more am, eas in a He had forgotten all about the ring, and I gave him mine, for I was standing right behind Kitty as matron of honor As I did so for the first time, looked into the fa Horrors! was Mr He looked rather queerly at to Herbert, and I was so exc that I felt my knees tremble, | [had to say to myself “Margaret Waverly, if you don't act like a decent, civilized woman now, I'll simply take you back to Dick on the next train.” The thought of Dick made me re- member our wedding and all the things that had happened tn our year or more of wedded life. As usual, when I thought of Dick, the man—my man—a little thrill ran through me from head to foot. I closed my eyes and for a moment jit was I instead of Kitty who was Standing there plighting my troth. |Oh, Dick! Dick! I do wish tt was easter to like the man one loves I mean to like everything about the man one loves. I love you—if you call wanting to be with you, to feel your arms bout me, to be happier if I can look at you, can touch you—loving. I love your strength, your inde. pendence, your manliness; but I know now, in all the year in which we have been married, you have never greatly appealed to my intel lgence or intellect. As far as cul ture goes, We two speak a different language. I hate the moral weak nesses you have shown on more than one occasion Dick dear, but you are not able to endure, and so you leave that to me a8 & woman's portion |. “Until death do you part,” said | the minister, and I opened my eyes and pulled myself up rt as I realized that I was being disloyal to | Dick. |. Im my heart of hearts I could not help thinking that perhaps he, too. | had some reason to be disappointed with me. I am always trying to get | at the heart of things; I am not con tent to take things as they come, I | must know WHY they come. | [looked into the faces of the bride land groom and wonde ff they | Were starting out toward any surer |happiness. It is certain that th | are going toward the goal from jentirely different direction. I think that Herbert loves Kitty | devotedly, but I am not so sure that there is not a lingering emo- tion in Kitty's heart for Bill Tenney. | When I looked at Herbert, ho ft, I wished that Kitty could once com | pare the two men at close range. | Herbert is even better looking than | Bill, and no woman or child, looking | at the two men, would not trust Her | bert, for always—and, well, as fas |cinating as Bill Tenney is, 1 would | not trust him around the corner. I used to think it silly to ery at | wedding, but at Kitty’s I shed a | few tears with the rest of the wom n who were wiping their eyes By I | | Samose Will Make You Plump and Rosy, Says Bartell Drug Co If you are getting thin you are|o | Class A Until Saturday Night pak ey a aig a8 sick, although you may not knov In Southern Hill two-part vio Ni : it, If you are losing weight st | Domino drama; “A Pair of Cuffs, f rh ti t ¢ ily, there 1s something wrong that |Reliance drama A Gambling )#nd. trouble. full | needs looking after If you have Rube,” Keystone comed The m } Peatgee tues itt he ey id Producers for Butter, Kans - perenne pencer,” Por ecneen i Tw ont e sick, but you may no Voultry, Veal and Pork ‘ . | You cannot be strong) fees or 7) ~ | Colonial Until Saturday Night | Aly. Ste » thin Hens, 1s @ 1 ents “The Court of Death,” two-part |). Try then to be healthy and| {i xa ° Port Townsend, $1.00. Port Williams, Selig drama; “The Brash Drum plump, it fs not difficult ff you » 1 Dungeness or Port Angeles, $1.50 mer and the Nectarine,” Essanay know how. 1 Tor the eound éip comedy; “Hearst-Selig News The only way to increase the r] “3 200 © welght and gain health and flesh ive ; Melbourne Until Saturday Night t fe by ising Bamone, the standard | EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY “The Kangaroo,” five-part. acory {made fr Tnesternitie tod and tdeue MARK A nino, a samer “SIOUX” from Seattle 8 a, m. Returning, arriving of the South Re le ler, It mingies with the food you ee 4 3ioux,” at 6:30 p. m., or steamer “Sol Duc” at 9 p. m | ey ae berg! eat and is assimilated so that all)? (R008 block ‘howe 6 @ | Mission Until Saturday Night flammatt a the flesh-forming and tiasue-bulld-| (Corrected daily the Bradner Co.) 3 F | “Les Miserables,” nine parts. Be a A ae iis’ Ga, ere Jing elements of the food are ré-|prean ranch ese 97 Kingston, 25c. Round Trip, 25c. . | oe tnd) © ha » during ltained fu the ‘system. This os butioe Special rates to Hansville, Ludlow,sete., on steamer “Puget | Alhambra Until Sunday Night |the night, but formerly I had to do| Akon ts giving just as satisfactory ins the great value of Samone Washington 4 every Saturday and Sunday. | “Sport and Travel in Central Af-/#0 2 or 10 times. Akos | has Re fresults ih maay (Ocher | See ae The Bartell Drug Co. eells ever Ma Watnte hat For full information call rica,” five-part Pathe tin ka lh ta or alr g he remy gt Bioanal 8 Colman Dock Main S098 9ME) | arana os sasniasy niches Ia Ont and arued sne Money CCS NOt GO| wisconsin plete » 1 dvegy ” vo. |let others know how mt b oth it lrug stores, where furs all that 1s claimed for 1t,—Adver- | yiscons'n trie af | “The Mask of Affliction,” —two-| done for me {f they will on me|ther information may be bhd Tegasae tiseme bh ’ ety \part Eclair drama; “The Under-'Gr'pnone mo at Beacon £326, ling this advertisement i CHR o | 1 of the best man. Sanders my You can work,| Iso found out one astonishing fact |: {t is that only married women cry at weddings STAR—THURSDAY 18, 1914. PAGE 3. Jw WHEN YOU NURSE BABY, GUARD YOUR OWN HEAL TH CAREFULLY rH. The Nursing Mother Should Have Exercise, Out-of-Door Life and Be Surrounded by the Things That Interest Her acids are ¢ { in the process of If, in addition, a woman eat ow t the mothe Keatlor wly, chews her food thorough A Watch the Diet an above all, refrains m worry However f the ” any other|there will be no reason to suppone 1 When you nurse your baby you) food or drink disturb the mother's|that the maternal milk will not 1 | may follow your own wishes as to igestion, this may have an unfa scree with the by Constipation cholce of food. effect upon the mi id be guard gainet as care t The 1 idea that acid frulte and It is necessary, ther . ing the period of lactation ‘ the aby alt atch the diet ve carefully 1s during pregnancy eans to t true, says an article minate all articles that actuall Eat Plain Food 5 t art of the official report of| show themselves to be unsuited t ») If the milk in anty, the od cated r ty of fresh milk, eg I: vegetables, ripe fruit, and . eigu If the ppetite ts os | cious, tt will » well to eat lightly five or #ix times a day, It ts n PLAYS jessary to reiterate the tmportan jof a quiet state of mind for all bd jnursing mothe | THERE is NO one THING which more CERTAINLY and completely interferes with the secretion of the milk than any overwrought, nerv. ous condition, and, although In the RAILROAD; WHAT THINK YOU? New York has nothing on Seattle steamship Governor docked | Presence of grave causes for worry as far as the longshoreman fs con-jat Pier D of ¢ Pacific Const |? sorrow it seems almost impos. cerne ip Company at 1 o'clock in|8ible to be self-controtied, the Offic of the United States,the morning. Thor | thought that the little life, perhaps, cor trial relations /100 men tn unloading the cargo.|'® dependent upon it will serve to earned the other day in New York/ There were 600 men waiting on the |9!ve the mother the that Eastern rallroads provide|dock, who scrambled to the front, | quired. shower t for hogs tn transit,/anxious for the job that 1 Get Outdoors but that human longshoremen| money for meals and necessaries.| TH mother should have pleasant have no such luxury at their com-|The longshoreman ia not lazy, He|°Xerclse, out-of-door life, pleasure, wouldn't be work 4 ~ ul moc nd be surround © ee ’ as far as possible with t of the} “We believe that 1 thins nes that interest her fea, the hox|could be changed for 1 strive to have at tant in the of the longshoremen,” said T urs of sleep at ni is the long larry, president of the Seattle if her rest 1s broken then, to shoreman union. it up during the day when » offi sho: Por in: - he drifting claas| te baby sleeps tea seweled Bearer: arg Ao aierae = Beane aty of fresh air and sunshine wh the reman is here, tnstead of the union and mar-|*F6,!ways desirable. pelled to work |ried men, New men are shifted on|,, There 's usually @ period a you we that anarchy|to the jobs. They do not under-|‘¢ aurse has gone and the mother grows?” asked one of the commis » work, as do the old heads,|'* left to herself when the weart * resulting from her own some sioners. xcitement and confusion h broken eden ie | caused by the yells of the foremen,| Wat. feeble health, al ions along the Seattle , quant! docks, where your longshoreman so scarce that when| 't !# at this time that many a awaits the coming ship, that he may cot work they often keep | mother concludes that the baby i» toll for 24 or 48 hours in the hot,|at it for 24 and 48 hours. They are | St8rving and is very apt to become ‘iscouraged and give up nursing as dust-filled ship's bold, are not at all reloRs. | encouraging. jcompelled to to make ends meet bh “Here are some of the things the! unfon hopes to chang “Working in cement in cloth} Don't Give Up This is nm great mistake. It fs usually true that the strain of this period is relieved, day by day, as mother and babe gradual! 0) longshoremen in Seattle. re are jobs for only {about 400 men a day, Sometimes,| sacks is a killing Job, No man can when & rush fs on, 760 or so can get/jast at it, as the dust cuts into the work. Six hundred men working|jungs and slowly kills the worker throughout the year make an aver|1 have seen men bleeding at the jae of $10 a week jears and nose from the cement dust | The work is dangerous. An aver. |in the ship's hold. We want dust- age of 1% mon aro maimed every | proof containers for coment, ENGINEERS OF yer than the girl herself strength re. Pens In the Powers drama, “The Power's Picture at Class A! Ray Gordon does not like the idea of marrying the girl his father has picked out for him, though he has never seen her. He falis in| love with a masked dancer. He | discovers, at the last moment, that | this mysterious woman is none oth- This hap-| Masked Dancer,” theatre. Ray's interest centers on the mysterious masked dancer, who |s| causing considerable comment at| the time. Ray's father has Edna| send a letter signed “The Masked! Dancer” and makes an appointment} at the Class A with Ray In the park the next! morning. Ray is unsuccessful In his ef- forts to unmask her, but neverthe- lens is so taken up with her charm that he proposes marriage. The next morning Ray receives a letter, in which the dancer offers to settle for $10,000, Ray's admiration turns to contempt when he is shown the| letter by his father. At the pro-| pitious moment Edna, dressed ai th dancer, enters. Ray, seeing that he ie the victim of a joke and remembering the charm of the | woman, renews his love Studio Hit by Lightning During a thunder storm — that] swept over New York, the Victor! studio at Coytesville, N. J. was struck by lightning and somewhat battered up—the company was at) work on a picture at the time—and waton reigned for a time, but |no one wae burt j windows and a singed corner of| the building were the extent of the damage. Several broken| ® “TODAY'S STYLES TODAY” Coats! Very Specially Priced Towards evening one can very comfortably wear one of these coats. Something that you’ll need almost any mo- ment in a climate as changeable as ours, ing purposes. A glance will convince you of their remarkable value, Silk Moire, Taffeta and Messaline Coats, They come in black, 4% Taupe, Tango and all the pop- —™ ular shades. Copenhagen, Very specially priced. Store open Saturday evening until 10 o’clock. 1332-34 Second Ave. 211 Union St. (MRS, BUD FISHER, ~JOYRIDE VICTIM, © tow,” Powers drama Letter,” Joker comedy cee “The Fatal . — RESIDENCE THEATRES At the Greenwood on Thursday day tn the year, Sometimes six a] “yfen go down {nto the hold at ne ee “The False Bride,” three-reel day are rent to hospital. the will of the bosses, and often Supersti' ion Dies drama; “Ike Gets a Line on His ‘os } oA === | times before the sulphur fumes from Princess Mona Darkfeather is a| fe." comedy, | | , fumigation have escaped. Here the veal Indian and aleo « real actress. : GOES UP A STEP oe ee Re Ta commenting on the change that| At the Home Until Friday NEW YORK, June 18—-Mre, | grief. His eyes are seared red A $ |has come over her people in the|,,“Iaicille Love, No. 8,” two parts; | Pauline Fisher, wife of the famous | BREMERTON, June 18.—The|from the fumes. We would Iike a |iast 20 years, she sald: “At one|“The Sheep Herder,” two-reel dra-|cartoonist, “Bud” Fisher, 1s now, growing Importance of the Puget|chango tn thts. | time my father would have thought | ™& C hildren of | aFte, drama; | lying close to death in a New Yorks © Sound navy yard {s Indicated in the ‘Creosote could be packed better. Members of the Northwest So jhis life had been shortened had/ Universal Ike in Pursuit of Eats,” | hospital as a result of the automa. 4 fact that officers of higher rank clety of Engineers, who will begin| anyone taken a picture of him It | comer Oe bile ‘collision of which she was the than have heretofore served here ped. It oats through the/their annual convention here to-| was an old Indian superstition that| victim recently. fs have been assigned here for duty.| clothes and into the skin, making| morrow, will visit the Lake Kee-| something of yourself went into At the Pleasant Hour Until Friday) _The machine in which Mra | Medical Director A. R. Wentworth, |the workman miserable. lchelus dam site at Meadow cree y picture made and thus short-/ r the Family Honor,” two-part | Fisher was riding turned turtle and a New York, will relieve Surgeon Ed-| “These are a fow of the things | Saturday. ned your Ife. Of course, this| a; “The Heart of Carita,” | pinned her beneath it ward M. Shipp, and Pay Inspector| We hope to change. We are work-| Charles H. Swigert, supervising | superstition is dead today. Many |drama; “Tom's Choice,” comedy | Mrs. Fi her, before her marriage, Timothy O'Leary will relieve Pay-| ing quietly. We are not looking forlengineer of the United Stat #| people who ay with me are] | was peaine en ae Ep who | George \srown trouble. he ordinary longshore-|reclamation service, will talk Fri-| members of my own tribe |won many admire pant, gue |man is a citizen of the community|day night on “The Storage Prob-| Miss Darkfeather 1s with tee] HE WILL REVIEW | taivitce mannerisms. 4 and a law-abiding man “Shorter hours, a closed shop and better regulations will help solve difficulty jlema in the Yakima Valley.” The Keechelus dam is one phase of the project | Joseph Jacobs, president, will de CRACKS A JAW |Kalem film | ee ort and Travel in Central At-| isa yart wild animal pic-| ELLENSBURG, June 18.—Abe liver his address Friday morning in|ture produced by the Pathe com-| Morrison of Kittitas and Ed Thom the New Seattle Chamber of Com-| pany to be shown at the Alhambra, | as of Ellensburg were badly injured merce assembly room. | starting today in an auto accident on the Cle Elum Toad yesterd: “Letty” La Bout went from another auto to their as SHOW "EM TIME sistanc When Charles Durwach ter blamed the men for reckless - driving, Le Bouf landed on his The Chamber of Commerce « fictals yesterday entertained Henry L. Risley and E. Manning Lewis, | trade commissioners of Bristol, Eng. | They have Just ¢ a tour of Aus-| tralia and New ANNUAL IS OUT Seniors of the Broadway high school are proudly exhibiting their annual, th,” which has off the press for distribution breaking {t. Le Bouf was arrested, charged with assault | JOHNSON FREE MoU VERNON, June 18.—L. P. Johnson, charged with giving false testimony in connection wit the trial for murder of George Ball in the Great Northern train robbery case at Samish station, February 20, was acquitted by d jury yesterday afternoon. Crescent Mfg. Co, Beattie ust come SPECIAL WEEK-END EXCURSION RATES TO: Complete Report of Market Today Baseball Star Falls Home Run Baker jes fam ie appearing in a two seen here soon. Marguerite Cour not, the little Kalem ingenue, will | play opposite him ‘ world’s story | Southern Story Here The Kangaroo,” a | five-part drama of old w Orleans at the Melt , starting toda deals with operations of a gang of commercial pirates of the slave |holding states of the South about 183 to 18365. ee ne |Kathlyn Finish | “The Court of D " starting at | the tod the last of }the Kathlyn Will series that has been running for six month With it is the first release of the George Ade comedies, produced by the Essanay company King Baggot, of the Imp, is pro- Jducing a play in whic e is starred in 14 different parts, rang Jing from the coy heroine to the jscheming villain. There will be a |number of double as well as triple exposures in this picture o eS ¢ ° WHAT'S ON THE BILLS Clemmer Until Saturday Night “A Rich Revenge,” a Mary Pick | ford comedy A Wayward Daugh jter,” drama; “The Ladies War, jcomedy; “The Missing Jewels,” comedy drama A STAR WANT AD will © sell it quickly. a PARTY HISTORY Representative Thomas F. Mur-| phine, progressive floor leader in} — _ the last legis! will review the} the progressive party, at the Satur. TONIGHT day m ting of the ro ty on the sixth floor of the Fra Paterson building BEFORE AFTER The Stingier You Are the Better for Us. lar looks to you the better you will like the care 1g shoe-repair work which this shop turns out. A lot of people in this town have found out that our expert shoes repair-men can cut a good big slice off the family shoe bills, Why not let them amputate yours? REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP 1124 FIRST AVENUE Corner Seneca Telephone Main 4136 The larg ful mor a dc y-8a\ Seattle Woman Flat on Back: Gets Quick Relief From Akoz From Rheumatism, Stomach | and Kidney Trouble. |

Other pages from this issue: