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STAR—SATURDAY, JANUARY 9. PAGE 3. Lib- Tonight (Saturday) Last times of a Beautiful Film Marguerite Clark —in— e Crucible” MONDAY TUESDAY Vitagraph’s Broad- way Star Feature in three parts WOMEN With The cleverest actress on the Amer- screen. A Great Human Interest Drama of TANGLED LOVES. CENTS Children 5c First at Pike FACE CHANGES COLO SPRINGFIELD, Mo William H. Thom a ing near Springfield, bine and doesn’t like it. He believes the peculiar biuish tinge ~of his face, neck and body has damaged bis appearance in the sum of $15,000 and has brought suit for that amount against Dr. W. Mc Farfand Brown, whom he charges is responsible for tinting him like an Easter egg. Thomas alleges that a solution of nitrate of silver, given him by the doctor as a nasal wash, caused his skin to change color. Jan. 9 farmer liv is turning WASHINGTON, Jan tary of War Garrison denied that the U. 8. fs selling tts discarded Krag-Jorgensen rifles to Europear belligerents. 9.—Secre SELECT DANCING PARTIES HIPPODROME Fitth ené Untveretty Clean Amusement Momelike Surroundings 1ePIECE UNION ORCHESTRA Com Dene! CITY WILL AS CCUNTY FOR A $750,000LOAN With Mave ll as the spokes man, the ¢ tl finan commit |toe will appear before the county commissioners Monday to request & loan of $750,000 untt! April at 2 per cent. The county's finances are in good shape owing to the recent | sale of bonds and there ia a large) amount deposited tn the banks at 2 per cent, Mayor ¢ believes tt! would be quite a neighborly act for] to respond to the city's! request. By April the city will have collected ita share of taxes the year suffictent to meet the n The county will not be tn nee funds till summer, and be that time we shall nave repai¢ said the mayor of these the I joan, The new board of county com-| missioners, consisting of M. J. Car | rigan, M. L. Hamilton and Krist} Knudsen, will be tn office Monday | (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) THE END OF ROMANCE I don’t know whether explana tions will do any good, but I am going to be very honest with you,’ ained my husband. ‘1 am ob- {sessed with the girl you saw me with today. I cannot get her out of my mind. She means to me all the joy of living, all the youth and allusion that I thought had gone out of my life forever. My sane common sense tells me I am not} only a fool, but something too bac to name in my actions toward you I think perhaps this foolishness will pass. I hope it will, but now I tell you honestly, Helen, I am like a lad in his first infatuation.” Those words,” said Mra, Selwin, “are| burned on my heart *‘Why do you insult me with all] 4 | this? | asked. ‘Is it not enough to injure me you have without telling me of your y in «o| many words? Oh I know, I know, he answered wearily, ‘but it has passed out of my hands. Can't you bear with me a little while? Certainly you can't despise me more than | do myself. We have lived together too Jong and presentea too happy| a front to the world to now take it into our confidence as to our mis-| ery. While I shall have to stand by anything you decide, I hope there wilt be no scanda | ONLY A ‘DAUB,’ WI word picture of love In a cottage with roses climbing about the door Conjuring up that pieture again in divorcee court here, Mra, Eleanor Lovina declares it has proven but an ughy daub; that It was sadly out of drawing and hideous tn |LOVE PICTURE PAINTED BY ARTIST | FE SAYS IN COURT | Mra. Henry Lovins, Artist's Model and Estranged Wife, Her Hus band and Child ‘ LOS AN $8, Cal, Jan 9%—T!color, with the brush-marks show-) When Henry Lovins, a well known ing garishly } Southern California artist, asked He was just perfectly m | Eleanor Johnson, his vorite said the former model who bad} model, to become his w three become the artist's wt years ago he pa & wondertal We were ha for a time tn a Holly wood. but trouble soon our bungalow ros bower at an exclusive suburb had been efuned to 1 had been my dress down and ell my husband he shock me and t town, w MARKET REPORT CHICAGO, Jan. 9--A sharp recession in the price of wheat marked the opening Of trading in the pit today. May wheat re ce 0 d July to “Margie, I went to my room and eet epee ims tried to think it out and finally Ne = ° did this. Perhaps an ardent femin — ist of the new school of womer| The high cost of living volplaned would despise me, but he was mylin the butter and ege market Sat thought of being without what lit tle I had had of his presence for the last year filled moe with dismay “He had always been good to me and I thought I recognized that this Mason of his was only a reaching out for the youth he felt was run ning away from him “I determined to see ff I could not fight for my own. My hear sank when I thought of that young face above its fragrant bunch of vio- lets, ita red inviting lips —the wholr sexual allure of a young and beaut! ful woman. “The next day I told my husband that I wished he would Invite the girl to my house. I found she was a young widow of good reputation “For three months I suffered the| torments of the damned. I feigned} not to see anything on the surface. I introduced the girl to my friends. 1 had her witt us always until at last I saw that he was wearted of her youthful ener gy. He could not keep up the pace of dinners and dances. The rict food had deranged hia stomach. He | went to sleep In opera I found out his chair at the too, Margte, that the} girl was not a bad woman—fust a| bit of silly femininity that, wher |} her husband died, was ready to| think herself in love with the first man who was kind to her however, was tiring of Mr. Sel before he began to tire of her, and when she had an Snvitation to go to Europe with some friends she gladly accepted it. I don't think my sigh of relief was any greater than his when we saw the boat leave the dock, and as we entered the motor Arthur took my hand and faised it to his lips *‘No man in the world ever had such a wonderful wife as I have and no m ever deserved her less,’ sald in a husky voice “That was all the reference we either of us ever made to the af fair, and as the years rolled on we became the friends and comrades you now see. I don’t know, my dear,” she said answering the question in my eyes | I don’t know whether it was worth it or not. You see I never wil) know what it would mean to live! with a man you could love and trust} lal your life, but 1 DO know, Ike | DIRECTORY ‘: ACCESSORIES |G & J. TIRES—NOBBY TREAD wren BALLOU & WRIGHT MOTORCYCLES, ae MOTORCYCLES flome of these taken BALLOU & WRIGHT _ in on new 1 AND SUPPLIES * MILES a Pho K. Pike St Kast 471. nen Broadway NEW ANS BECOND HAN other 2 cents was clipped by tions to 31 cents. 2 cents and upward trend Sa but what war |; commodities id descent these have undergone during the weok. The bottom bas falrly fallen from the egg market. An-| the jobbers, bringing wholesale quota Butter declined barley, oats joining the Other prices soared, Burbank potatoes © Prices Paid Whelcsale Dealers for rected a White river spud Honey for Kai Pork ry) your friend Mrs, Tenney, I'd be} unhappler without him than I am| with him “Indeed, I am not now unhappy and if I could forget the episode that I have long ago forgiven 1 think I would be always quite hap. |, py, but sometimes memortes surge | ¢ up and, well 1 will forgive an old.woman’s| burdening you with her confidence Margie, won't you? Perhaps it would hava been better left unsaid but you came to me tonight on the anniversary of my great pain and have broken the silent habit years know now what T have seen in Mrs, Selwin’s eyes forgiveyess but not forgeting. (To be continued Monday.) always it n ia “Health—Longevity atlies ariee fro bay Ineid: son felf-p 1 knowW that Yoonuntr eane to destroy the ts the intestinal poisons? A miave to your digertive| liver, kidney, . 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Mich Address » Return mail will bring you the Miustrated Hook free and prepaid, in plain wrapper [his winter #! BOOK. PASSION FOR NOVELTIES IS ON WOMEN Craze for nove in attire, at the expense of quality, and a pas klonate desire to — po 6 thin not owned by her netghbor ure two characteristics of the modera housew which differentiate her from the ploneer womar rd to Mins I Raitt, head of the artme economl t the ing of the completed home was the manufacturing plant of almont all that it vsnimed Miss Raitt believes ave lost & certatn cultural 1, and with it an apy of labor and a symy worke The remedy,” adda Mise Raitt is not a return to the laborious work of our grandmothe uit such training as will to choc and use ¢ ent No longer can the mother fulfill her responsibility b matter tion 1 to the things that Ko on in her own home larger housekee er duty wo her knows condi whether the br comes from a saniter aker the |laundry conditions are whether she ts using the proceeds of child labor or of those who re ceive leas than a living wag smands of our time require that the human be considered PROGRAMS ON THE NEW WEEK’S BILLS AT SCREEN HOUSES At the Liberty Until Tuesday Night Two Women,” two-reel drama The Best Man,” comedy drama “The Adventures: of Flora Four flush,” comedy At the Clemmer All Week The Chr drama At the Alaska Until Tuesday Night “Capt. Swift,” five-reel drama. | At the Colonial Until Tuesday Night The Rage Karl,” drama, fea Giddy, Gay comedy ring Andrew Mack Keystone At the Class A Until Tu Only a Farmer's Daug comedy His and Ticklish jay Night ter,” Ke Mutual Weekly New Profession featuring Charlie stor Keystone con Chaplin Ol Fisherman's Story rel Majestic drama Pathe Scenic GIRLS POSE AS SEPT. MORN; LOSE PICTURE LA CROSSE, Wis., Nee were ap Jan. 9. led to today to re |cover three photographs of Spar Wik., young women—~posed in a mil! pond near Sparta in imitation of September Morr Miss Lois Brystow asked the fee to look up the pictures. she declares were taken yeket of her jacket by a young man who escorted her home Miss Brystow Said that last sum mer #he and two other girls po. which from the were wading—in overalls-——and that in a spirit of fun the girls snapped each other, “posing Iike—like a us icture”——she blushingly told the thief of police. LAUREL, Va. Jan digging a grave near hb & fow days ago, farmers saw som re | /thing moving beneath the surface | The earth ro and fell and several 1400 {Of the party fled. It was nothing i400 |less than a large groundhog that *0° |had burrowed into the earth for p WMLOUY 1 Ptttt dt, AA, WGC 4 Charles Cha aplin Again Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, in a Keystone Scream “His New Profession” JEWELS, WHAT TO WEAR AND WHEN TO WEAR THEM Hough w of eam BY IDAH McGLONE GIBSON ery woman should ar when choosing woman wears ber wuty more new x s she hangs the Jewels she puts the racelets and rings with which she decorates her arms and hands These facts were brought home }to me most forcibly when I saw Miss Irene Hough, America’s most autiful telephone girl, wearing earrings Miss Hough bas ordinarily ¢ face » Madonna type eve whe he appeared long ear drops of jet, al she had not changed the essing of her hair or in any oth er way, ® he like a vivacious Earrings nearly always make one look older, 80 women, unless they would try for the grande dame ef- fect, should be very careful when they wear them have it that wear coral ¢ do not wear look like If peac wear you com! bea you rhes pearl earrir A gir tures Pearl | most an n an warts, are and with ttle color! de above dark p ear you have ing n't ink They a complexion, plexion I becoming cast of fea oks to “The Old Fisherman’s Story” \ dram. Ha, ha! Earrings Always Make One Look kled and old, and a thin with a pretty style. BOY HANGS HIMSELF RICHMOND, Bobba, hanging \ Majestic Another Keystone DAUGHTER” Admission 5 Cents Class A Theatre THIRD AVE. AT PIKE or cient to wear Bracelets, the bracelet watch, 18 Mr Oider two good r at one with Cal committed f from a — ‘ARE YOU READING “KEEP WELL” ADVICE ON EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR EVERY DAY? time the exception of are now out of| 6 Jan. 9 Some Lessons From Irene Hough’s Beauty A suicide sign. “ONLY A FARMER’S Ed Stoudt at gcld chain locket or other orna- ment on it is always good taste are suffi G by ¢ his Sen ighs in your effective seashore a real Mutual Weekly No. 106 PATHE SCENIC Piano TURK WOMEN FOLK FOR WAR: HATE BRITAIN BY HENRY WOOD CONSTANTINOPLE, Jan. —(Mailed from Salinika New York to escape Turkish censor.)—Ali Turkish women strongly favor the war, and for a@ reason of their own. For the time being, at least | they hate England with an en- | to ergy equaled only in Germany. Two years ago the Ottoman gov¥- ernment called for public subserip- jtions to a fund to buy two dreade |naughts. They were to give Tur key naval supremacy over all the | Balkan nations. The Turkish women saw their opportunity then for emancipation, During two wars they had made great strides forward. this fact. They had brought oe ence on the Sheik Ul or spiritual head, of the Mohammedan church to ameliorate their condt- tion | And when the government called | for subscriptions for warships the women saw another chance to “= emancipation. So far as the men were com cerned, the reference to the pri, ment as a “popular subscription’ was a misnomer. “Unpopular — extortion” have been more appropriate, The officials in charge simply fixed the sum each man must ~a sum ranging from a week to @ month's pay—and if he failed to pay voluntarily, the local authori; ties collected forcibly. ‘ But with the women this was ums would jnecessary. They gave benefits, teas and bazaars at a time when | their participation in such funes jUons was considered as radical in | Turkey, as the appearance of Ne! York’s women on Broadway in Eve's garb would be deemed in th | Western world. Their fall in Turks ish male estimate was just as pros nounced as would be that of th¢ New York wgman who appeared in the Lady Gofiva act. They never hesitated 2 They pinched and scraped in ev, ery imaginable way to make thelr subscriptions as large as possible; In all, a total of $35,000,000 was raised, and the women contributed more than half of it The two vessels were rushed to completion in British, shipyards just when Turkey most needed them, after Greece had bought two cruisers from the Unit- ed § The and the er chosen war, craft installment was paid isers’ officers had been Then came the European and England seized both For a limited time we will do work at the following prices: A good set of Teeth for.... - $4.00 22-K. Gold Crown, -- $4.00 22-K. Bridgework, per tooth Dea easn ‘ +++» $4.00 Gold F iNings $1.00 up Amalgam Fillings 50¢ All work guaranteed for 15 years. None but skilled operators of long experience employed by us All Work Done Painlessly Examinations Free Office hours from 8:30 a, m. to 8 p.m. Sunday 9 a. m. to 12:30 ALBANY DENTISTS Over People’s Bank Second Ave. and Pike $ Cor. The Young Turks bad recognized ©