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Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS Q—! am a young married woman and have a little girl nearly 2 years old, | am soon to be the mother of a second child. Numerous ru mors have drifted to me to the ef. fect that my husband Is not loyal; but | take no stock in gossip, Final ly, one of the girls with whom h name is linked came to me and con fessed. Now | am the saddest woman in the world, for | alwayr loved my husband, and do even yet Geapite the great wrong he ha done me; but | think 1 ought t leave him as soon as my child born. | could not support two chi dren, but | would take the first on with me. Could he take it awa from me? M. T. B A.Your duty is to both childrer not to one of them, and your dut Is double since your his, You ought not ® man from his onsibility his offspring’s support by assumt: it yourself, and you can nr with him only at the sacrifice ¢ ar own dignity, and to the danger husband shirt release auc ¢ your own health. The court wil entitle you decree of separe tlon, and the law w tt father of your duty by them, provided that he i indtsposed This te’ as does the answer makes most unpleasant reading an is publish show some mer exactly w wretchednese re ¥ they make a social to suit themselve code 8 Q.—Which Is correct: “$5 is de- ducted from your time,” or “$5 are deducted from your time”? STUDENT. A.—“Five dollars is deducted from your time” would be correct, for in 4 such a case it is not the five sep- frate dollars which is in the thought, but it is the amount in a single lump that Is considered. It is as if the person said “The amount of $5 is deducted.” Q.—1 am going East and have all of my clothes ready save two dress- 3, one a brown velvet and one a crepe de chine. Please tell me how to them. | should like to have , » them some way that will not go out of style so soon. | am 17 years old. Ww. B.S. m4 A—Make them both with flaring skirts. The crepe de chine may have several deep ruffles about the bottom, Cut the brown velvet with the waist extending in a Seraight line to the hips. Button on the bias up the front with large buttons. Finish the neck cut fn a V, with a high, upstanding collar of white net in the front, and have long, close-fitting sleeves of the same net. Make the crepe de chine with & coatee effect of the goods but toned across the front over a sheer underwaist of net. Have long sleeves of the goods. skirt a wide one on a circular yoke. Finish at the waist with a sash of the crepe de chine, with loose, tasseled ends. Q—Is It possible to paint a spot- ted carpet to make it look like linoleum? Tv. €.C. A—Clean the carpet thoroughly, then give it several coats of var- nish. If Brussels carpet {s used, varnish the under side. Q—I am engaged to be married and my fiance is going to give me a set of silver knives, forks spoons. He thinks his init should be engraved upon it. Do you think it should be or the initial of my maiden nam MONA. a third party, it would be correct the groom-to-be is making the pres- ent for his own future home, it is perfectly correct to have his own PY initials put upon the silver. | Q—! have chiiblains every year and suffer greatly, 's 4 A.—Iechthoy! will cure chilblains, q it is claimed, and of! of sassafras will furnish sure relief. To prevent chilblains, keep the feet warm and dry. When cold do not warm them at a fire, but bathe them tn cold water, rub hard and dust with tal- 1 cum powder. DEBS HERE SUNDAY Wugene V. Debs, soctalist orator, will speak at Dreamland at 8 p.m Sunday. A record crowd is expect ed. Debs is making a complete tour ‘ of the United States, and Seattle f will be among the last cities he will visit ZUDORA Chas. Chaplin In a Keystone Comedy xe “MAKING A LIVING’”’ A Princess Drama | “THE FACE AT THE WINDOW”’ A Reliance Western “Out of the Deputy’s Hands Tilikum Theatre Pike, Between Third P; and Fourth a” . BULL BROS. Just Printers 7013 THIRD «AIN 1043 Customers bring shoes here from every part of the city, be- cause our work is different. it’s a bit better. REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP First and Seneca Moin $156 Make the! nd | A.—If the silver were a gift from} to use your maiden {nitials, but ag| FORBES-ROBERTSON SAYS THIS FAREWELL ENGAGEMENT IS REALLY, TRULY FAREWELL ] A Sir Johnston Forbes-Rob-| American girl for a wife; namely, ertson, who will open a week's en-| Gertrude Eliott, who ts consider |gagement at the Moore theatre -eadnd “a Re = Bhan | Monday night, will soon retire from | has been coming to America quite the stage. joften, and he really ts anxious to After a busy career, which | get better acquainted with his own jachieved for him not only a title | family in England, So. ils is his at the hands of King George V.,| farewell tour—the first, farewe j but also raised him to the highest tour he bas made, and the last, he ranks among actors in the estima- avers. tion of the English-speaking pub-| While in Seattle, the upted actor lic, Forbes-Robertson will gather will be the guest at @ reneption to his beautiful wife and four kiddies |be held Tuesday from 3 to 4:30 |to a little famfly circle that shall/p. m. at the residence of Judge jbe all their own Thomas Burke, Boylstan ave. and The fourth baby, you know, ar son st. The proceeda from the {rived the day after Christmas, last tion are to be divided be Forbes-Robertson has been coming n the Belgian relief fund and to America quite regularly, In|the British-American Relief asso: fact, he took unto himself an / ciation. | ruritts,” Keystone comedy; “Fatty | jand Mabel at the San Diego Epost- 1{ | tion,” scenic comedy | ° | About It. 6°05 sconce RESIDENCE THEATRES At the Home Until Sunday “The Mysterious Howe,” two-par’ drama; “Animated Weekly.” No | 148, of January 6, topical: “The Sen ator’s Lady,” drama; “Vhe Hoodo,” J. D. Jameson, manager of the George Kleine attractions in Seat |tle, was up to see me the other| day, and, after the formal greet- | °°™4” ey ous ing of passing out a cigar had been jtckled to death because T had men- | 4. “Heinie’s Outin var tioned the fact that Jultus Caesar |“78™4; “Heinle's Outing,” comedy was in six parts. If cutting old Julius into six parte will bring a stogie, what would {t fetch me, I! wonder, if I ground him up tnto| hamburger? s eee Ed Kennedy, of the Colonial, who HAD NO USE has entered the race with a num- Tt must have been a very amuse ber of others for easy chairs in the council, informed me that I was ywrong about the Owl cigars. He said they were campaign cigars fand not Owls, And I thought all jthe time I was getting a real smoke. Listen, here's a good one. Jim ing letter Clayton W. Richards, of Clemmer has sewed up the pockets |Pennsylvania and California, wrote} in his ushers’ uniforms. I saw one |his wife Anna, of Seattle. ‘It was) jof the ushers waving hix arms {read yesterday by Mrs. Richard's at vound in the alr like a windmill |torney in Judge Tallman’s court |the other day. I asked him what| Only the judge. the bailiff, the| jwas the matter. He informed me |clerk and a few others sitting right jhe had no place to put his hands. /up front could hear it, because the! I told Jim he ought to get swagger ‘attorney mumbled through {t in #o/ jsticks or vanity boxes for them to |iow a tone. But it had an immense-| pack. The poor fellows are in/|jy mirth provoking effect on them} misery, all—all, of course, except the judge) himself Have you ever noticed Freddie 6 tatkaie " | Gordon, the gent who takes your |,,4!! the public was privileged to i 4 hear was a clause repeated by! |tickets at the Class A? Freddie is Jo", } Freddie is | judge Tallman in which Richards so polite, he has Harry Carroll |)uace Tall : backed oft the” map. The old |™ade @ blanket condemnation, “tol folks smile at him, the giris make wR ah wemeen,” evidentty | eyes af him, and the babies cry for P¢®0!ng to include his spouse, Anna.| ig: Ravary Secs to And 80 they were divorced ’s some “oP And now they're trying to pase a| Josephine Hill told how she had law to close the movies on Sun-|been knocked down and otherwise days. Can you beat that? What |®bused by Arnold, her husband | Jabout the poor cuss who works six| She got no further with her testi-/ |days a week and on Sunday takes ™ony, for the Judge interrupted to two-bits and his famtly out for a|rant the decree and $10 a month, |good time??? kecompanying the judgment with aj Sinai little ch on what he thought ———@ about a man who would attack a woman MOVIE PROGRAMS ° ¢ the THikum Until Tuesday Night “Zudora,” Episode No. 9, drama; “Making a Living,” Keystone com edy; “The Face at the Window,” drama; “Out of the Deputy’s Hands,” drama. ° see Emma E. How got hers because her husband, while drunk, had chas-| ed her out of doors and locked her out and otherwise been unpleasant! to live with. They'd been married! Saye 24 years and have three grown chil-| At the Class A Until Tuesday Night dren, but she wanted it just on ne Three Brothers,” two-reel | *4™¢ ake tae drama; “The Rounders,” two-reel| _, . | Keystone, featuring Charlie Chap-|_ George D. Stenson had simply lin. "Pathe Scenic”: "Mutual |Kone away and left his wife, Grace Weekly,” She had written twice, she said, but! ee received no answer, Divorced | At the Alaska Until Tuesday Night fate | “Mother,” four-part drama, fea-|. Pretty Mrs. Mamie Ness had turing Emma Dunn; also, a good | been deserted also, she alleged, and is announced. never had been entirely supported 7 oe by friend husband, anyway He'd At the Mission Until Tuesday Night Kicked when the grocery bill ran The Evil Men Dv,” three-part |over the $10 limit, and mother-in-{ drama, featuring Maurice Costello; law had been obliged to contribute, The Stege of Leige,” cartoon com-|Mother-tn-law was there to substan. ody tla comedy |tlate the story. Divorced. see | ‘Ge pa At the Alhambra All Week,| So also, for one reason or an Starting Monday ther, were these: Mabel L. Smith 9 “A Fool There Was.” a drama,|from George Smith; Lena M. Ball featuring Theda ra. from David W.; Addie Knox from|f William At the Liberty Until Tuesday Night |p. The Dancing Girl,” two-part | jan Irama; “The Fate of the High George Ade comedy; At the Clemmer Until Tuesday Night Punctured Romance,” . featuring Char i Marie Dressler. ; Stella M, Walker from and Carl DeLong from LAl Mag | one | WALLA WALLA, Jan. 23.—Peter| Miller today settled down to serve what probably will amount to a life sentence | Yesterday he learned that the} one state supreme court has turned] down his Jast appeal. This was on “Tiie's | Keystone com | lie Chapli an | | At the Alhambra Until Sunday Night a petition that his various sentences | “Cameo Kirby,” drama featitring Should run concurrently ver-| Dustin Farnum dict was that they should run con-| on eutively, which will mean from| At the Colonial All Week to 70 years in the penitentiary “Runaway Jur story No. 1'for Seattle's most notorious crim| again aud No. 2; “Love, Speed and nal. N IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT... Thousands of husbands and thousands of wives in Seattle and vicinity were unable to gain admittance to the OLONIA last Sunday, Monday and Tues- day to see George Randolph Chester’s first great story of “RUNAWAY Our office has been flooded with requests for a return of this THEREFORE, we will show for ONE WHOLE WEEK, starting Sunday— great picture. & > JUNE” “Runaway Jun STORY NO. 1 !Both Stories Shown All Week! TORY NO. 2 George Randolph Chester, author of “Get Rich Quick Walling- ford,” the greatest and most original writer in America, with the as- sistance of his wife, Lillian Chester, will make “Runaway June” the talk of the civilized world. We want every married man and every mar- ried woman to see these stories, run exclusively at the Colonial Theatre. WHY DID JUNE RUN AWAY? AND BESIDES—TW0 CORKERS—FIRST CHOICE! KEYSTONE | LOVE, SPEED Fatty and Mabel at the San Diego Exposition COMEDIES See these if you have to ride in on a Jitney Bus. AND THRILLS —