The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 4, 1915, Page 1

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MARY FULLER REVEALS INNERMOST SECRETS OF FILM STAR LIFE @ You've seen this famous beauty a score of times, perhaps as Mary, Queen of Scots; as the mannish “suff,” who “fell for” the right man; the little Italian girl of the slums, or in the captivating role of “Elise, the Forester's Daughter.” @ Mary Fuller is the second highest paid screen star, She is one of the most beautiful and talented young women in America, She writes, produces and takes the leading roles in her plays. She works 14 hours a day @ For the first time in her career this charming actress takes time to record the interesting story of her success, She tells what has happened to place her in the zenith of the picture game. Her “Dressing Room Chats,” copyrighted and printed exclusively in Seattle in The Star, begin on page 2 today, DON’T INVITE THE FLIES Sidewalk displays of perishable products in and in front of stores should be prohibited unless they are inclosed in show cases which will pro- be from flies SWAT THE Old Men Decide But now his nose is thin, And it rests upon his chin Like a staff, In his laugh China-Jap ME 18 NO, 59. SEATTLE, WASH., On That TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1915. ONE CENT Shwe hin. FINDS A CIGAR List of Youths Killed in | Wife Didn't Let Him Smoke | |”: M. C. A. Attaches Furnish| Optometrist Tells Judge His | Action in Europe. | in the House. tall ehwras ~ of Los Angel cede to various industrial and come And a crook is in his back, LEAVE SWEETHEARTS HE READS HIS DIARY . Fredr mercial demands made by Tokio. And a melancholy crac« nine nik, Markey An extended report was received | Seattle Girls Mourn Deaths! Keeps Official Dope on Do-| 1 @ Where do famous screen actresses get their clothes? Must they pay for them out of their salaries? 2 © What are the feelings of the actress when she watches herself act? © © @ How did she succeed? acquire it? 3 toward 4 How does she spend her spare time? 5 What's the secreeg? Can How does she feel the actors? YOU 6 What role does she like best? Why? ] Mary Fuller will answer all these questions. IGHT EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Fair TIDES AT SEATTLE Low. or tt ia ft 127 ft, 244 a m 1 ft. 243 p.m aD n, Se . Clash Seems Near; Tokio Will Send Ultimatum Girls Forget Moral Laws EIGHT YOUNG | in Hysteria of War Time er aTTLE MEN BUTT INHOME: TOKIO, May 4.—The Japa- |nese cabinet has decided to send an ultimatum to China. | This was learned today fol- lowing a THREE AMERICANS ARE WOUN OTTAWA, Ont., May 4.— ' , : - The names of three Ameri lengthy conference And Now, 20,000 Unmarried Women in England Are / cans included in a | between Premier Okuma and | About to Become Mothers. | | 7 eee vartaay, ali | his minister. It is understood Palit é | | were wounded in the des- | the time to be,fixed in which s) perate fighting about Ypres, ‘ China must reply to the ulti- matum will be short. This decision follows the refusal of the Chinese government to ac when the Canadian troops Saved the day for the allies. All the Americans named were wounded. They are: Edward Garner Ewing, a gi yesterday from M. Hioki, minister —"The Last Leaf,” Oliver Wendel! Holmes. | of Men on Both Sides of mestic Squabbles; Says to Pekin _ nee t . cabinet r ati Tega ‘ Flanders Line. | Wife Was Jealous. ang ri Pg sakes” pals 5 The proprietor of the York hotel, at First and Pine, sniffed] | pins tei. ra 7 SURG obi je premie <> renal c PA tatimately kno’ in| When ¢ 3. Buthe let him amoke in the house Gas?" he said ' 14 at home from his office | tai so he couldn't eat his Thanks-| firmly determined to make no fur- hearts here, are named on the ros |one evening and found a cold cigar | ter of death In the recent fighting |butt lying om the window ail, his| in Europe, and one les desperately |dander wax aroused. When’ his |!" - | wounded in an English field hos-| wife, Josephine E. Sutherland, could | %; ©#™me down, and “left the house pital on the Ypres |not remember or explain who left|*'th &® slam.” He sat there and THE DEAD |it there, he left the house in high | ,(ousht if this was a home, he Fritz Weiagerber, German. dudgeon. j aida t want it | Gorden Bevan of Columbia City,| Now he sleeps at the office inthe | Christmas day—She was “mad.” & | People’s Bank building, and Mrs.| He went downtown and spent the R. Pitrgeratd, English. Sutherinnd maintains the home at |48y reading. ther concessions in the negotia- jtions which have been in progress ‘as a result of demands made upon Pekin. U. 8. AMBASSADOR ON RUSH TRIP HOME | SAN FRANCISCO, May 4— | George Wilkins Guthrie, the a: R sador of the United ~ States He halted at the door to room No. 217, and, stooping, sniffed at the keyhole. j “Gas!” he said. He tried the door. It was locked. He fetched a chair, and, mounting it, tried to open the transom. It was fastened. He broke the glass and peered into the room { Two old men lay on the bed-—asleep? i Chance brought them togethér.| giving dinner, He read the paper instead. She went upstairs, dres Kenneth Makin, Engtish. 750 N, 75th et December 28—He was at the of. Japan, departed for Washington to- _ They had been playmates and Lestie Gartand, English. And altho Sutherland told of| fice late. When he came home she day. He was in great ise He schoolmates to the town of their) Alex McLaren, English. this and other irritating happenings | was jealous of the stenographer. arrived from Japan on the liner C. H. Collison, English. “Capt.” Tom MecLelian, Scotch. THE WOUNDED J. F.C. Kirk, English. birth, Chatfield, Minn They had left the home town to seek their fortunes. They had come West—the pioneer Weat of op- loccurring over a period of 28 years,| He wanted her to go to a picture Judge Gilliam Friday afternoon re-| show. She said she didn’t feel well bout the Chinese-Jap- fused to grant him a divorce. enough. He went alone, came|anese situation or to admit that his Jealous of His Stenographer | home, and went to bed, leaving her| hurried trip to Washington had any | i Manchuria. Guthrie refused to say ARE TABOOED AT + portunity | Welsgerber was bere but two! Mra. Sutherland, he said, accused | Sitting up reading. | connection with it. CLUB OPENING Now they were together again | months pricr to the declaration of him unjustly of being friendly with after 45 years. They compared |war. Altho but little was known of |"diamond women.” He harped, also, : notes, James V. Walker was 62 him, it was learned he came of anjom the cigar butt incident. She LETTER FROM BEACH—Los Angeles nas ter-core é His old chum, Harry Sawyer, was aristocratic tasaily, He Ree in bedirar poiy ea der cen yin nh hin city BEACH, REDONDO and VENICE— ~ : “a te 60. They had done the usual |nearch of work. Those who knew e fer, he +}— : ‘ Rolled shirts, silk tiles and white |i eis ten dav worked hard. [Mm aay of him that he was an declared, and he didn't exactly Ike | Real. Estate, Cor.| San Diego has her CORONADO n gloves will be taboo at the informal opening of the Commercial Club's the idea of! finding traces of other! Ave. and men around the house. | City, N. J, March and 2 played hard, schemed and dreamed They had married. Their chil Francisco has her SANTA CRUZ MONTEREY—Portland has her SEA- every day fine fellow Killed at Hill 60 | While he outlined their most new quarters in the Arcade build dren had grown up, taken unto machinist, who ved . amyfsaet ana Uemselves wives, scattered |with « brother near Columbia City, ;memorable spate in chronologica SIDE and GEARHART—Seattle will . Tuesday : . | ty order, Mrs, Sutherland and. thelr It will be a “regular fellows'” oe sig que and thay knew ther hed | Europe-—and England in part! cular—ie wondering how the “war | He had a gir! friend there, He Was) married daughter, Mra. Effie Mal-,YOUrs T beg to have her SEAHURST! § ' b he: feng banquet, without starch, and the failed. The world has use for| by” problem will be solve Fitagerald was known as a sol-lette, sat at a table with their at-Fiy was —SEAHURST, with its famous beach, man who “dresses” for the occa. young men, not ancient failures. So} LonDON, Eng, May 4.—What'«{lowed to keep up with the soldiers. | torney facing him elr faces be ow pr ier of fortune, a Yukon prospector, \and all around congental chap, who spent his winters at the Y. M.C. A Makin left a sweetheart bere. He was @ grocery who took part In young people's club work at declared by the Chicago, Milwaukee & © St. Paul Railway to be the “finest, wid- — est and hardest beach on the Pacific — Coast,” will be a gay amusement city trayed no emotion, but a group of ;erth fro witnesses in the rear could not re-! {other | strain their mirth, : ? be joard Walk Mrs, Violet Chambers, who had’ 7*r* “$"8! ooo.00 lived with them for two years, said >r the chums made their pact, turned | ¢, 1 ‘ on the gas, and lay down to dle, | (0 De done with The proprietor found a note on j the dresser war brides” and | nameless babies when peace Is de- jelared and the nations now fight ing try to bring order out of the | rain of Europe. Many Are Young Girls Army doctors and clergymen, who are etudying the situation closely, declare vast numbers under the influence sion will find himself classed among the “others present.” Senator John W. Weeks of Mass achusetts will speak, and afford he had heard them quarrel, per-we Property: the banqueters a chance to size “Darling wife, good-bye, and It ix one of the greatest—per-| of a species of hysteria. Ja local Methodist church, where he si as2 fort ba 00e.00 him up as a presidential candidate, to my daugher, Gladys, Don't [haps the xreatest problem con They express opinion |S as well known olga aos lei pe pd 3000.00 of summer homes, hotels, Pleasure — Th Ri ot| worry about papa. Nothing to | fronting the vations at war ], that the women ee Employed by Broker rious, | Their quarrels, she sald. sik cuntmproved) | piers, bath houses, casinos and possibility. jomas Riggs, jr., pracad Sn ull cab ale naa. AND THEY MUST PACE AND] perfection ‘ mploy y st were no more frequent than might vn avenues poi . 4 the Alaska engineering commis. pms pe ye rh ANSWER THE QUESTION NOW! of the sol | Garland was known as e's ae occur in any other family } pavilions.. And present plans provide sion; Mayor Gill and Robert 8. “OD living | "A apectal census recently ordered| Women always have had ‘a (Pion short distance runner, tennis Keeps Account of Quarrels for the initial expenditure of $100,000 Boyns, the club president, will aiso jaughter living at Bothell. | layer and all round athlete. He fi o} u pe ,' cok. . , Mrs. Sawyer at Supply iaun- |by the government reveals the} weakness for uniforms, they |P lve! ti ee ee WW Eyman &| But Sutherland's account wana, in the buildi f the ject which weWe want prerybody to under-| Gry: brother and sister at Ar. | startling fact that there are 20,000) declare. [Rae ca Poy ed per troge building. - something Iike this in the building of Proj : stand thet thi? Ie. strictly an in.| lington, Wash, Two wasted [unmarried women in England slone| | A large proportion of, the igirle |Co, Wranrs. ai machinist In the |, There had been no harmony for, shall form the nucleus of this summer “ : lives who tried best to make it | Who are to become mo . ved | | Sees 28 years. She pouted. Sometimes!”®, “"* | formal affair, romp Snaceame well for every test. We made | There are thousands of women|ly out of their teens—giris of 15/employ of the Seattle Deydock & |r ‘Hv. weakp ate streich ‘shel en eye resort city. E Otto Casas eet gawith them| @ failure of thie life. Our |in France in the condition, and 16 years of age. CoRMtraction: On. leaves a aweer,| wouldn't talk to him you inay expect his | —It is not claimed by the builders of ~ imi age Pa phyla M| fearte are. all right. Excuse and the chamber of deputies is try-| Many of them, carried away by|war veteran, - He leaves a sweet-/WONun’ Met) om | Rly eS o> pipiens abs 0 the strife, We bid your dar. | ing to decide what shall be done| war's Rysteria, are proud of what/henrt here, | ||| sen tata, tite ete te canmeant SEAHURST that it will reach the mag- — ling wives, good-bye, and all for them and for their babies—try-|in other times would be to their Collison, rd a . oie i (sister, They stayed down five min nitude of Atlantic City, but it is confi- our children. jing to decide whether these war) grievous shame. |the Pacific Telephone SPODA | tem. Then. his Wife came dOwilns at Gb HURST " qi BA RANE The note was signed “Jim| babies shall be legitimatized Would Forgive Mothers Co., quit his job ax soon as the war | 268. Sine: “hit oak priv a dia AHURST dently predicted that SEAHURST, | Walker and Harry Sawyer.” | Girls Flock to Camps Great Britain's lawmakers have |broke out and went to England to She was $25 00 || within a few years, will excel any re- Their addresses were appended | Germany and Russia also face |decided to tackle the problem now |join his old company, tn which he firm wpa F y years, 0 GO 7 HIS thus: “Walker lives at 706 North | the same situation and Ronald McNeti, member of par. /seryed In South Africa “dig, had some divorce | paverycination to Work || sort of the kind north of Long ‘ 83rd st. and Saw t 620 Despite the efforts of the author-|Hament, has been’ appointed head | 4 seal sipeastamenaleanl of | } ‘ a t rth Beach, : see At ent Samzer at G20 Fitet) oto grovest them, women: aad|ot a committee which undertook a|. Loves a6 SMORN TR’ ©) pleaded with him and he tore tHen Cal., with her 275 hotels and apart. — SYRACUSE, May 4—Dis- ded kirls flock to the huge camps in|census to ascertain the extent of) 1) Sie cape” McLellan, an 18| February 23, 1913—His birthday - ment houses. closure thru “old correspond. The proprietor found that hia! England. Particularly at Salisbury | Megitimacy directly connected year-old boy, the ne‘er-do-well of the She was “mad” and wouldn't talk é 4 ‘nce of the personal interest of | guests were not yet dead. At the| Plains, when Kitchener's second | with the war YM. C, A. He was jocularly| June 19, 1913—She pouted anc 5.00 a Month Buys You a Lot Wm. Barnes, jr., in state print- | city hospital they recovered from | army was in the making : Meelersnt dayggertab et hpi bors & known as the, “good-for-nothing.” | refused to answer his questions, ts ' ly . |the effects of the gas, and, on he hey were not common or vi-| ere - . prow nell "7, 1913-—-She ‘aloud of : wet a Oinkete ean. Platt beceuse |ing released, promised the doctors |clous types of women, but youns | cause of thie attitude has He ae cle amillnk. He lived |the stenserapher. O"* °! Splendid opportu are offered to the first in- Gl | o hboring towfis broug! col erable ori "7 ~* wl boul } . > he was not getting as much they would not again attempt sul-| women from the neig' at the Y. M. C. A. for months, where Nov. 14, 1913—Had to get lils pelnting 96 He theuget he | cide eee ae ari a farnin| upon himeelt. eg the problem he wax loved and despaired of at/own breakfast. She was pouting vestors in SEAHURST property. Lots are selling 4 should, featured the hearing “i ane . bail he declares, “It should |the same,time, “Captain” was a/and continued to pout for five today for as low as $25. -Ocean-front lots are going today of the Barnes-Rooseveit Arvin Hoxle, aged 82, was more} The same ix true when the| squarely,” h ree: “ig eahowid the. bmn, Heian tin was beet] weeks ; i a ; egene Puight st the bone Rin tan toede: att Wihagen came oe er een in favor of a general |known around the world Couldn't Smoke in House for $100. And the terms are only $5 or $10 a month. Iso shown that New |self Monday night at the home of| from the towns #n ages thr . tenga : time in June, 1913—Wen : : y : ce > | € of @ o yy | CO pec Bt n ad . 2) qi 2. In printing since "899, and that |tho St. Paull apartments, Summit |(o a high pitch of emotionalinm ly |countey at a specified tlme thet during the recent OaWLnE Here, fie Nani And une couldnt. se. proachable! They're appreciated, too—for the lots Albany printing companies had ave, and Seneca st. He eame from | the war, follow the troops tor ee ilar Mothers of those |He is a member of the 16th British | whose tt was. But he knew 1 Many try tw disguise themselves |atigma from the in men's clothing tn order to be al.’ infants n- are selling rapidly! —Lots at SEASIDE, Ore., that you could have bought a few years ago for $50 and $75 are held today at from $500 to $2,000 a lot. Property soars by leaps and bounds at seaside resorts, once they are estab- lished. —Take, for instance, the figures on Atlantic City, published herewith. Look them over. Think about them. Then put your imagination to work on the possibilities for a great ocean resort at SEAHURST, tributary to Seattle. Then find out about the op- portunities that SEAHURST offers you. —Perhaps you can camp on your own lot at SEA- HURST this summer. Perhaps you can join the Tent City that it is planned to establish there in July. If you can, notify the company at once. & Washington Development Company for full ed literature about SEAHURST opportunities. Telephone Elliott 2568, Office open even: Spokane a week ago to live with juggied contracts his daughter. He was despendent WHY DIDNT You SAY THAT You PLAYED cour ? COME IN THE House, | WAN'T TO because she wouldn OF COURSE ITS A NICE DAN ~ DO YOU SUPPOSE | HAVE TO BE TOLD EVERY TIME Jon Were, PLL Say | WELLO AND IF HE ACTS PEEVISH PLL PASS fim UP std NICE BOTHER TRYING TO MAKE FRIENDS WITH THE MAM NEXT DOOR— HES TOO a GROUCHY 5 IT ISA NICE DAY FOR GOLF SHOW YOU SOME NEW CLUBS 1 JUST Gor

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