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Beatties i Februar fe _ from et had at ra 14 YEARS “IN SEATTLE | gy EDWIN J. BROWN, D. © ye was 14 yea y eet growing. ‘are larger meal College in the | land are said to be the t 14 years tn my the las . the ‘price the average on was the in CAN'T STARVE KAISER OUT; home and told our folks and every | This Year's Crops Break one that we were married and they | . : believed us. We intended to live| Records; Nation Can [together only long enough to get Support Itself. money ahead and get married, but sickness came and also a boy, We By Charles” Edward Ruseell have tried all th years to save| operators, STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1915. PAGE TEDDY WANTS _. ANARMY HERE e . About six years ago | met af Q.—1 ama young married woman s . | vey 18 years old and | was 17, Weland live in an apartment house. || Charles Edward Russell De-|wanted to get married, but my|am thry with my work in an hour| And What Kind Is Switzer clares Allies Cannot Win | folke wouldn't. tet. me. We ranlor so and the rest of the day drags| land's? Star’s Washington by Starving Foe. | away and tried to take out a mar-|atong very heavily. Could you Writer Tells. Ayes [riage license, but couldn't without | suggest something | could do at! = a witn We spent all of our! home? Something to make pin —_- 4 CAN FEED HERSELF fioney on thet trip, We came back | money? ALL CITIZENS SERVE A triend wishes to know If there are any books at the city tibrary for an expectant mother to read, and If #0, what the titles are | THANKFUL with there married wom U. S, Army Officers, Investi gating System, Call It Finest in the World | A.—-To be frank are already BY FREDERICK M, KERBY so many mough to go away on, and now Is|en in thin city endeavoring to make| WASHINGTON, D. C., July 24 the first time we have had the| pin money by doing extra work at! No matter what may be the outeome money home, that the field is very much | of the present international compll dieg Dent | now have three children andjoverrun, If you can operate | cations, it is certain that Secretary the BERLIN July Jermany isn't|! want to get married for thelr u. possibly could get|of War Garrison will recommend to Seruen . tae being starved, A great many per sakes; but if we get married now, address or copy Work | congress vital reforms in army ad lived for 15 sons in the United every one would find it out and | ubt there are a num-| ministration 7 States and else-| could never face my mother again. | hers who would like to The af has for where think she| Mise Grey, is there any way that! leave children with a good! yon, studvine the ¢ ree is, but that in| W@ could be married privately and| trustworthy person an afternoon Sod af is Gaited Gtates «nd te merely one of the| the Hicense not be published? I each week while they shop, If you| On Of a | pat allt sega palace PRIZE HALLUCI.| Want to get married, and at once; joan crochet you might make the | Pitterned afte dye serena NATIONS about| Ut | want to know if it can be/little crocheted bags to order or|"2*em. and Secre Gerreon | the war, So far ¢n@ without any of our friends| other crocheted articles, as any. | 8OW engaged in drafting a or as starving is con.| finding It out STELLA. | thing in that line is popular at the | "oreanization Dill wlong this line cerned we can|, Av~The county auditor would! present time ene ‘s od pre pubic: withhold the ready | P4¥@ 80 rlght to withhold any in The following books on mother.| DoW can the ttle me untain re tear. Germany formation from the public; but you} hood may be obtained at the public | Public organize and support a mili lan't being starved | CONd easily keep your names out) ibrar mons, “Mother; Stock.| “ry foree which comprises pra and CAN'T BE. | ° the Mat of those securing mar-|ham, “Tokology"; McCarthy, “Hy-| te ally every able-bodied adult male The food that| 8 Heenses by making such @/giene for Mother and Child.” in the countr request to the editors of the news: | According to estimates made by C. E. Russe) Defore the war! papers in the city where you pro-| @.—Would you please tell me if|the war college, the American areest ta the Germany was in| cure the license, If necessary, ex-|any dne can have a free examina. soldier costa something lke the habit of Importing wasn't {m-| plain to them that it is for the sake | tion at the city hospital? Please tim. as much to maintain as the . ported of miprore necessity but for/of your children that you wish the | answer at once, as | am badly in| Swine soldier \ are convenience and profit names withheld need of help G. Germany can feed herself. If you) You have put off until the last! A.—It depends upon the cane. In| ony, Rod a sa pelle Ae could cut off every pound of food| what should have been done first; |an emerg y case, or secident Shien phe dgr fe i ‘ rs 4 be ne an supplies from abroad you could not | but it is never too late to correct| people are examined free of | Hine “Othe. Tully edulpped with * starve Germany—so long ae the/# mistake, but the sooner, the bet-|charge, I cannot answer nee oh <gfve sey — if German farm was on the job. ter Jquestion directly, us tt d gg rbiooni-py eat Sar Spa A tirely upon the seriousn: — perv ont eee SROWS EVERYTHING NEC] GQ wint you picase tell ue | sie ye nen, the se |tor the United Staten to mobilize an Dentint Leo Frank should die, would they equal number of citizen soldiers and $1.200,|MAN PEOPLE. What it doesn't! try the man who cut hie throat for| @—De you think Ice cream|at the end of that time they woul done at }grow they can get along without. | murder, when he |e already serving| harmful? | eat it on the average be nowhere near as well trained as Crops Break Records ja life term In the penitentiary, or|of three or four times a day and the Swias This year produce of the) what would they do with him? would really like to know if it ia| One of our officers who hak made ve Mot been re-|German farm wil probably exce J. E, K. | detrimental to the health. Truly} a detailed study of the Swiss mt pat per lall records tt rests with county | yours, H litia system, Col. W. C. Sanger, is It was supposed by some persons, | p itor as to whether Convict] A-—It depends entirely upon | que as saying ras HANe| mostly of the type of the over-|Creen will be tried for murder|YOur size and the quantity of ice If proofs were needed that a land led with them. | Sanguine and filinformed Briton, should his victim dle There el phos you eat. For a small girltcan train all its citizens for the take ntal| that so many men had gone to the/ nothing to prevent such a trial, as | four large dishes c would belefficient and intelligent perform ae *t.|war that Germany would be unabla|he could be sentenced to hang too much for the good of your! ance of that work that must be done this year to plant her crops; or if - health, as it would chill the mucous) when war comes, and at the same boys, and w! f | planted, there would be nobody to Qt oye Beg conmecerate sotjer panlvess ot yee it mac _ —_ tr rape the evils of what is , jharvest them. THAT WAS AN. | Dill dated 1864. Ie there any value her hand, a dish consisting |today called militarism, that proof or, ‘he fake col; OTHER DREAM attached to It? L. B. [ot & tablespoonful eaten four/can be found in the republic of Siete ‘work. All the women were left at home;| A.—Confederate currency has no| times a day would not be injurious trerland jalso the boys and the old men value as a circulating medium. Without the slightest tho: ot In ordinary times these did abcut - PRISONER ESCAPES adding « foot to their territory, but }four-fifths of the farm work, so) @—It will soon be my fiance’s| with an inten country, and what was the difference? birthday. Will you please suggest) The county commissioners were es to perform Also the dreaming ones forgot; dainty, yet simple menu for @ informed Friday of the escape on thetr cittsenabip the prisoners of war. What was three-course dinner? ravens June 12 of Charles F. Smith, contails ve evolved and de “tha American lacking otherwise when seed time ¥™ ove vieted of petit larceny, fre velope itary system which has The came around these handily sup-| -If the her is warm you |county stockade, Smith was give the best militia in t | plied. jean very nic substitute fruit “honor” prisoner wor a Whole Nation Blooming selficon for t up course, Thix is made by dicing oranges, ie dotng service filings have and my bridgework always long as the im most cases, the natural been retaine bridgework Httie wonder to me that some Dentists s and tm) tO move as soon as shay to the people. are no many amall-minded Ma thet Tam much am ‘Of ome Lawyer, Doctor or Bus- Teferring to my offices as tution, We never seen ar: and are therefore tenorant in my patients, « and all of my suc: 1934. Dr. RC. Rosson é ‘the Brown Dental Of- e Eatite am, and in Relling- ‘fice that have butlt In Seattle in Se uitle, our bu the people are coming to Dental work because, while are #0 extremely low, our mathe best that can be had in J. BROWN, D. oF other HEE ; y can tmolld the LY! ud g FFs f 2 tT Telief that the tment is perfectly incr the suffering they have en- and all they spent good money for, not believe and itching and burning IN And they find it still| pontertul that the improve-| béermanent and that Res- Teally drives away the erup eompletely erhaps there is a pleasant like this in store for you er apent and Resinol Soap 4 by all druggists Write to Dept Ma, My cold ood the teat natural teeth much tons ving been are looked | tors Petty, jealous Den ed when I) Of course these 1 Dental fely on the working 4 1 owe 9 to uusiness methods gov my In Bellingham, siness is grow- s D. & Phone Main 2640, Original fire back linings and repairs for all kinds of stoves, ranges and furnaces, Water backs and coflsy ut in and connected. Gos _ STOPS ITCHING those who have endured for the i ng torments of ecze- such skin-eruptions, | and ‘edible. the useless treat- any inexpen: #0 can gins in a very short For trial tended to that. first use of Res-| Resinol Soap | Aft-| The result is in increased acre- age, and Germany never looked a0} apple, j| blooming. People have turned thelr, 2°! door yards and waste spaces into) vegetable gardens. Everybody that has any ground bananas and grapefruit m size, Sweeten to © in Individual dishes or cock tall glasses and sprinkle with pow dered sugar jaschino cherries. le growing something to eaten ond course may consist | iReeennote Satenes Be. entree. of breaded lamb chops or fried The grain harvest, of course, 18] chicken, creamed potatoes, peas snother matter. with mint sauce, sliced tomatoes, The labor usually tmported from) piscuits, coffee. Russia will be missed a little, but The third course, cake, ice there are more than a million pris cream. oners of war in Germany and they -——- will get fn the harv | Q@—Wilt you please tell me ‘The cost of food has risen about! what claim a man or a woman 55 per cent; but it will not rise have on each other, who have lived any more. The government has at- together man and wife for a | dozen years and had children, yet never married according to It has taken over the control of w the staple supplies and blocked the law? speculators. | necessary for them to go to court Experience has shown that under to make the separation legal? present conditions one wheat har- HENRY. vesting will last until the next, so) A that THERE IS NO LONGER THE/a common law marriage. There LEAST DANGER of inadequate) fore a legal separation is not neces ce RTI SIRI SS sary. 20-R, Resinol, elient for sun- CFricee Paid Ww “4 Fro jeton twine HH i ee hoo va a 4| Young America us } Fess (Corrected datty by J. W. Godwin & C0) | select ranch i 6 @ basen e } Country May a ] : - ° 1138 4 ‘eo 22.00 B00. | Bastern’ Washinaion oat, 34.09 @ 100 | Puget 2700 16 ib bes — Straw, ton eto ae Oe sothy 17.00 4 14.00 don 100 @ 1 ° ‘ "4 — Country Hay and Grain if Serenata |Xitaita, No 1 i300 @inoe | Barley 2800 | Eastern Washington cate 30.00 eet sound oate s0.00 traw, ton 900 | Timothy 19.00 see New Optical Dept.—On the Geiceny joeal s re i hothouse 10 @ Fits-U Eyeglasses doz 6 @ ) a 3 orn PPe Popular Prices” for high-class New apples 1.00 @ 2.0 Cherries | work. Best service in Seattle at Royal Annes, 1 tb 7 @ 0 lowest rates. We can duplicate any P 199 @ 125 | broken lenses. A call will please stacat Hee o* @ 19 | and convince you inicoien Mant A tone as. | Phones—M. 2174; M. 7100, Local 33 california, new ois | J. W. EDMUNDS, Oph. D. Australian browns 2 N CHARGE Walla Walla 5 O14@ 01% IN CHARG Potatoes . O1%@ 01% Ib, O14 *.01% | lo | Prices Paid Producers for Kags, Poultry, Veal and Pork | Relgian hares . on Brotiers ae 8 We gunrantes the superiority of | fat 10 | the Lundberg Truss, end give fre 4 | trial to prove It 10 | or ia ; it A Ibe. and under 8 @ (09 ducklings, over 3 Tisases 1" i on | Pork, block how on 0 Pork, larner epee os Bauabs, g004 size, doz... 1.00 60 to 120-1 09 10 07 09 o) MEDICINE Co, Vrices to Retailer | us ¥ | wet. Son oe q We have Chinese ot ai Al Roots, Vegetable yrary Cures all chronic Native Warhinagton ‘lee ‘and dis creamery, brick ; Ey Cues tat aes Native Washington ag creamery, solid pack Be pee: seems oar oa Domestic wheel Use Star Wants Ads ‘for Re- Limburaer sults. Oregon triplets . nd garnish with mar if they separate, will it be| This state does not recognize | “| the STORY IN THE STAR SERIES FOR SUMMER | lady stood. a decidedly creepy feeling. Ten days later he was just be-| ginning the Collect when someone | |laughed aloud, He looked down | |Below him smiled the old lady ; |She advanced towards him, her (EQITOR'S NOTE—One of | skirts uplifted, the ridiculous’ slip- the odd facts about ghosts is r and. the stockinged foot held that their actions and m |high in air alternately for his sages frequently concern mat- not ters of the most trivial Import. The vicar turned cold. He seized Elliott O'Donnell, who tells F match box which lay on the pul- this story @ personal ex- | nit and half out of his senses | Perlence, Is an investigator of | threw it with all his might at the | ghosts and a collector of ghost | stories which he believes to | be true, It is taken from a collection printed in The Occult | Review, May, 1913.) advancing figure. The match box met the old lady AND THE OLD LADY WAS NO MORE! The vicar in a state of nervous collapse was escorted home. | ree) | Some time later, leaving the By Helen Christine Bennett church on St. Martin's eve, the The vicar of Ratheby chureh,| vicar again heard that malicious England, !s the Rev. C. Bodkin. jaugh | Three years ago this August the! Hefore him rose the old lady |vicar was in the vestry, alone.) smiling, one stockinged foot ex | He was tired and was just pulling|tended. This time he ran, and on a comfortable old pair of shoes| af erwards he announced his inten when he noticed that in front of}tion of leaving both ghost and }him a lady was standing. Some-! church, | what efmbarrassed he hastily Tone] The vicar was in earnest. But |to his feet his congregation declined to lose “What can I do for you, madam?’ |he inquired. At the same time he| looked searchingly at his visitor. him. When pleadings falled of ef. fect one of them wrote to Elliott | O'Donnell. | silk skirt and in displaying to) anything vicar's astonished gaze tw6| His search by day was more suc small feet, the one smartly shod|cessful. An old lady, answering jin a slipper of patent leather, with|the description of the apparition }a buckle of polished silver, and|seen by the vicar, had boarded at the other extended in the air to-|a farm house about three miles wards him in nothing but a violet}away for one summer some 40 | silk stocking |years ago, She had gone for a walk Good gractous,”" ejaculated the|one morning and had failed to re- viear, “you will catch your death|turn, A search revealed her body of cold—I and then he stood/at the foot of a disused j still open mouthed, THERE WAS|The man who found !{t was still NO OLD LADY THERE. For some) alive and remembe: the occasion time he tried to persuade himself} distinctly that he had been dreaming, but “I remember well,” he said, [When he left the vestry it was with “that when | got her up | Het c GHOST OF BELLE OF | OF LLE OF 40 Y 0 YEARS 5 AGO ) HAUNTS: CLERGY the slipper Into the pa She was an old lady, with a! Elliott O'Donnell is a professional |pointed chin, coquettish side curls,| ghost seeker. He went to Ratheby |a white cashmere coat, a violet! interested, but rather skeptical. silk dyess—here the vicar started] He spent three mights alone in back aghast |the church, which Wis atmospher ‘or the old lady's hands were|{cally perfect for mysterious ap: |buslly employed in lifting the vio-|pearances, and he failed to find| quarry. | Dr. J. Eugene Jordan After Eviden Cures Was Produced in On year dan 7th, J, Bug arraigned bet the Medical Board « his to practi medicine tha contention of being that the ad reproduced, which bad been running in the local newspapers, was untrue, that Doctor Jord could not cure the diseases mentioned therein. Doctor Jordan appealed to the courts tn the matter and the trial of the case which followed, in the Bupertor Court, produced fevidence of & character that aaused Judgo W M. French to award a decision to Doctor Jordan, restoring to him hin license ot aie Judge French stated tn his neck nder my arr Iston cut them The court this case that or fxnorant been deceived hand, the have been half of of ne January this Doctor Jor revoked the board vertinement Other Physicians, Ab: de cannot find in od any credulous perso have On the other witnesses who 1 produced be 1 Doctor Jor st peopl fessional standing people on na in the the £ peor fn the who are to the Court person. and people who are known to the citizens of this city generally as being among the best people in the elty. And I don't think that Jor it can be contended that they were either credulous or ignorant except Inity generally t# #0: ignorant of medical matters: among the elty Pr ple mm unity known ally There being a number of Docto to bear tr tan Seatt as There is no contention here that any medicine has been given which {# at all harmful, In fact, all of the testimony tn this case seems to show, as far aw that ts concerned, that any medicine that ever has been administered by Doctor Jordan has tended to benefit the patient to Involve moral Jordan. were incurable, m not cure them. There Is no contention on the part of the State, and {it so stated by counsel for the State, that there was anything in this advertisement that was injurious to public So that R gets down to whether or not this ad- vertinement is so grossly untrue as to Involve moral turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan. Under all the testimony in this case, I cannot find that the advertisement {s so grossly untrue as ly cured patient stories of their re under oath. Doctor Jordan published in orde many friends wit I Cured of Tuberculosis by Dr. Jordan’s Remedies Doomed to a Crippled Condition for Life by Glandular Remedies READ HIS TESTIMONIAL and ad | VINDICATED BY THE COURT Medical Board Ordered to Restore License to ce of Remarkable Court solutely Cured by ors Jordan tn Seatt in well ss of Docte Eugene ¢ e hours, 9 Corre remarkable —$—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_$_—_—$_—_>—_—_—_————_——— turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan and judgment will, therefore, be for Boctor GREATER VINDICATION COULD NOT BE DESIRED The Medical Board claimed that these diseases eaning, of course, that they could Doctor Jordan not only claimed to cure them, but produced {n court scor of actual as witnesses for his case. The markable cures have been stated has caused this statement to be r to acquaint the public and his h the proven facts in the case. wl : THE THRILLING MYSTERY OF THE PHANTOM AND THE SLIPPER; = im J i om i © i i on om om THRILLING MYSTERY OF ‘OF THE PHANTOM ‘AND THE SLIPPER; iT eee. Ce PT Pee MAN; FOURTH » Confessions of a Wife NIGHTS ON A PORCH KITTY “MALRAM’S” NEWS (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) | I know now what to do with! sonny’s little clothes. This morn: ing I received the following letter from Kitty Malram (I guess I'll] call her K Mairam until the “Margie, dear, dear, Margie, you can't tell how sorry I am for you that your baby did not live, for you | wanted a baby and you, dearest ot | women, seemed to have the ‘moth- kind of a nature, It would| make me almost laugh if I did not }feel more like screaming against fate, as I sit here and realize that you, whose whole heart and soul! seemed bound up in your baby, should lose it, and I, who don't want a baby, who am not in the least inelined to motherhood, will probably have twins or triplets “Nature, my dear, seems to de-| | light in playing practical jokes, and | they are apt to seem tragic to most of us, “Yes, dear, I am going to have a bay—and, o Margie, I don't want it! I don't want to look ugly for the next few months. I shrink from the pain and suffering and I know in my inmost soul that I am not capable of shouldering the re- sponsibility of bringing up a child I know I shall love it and hate it. the mysterious old | noticed SHE HAD ONLY ONE /|DPon't look shocked as you read SHOE ON. | HUNTED FOR | this—many women, if they told the THE OTHER BUT WE NEVER truth, would say what I am saying FOUND IT. They sent for a (to You. At least, they act this way to their children. Margie, when a woman accepts motherhood she has dedicated her life to a cause of which there is none holier and, dear, your poor friend, Kitty, is not big enough to give up her foolish little pleasures niece and nephew and when they came it was decided to bury her at once, here, and THEY DID, JUST AS SHE WAS.” Ratheby boasted an old, very old, ex-blacksmith. He sought Eliiott}and sink into the background of O'Donnell, and without telling why,| just a propagator of the race. induced him to follow him to a} I hate the word ‘duty,’ and it's the word that is most on Herbert's lps. I want to let all the things which most people think important slide and I want to put in their small upper room. old Then from an{ blacksmith drew a leather slipper with! chest the patent heel and a silver buckle, tarnished and old places the unimportant things “ i which mean so much to me. I nev- I never told,” he said. “Butler can get used to the idea of be years ago I found {t in the quarry.Jing an old married woman to I'l sell it whom no man but her husband O'Donnell bought it. Then he|must pay compliments, I want to proposed disinterring the old lady| be flattered and caressed, to have and putting the slipper in its}some one's eyes at least tell me proper place. To his surprise the/that I am most good to look at, vicar refused to permit the re-|even if his lips do not form the mains to be disturbed unless the| Words. Margie, I'll never settle old lady's relatives consented. No| down, and, oh! how I miss the fas. one knew the whereabouts of the|cination of a Uttle flirtation. relatives, O'Donnell returned home.| “I wonder if you have forgotten, It was the third night after his| “ear, that you used to have plenty return, about 2 a. m., that he heard|0f admirers. Are you perfectly sat- A soft knocking at his bedroom|sfied with the prosaic everyday door. He got out of bed gingerly|™onotony of married life. Don't jand opened the door slightly In| You ever want the tenseness* and the moonlight he saw the figure of |Mnsle of the nerves that we used 0 call good times? Don't your feet nid lady, a figure 10ke : : To ett dads of igure in a poke! ever ache to dance all night with a let slippers mere shaw! ®/no thought of the morrow? |""Pante welzed him, Ho rushed|,,“Ate™t you sometimes sick ot | the roast beef and potatoes of mar. back into the room, seized the slip | ried Hfe and don't you long for| per and threw it into the passage. |ionster and artichokes? I do. Mar. here ~was an instant’s silence.| sie, and I can't help it. Some. Then from the corridor came the/times when I sit across the table junmistakable “tap-tap-tap” OF Altrom Herbert at breakfast, and |PAIR OF HIGH HEELS. Down!hear him discourse on the needs of | |the uncarpeted corridor, down the| Mary Maloney and her sore-eyed | |"ncarpeted stairway they went,/ baby and on the Hkelihood of Pat | growing fainter and fainter, out| Maloney staying sober more than| Into the night one day a week, as he placidly | ’. drinks his coffee and eats his in-| (Tne fifth of this astonishing| variable cereal, I want to get up series of “Ghost Stories” will be/ and go around and box his ears. | printed next week. It is the my: “Anything to get him out of his bert,’ where the words are needed and patiently accept his cool kiss on my cheek while all the while I want to be taken and crushed in his arms—want to have my hair mussed and my pretty negligee crumpled and my head strained {back until he can look into my eyes and tell me that we are young—that life is good when love is al. “And now it's going to be worse than ever with a baby to nurse and care for. I'll lose what little |looks I have and for the next eight or ten years I'll have to stay at home and take care of it, for we can't afford any one to do it for me. Eight years! Why, Margie, then I'll be an old woman! All the joy and light and laughter will be gone out of life. “I am coming over to see you for one more ‘good time’ before my condition gets noticeable. Until after that I am not going to tell Herbert, for he would not let me if he thought a baby was coming. “He is perfectly wild ‘to have children, which is more than is “Your distracted and unhappy friend <ITTY.” (To Be Continued Monday.) If the Employers of labor would encourage the employes to save, we would have better citizens, more contented citizens, more prosperous citizens, and a better city all around Interest Mf Per Cent UNION SAVINGS & TRUST Co. OF SEATTLE Capital and Surplus, $815,000 JAMES D. HOGE, President N. B. SOLNER, Vice Presi- dent and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING In the Heart of the Financial District FREE ADMISSION AT DREAMLAND DANCING BVERY EVENING EVERY ONE WELOOME BULL BROS. Jusi Printere |terious story of the vanishing Sis-| seeming content But instead 1 Iter of Meroy.), say; ‘Yes, Herbert,’ and ‘No, Her- 1013 THIRD «AIN 1043 }