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: P. S. Lontine Lady Popularity Contest tomor- row. 10c 5c Westlake, Pine and Fifth Contingous 11 a. m. to 1] p. m. IS HELD VALID $20 annual tuition fee tm- DENVER, Sept. 2: #20 TUITION FEE |STILL PLAN TO INDICT JOHN D, LHAMBRA FOUR DAYS—STARTING TODAY Harold Lockwood in the master picture With the ar- EMISSARY ARCHIBALD WASHINGTON, Sept Publl jeation yesterday of further letters which American Correspondent J F. Archibald was rying abroad when detained tn London, seemed likely today to result in the follow ing eituation Punishment of Afchibald for alleged violation of neutrality or for “conspiracy.” —Return to Germany of Mill- tary Attache Von Papen of the | Germany embassy. —Recall of Austrian Consul General Nuber and Consul Schwegel, both of New York. Investigation and possible action against the editor of the Hungarian paper Szabadsag, of New York. —No action against German Amba dor Von Bernstorff. The administration frankly was not pleased with the correspond-| ence which London has just di vulged In it Dumba gave a frank expres sion of opinion concerning Prest. dent Wilson and his administra tion Wilson was termed self. willed; he was said to have a vaat power to coerce congress and his course was said to have been firm ly fixed | That he was not “approachable,” but that Austria had more to hope for from Bryan, was another of the declarations In the ambassador's jcorrespondence entrusted to Archi bald. The correspondence indicated | Von Bernstorff had given Archibald 4 letter in the nature of an intro-) | duction. STAR—WEDNESDAY, S ALHAMBRA The love of a young millionaire for a little country girl and work of the exponents of anctent Greek philosophy and culture form the basis of the plot of he House of a Thousand Scanda’ which opened at the Alhambra Wednes day. Harold Lockwood and May Alli son play the principal parts. It is the story of the work of a| | Miss Cynthia Grey: Again | wish |to compliment you, Cynthia, dear altho it's a shame to waste the mp)—Mise Mord you please—one of qu | telligence and poor social standing who wae simple and wayward lenough to win a five-doltar bet by criticising your wonderful letter purporting to come from a | poor, misguided matron—and con- | cerning the advent of a distant rel. lative who slipped in on the serene! |domestic scene and marred it) eo" 1 maintained to various friends B that you did not have nerve enough jto reply when ¢ truthfulness of the article of Sept. 9 was impeach- hed. They, my friends, unwittingly | took your part to the extent of five dollars, which | now have in my) | possession, thanks to your lack of | moral courage. And while this is) true in every detail and many of | my friends see this copy before it i's inclosed to you, | must say that} | being very liberal in my moral views and never attempting to pear in a false light, | have at I | this, I can teat public bickering space, for, above all things, I de As an Intelligent reproof, your letter in extremely vague or Cyn-| thia Grey is an intensely stupid per son, It is quite evident from what I can gather that you have a com plaint to make; but {n attempting | to do #0, you have conglomerated a| mess of big words, translated {nto common everyday english, don't mean much. 1 do not object to criticism, but I insist that you hit the nafl squarely on the head. I hasten to assure you that which, when Tam not a high-brow and am strong | ping—where man battles with the /¢T Jane Keith and Ernest Mau- for plain talk. If f understand rightly, you wrote a letter to me which I fatled to) print. If any comment upon the let ter of Sept. 9, to which you refer,! was addres to me previous to receive same. me of lacking You openly accuse moral a fair chance to prove that your remark is open to question, at le: SCENE FROM “THE HOUSE OF A THOUSAND SC POUR ACT MUTUAL MASTERP the | ruthfully say I falled to} courage. | | Please be more explicit or give me @n university students by the legislature were held valid by Judge Gilliam, tn de- rival late today of A. M. Belcher, | the courage of my convictions, and, general counsel for the United) shove all things, | do det | Mine Workers, plans will be laid prostitution of truth and m 0m a suit brought by stu-/dict John D. Rockefeller, jr, and i arsimonious a8 to| bie It would be for me to print ever: y-br 4 he House of a Thousand Sean- aw profession, that of clty ad- 5 |for conspiracy in causing one or |respondents; but, in justice to te ody, th ° ; : . : Gale from enforcing the act. AD) noe or the 40 deaths in the ue or AL neg Al Syeda prem ge fale Datla upoa which this depare.|the young man is given a place in|*!!!90>) pease | Nau, former treasurer of Cleveland,| ‘The staff for the Totem, Lisa appeal will be taken to the supreme of the strikers which resulted from | tye of ie oc tn scare lines and|ment is conducted, I invite you, |the iumber camp of his uncle, falls] Clase A Ending Saturday Night |RSS 12 He st eneue ma Me nee monthly | bahiicattaes j court, the coal strike last year. bile to be| Mins Mordeau, to come up to my |in love with “Wolf John's" ward.| “The Reward’ (Bessie P Addressing the will be this semester enneth einer a5 pon me maga anderapgh age Baro them joffice, in The Star bullding, be-|Belle, subdues and kills the former|-aig). “441 M essio Barris-|-ruesday, he said: “No man can/Cole, editor; Lucile Hicks, society After hearing 10,000 divorce | Sullible enough to swallow sham |i Union and University ats,|camp foreman and bully, who isleqy)) .* Musical Career,” com-|som with his physical eyes all the editor; Clement Price, art editor; cases, Judge Charles Monroo of oer bli any pert intellectual (On Seventh ave. any day except also in love with Belle, and at last a eee |ramifications of his business on exchanges, Allan Patton; senior | | Los Angeles wants to be relleved pedeote as she might have occu. | Sunday between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m.| wins the girl in a smashing climax jasion Ending Thursday Night arg ae bigintighy, Seg ioremeinhts tae: Phere ag fi y . ‘Nut nd see for yourself that the letters | - S12 « “avi cies ficial eye. e city, 001 jor representative, Murie me en m | Bled, a0 poet dig Am gy printed in the column come from |ALASKA eqularse Covington” (Edward Con-| magnitude and variety, claims the sophomore representative, Dorothy Oynthian Sgain | say you fear| real, live people and are not, as you| Dainty Mary Pickford will re-|"O'°?): eae most interest of any business. I) Willard; Charles Peterson, busi- BESSIE BARRISCALE te even acknowledge that you h insinuate, conjured up by Cynthia/main at the Alaska until Saturday |¢ _¢|hope the time will come when a/ness manager; Marion Herrick, dd- ie i eoatved this intelligent reproof , the editor, or any of The/night, Inclusive, in the delightful _ RESIDENCE THEATRES ¢ |Profesvion of city administration) vertising manager, and Kenneth “THE REWARD” ee ‘Marie Mordeau Star staff. Also, I invite the pub-|drama, “Esmeralda.” _—---@ | Will be clearly defined A cine, treasurer. Arthur Rarig will , oil gies ‘she witt make |l¢ 9 Write their opinion as to| “Litile Mary” has scored a suc Home Ending Thursday |“Muntetpal leagues everywhere,” be faculty adviser, | ae P. $.—Do so and she w | whether the letter in question was,|cess with Seattle movie fans in| “The Broken Coin,” No. 7, two|he added, “seem to have an eye herself known to you. in their estimation, improperly |“femeralda,” and those who have|parts; “What Might Have Been,” |largely on the outgo of the city’s! onan WANT ADS WILL FIND A If it were not for the fact | handle d, and request that each |not had the chance to see her may|drama; Billie Ritchie in “A | (reasury. It is my contention that rHE LOST ARTICLES. that you would undoubtedly mis-| sign his or her name and give ad: now witness charming Mary in her|Doomed Hero,” two-part comedy. even greater attention should be Oe for asking state authorities to In- note, I did not say Intelle | take my | silence and delude yourself of Carl Lind, This is a few | Kathlyn 4 Williams Case of Talmai Williams. animal weeks after forced his wife to enter the lion’s cage, himself soon, rushes back to find his wife unharmed The result of this visit to the lion’s cage- attachment of girl and cub, are told in a three-act special feature of heredity and pre-natal influence—featuring Kathlyn Lind” | ¢The Strange Case, of Talmai Lind At the same hour that a girl is born to the home trainer, lion bears a cub while intoxicated, but recovering his Lind, | | the strange | “The Strange I would hardly expect an out | sider, who has no knowledge of the | large number of letters I receive daily, to reallze fully how impoast- dress, and the letters will be print ed for your information. Dear Mise Gre This le In an. swer to the letter concerning the man of 47 who had been happily married for 20 years, who became too Intimate with the girl of 23. Third chapter of Proverbs, first | and second vers 1. “My son, forget not my law; |} but let thine heart keep my com-| ngth of days and long @ shall they add to In my opinion, both parties lack | parental Influence. As for her, she was of mature a and the no excuse in Imagination for her. He is more of the lower animal than) |of the superior. If It were not for his age, | would |agree with your letter; but, owing ‘to that, there Is an excuse for him. Whether it is his or her fault, she was far the worse. Firstly, she knew he was married. Second lly, she knew he was too old for her. Third and last The daughters of men grew up before the sons of God and looked K and they took them for Fourth, Pike and Union 5c Starting Today—Until Saturday Night CONTINUOUS—11 A. M. TO 11P. M. MISSION 800 Ground Floor Seats Piel ee | midst—not fit for our thoughts or|°"Chariie Chaplin is algo on. the| | have been a constant reader of Sill in. aaa entitled, “His! |your paper and letters for three eee | years, and this Is my first letter. | MEL@OURNE id " mi i oe at Blanche Sweet, heads the » Mel-| |13, was pu e je at that), ‘ y bill Wednesday age, for no one dared to harm a ourne’s new b “is hee ‘or papoose In Texas; rode| The crime of a kleptomaniac, for] lthe sands from El Paso to Eagle| Which an Innocent girl is sent “up Paes: drifted to Deadwood, rode for |the river,” and who turns nurse, from the “vorboten AN OLD BACH, to refrain veak.” EPT, 22, 1915. PAGE 3, TO PUNISH [PHOTO PLAYS] CHIHUAHUA } | TURE D se mM AMERICAN Jyoung millionaire engaged In soctal |work, He finds in a squalid tene ment a beautiful young girl, and touched by the miserable surround ings, he builds a working place, a community where the poor were given an opportunity to live and work under ideal conditions Then hearing of the culture of the ancient Greeks, the young man jand the girl join a colony near by, where their flowing robes and junique manner of dressing make the villagers think them insane. The villain of the play, in love |with the girl, rouses the villagers |to action, and an attack is made, The home of the colony ts blown up, but with ft perishes the trouble maker, and all ends happily. eee A special Northern - [CLaMMER és carried East Wednesday morning The Regeneration,” the powerful jfrom Seattle 25 delegates to the drama, adapted from Owen Kil-l49th annual encampment of Jinto bellfeving that you had me|‘#re’s classic, “My Mamie Rose." |Grand Army of the Republic, at buncoed, I would not waste this |!!! remain at the Clemmer for four!Washington, D.C, next week more days because of the demand lof many who have not yet seen the play. The story 1s that of a Bowery jtough and bruiser, reformed by the sweetness and purity of the young schoolma’'am with whom he falls lin love. Rockeliffe Fellowes, famous dra jmatio star, and Anna Q. Nilsson are featured. eee |LIBERTY | A play of the primitive pine woods— massive — dramatic — grip- \forests for a livelihood, the story jof the love and hate of two men in a place where the heart of man is jbared with all its wildest penton a drama of life In the raw, is “The Man Trail,” which comes the Liberty Wednesday. Richard Travers, June Keith, Er. nest Maupain, John Lorenz and a host of lesser stars, appear in the masterpiece, to say nothing of the [thousand or more frezh from the north woods, who} sve the play the needed atmos. phere. It is the story of a city-bred young x? lumberjacks, latest. The play {ts adapted from the WASHINGTON, Sept, 22. Carranzistas have captured Chihuahua In a sweeping north ward movement, according to official advices today Villa's forces are fleeing to the northern border of Chinua- | hua state before the Carranza | onslaught. | Villa was reported heading for Sonora to Join the forces of Maytorena, | CAN’T ENLIST AND KEEP CITIZENSHIP Rather than lose his American citizen 8. D. f North has dec P- frain from joining the British He made application Esquimalt to enlist in a Canadian but found he must renour citizenship rights here. Tho he wanted the experience to be gained at the front, he returned, still an American. CITY OF SEATTLE | SLIGHTLY DAMAGED The steamer City of 58 due to arrive here from Alaska with 9,500 cases of) canned salmon, 47 boxes of fresh) halibut and 26 members of a can nery crew. At Petersburg she was damaged on the port ride by collid ing with a ht. Part of her side was torn a and two staterooms damaged, 25 DELEGATES GO TO G. 0. P. MEETING | Pacific car) attle is) at o'clock | feminine role, Is the headliner at the Mission for four days, begin- ning Wednesday. In this pictu acts a dual role. Lillian Walker {s featured in an| Jattractive comedy entitled “The Fire Escape.” eee PROGRAMS Liberty Ending Saturday Night “The Man Trail” (Richard Trav Miss Williams en- pain). eee Colonial Ending Saturday Night “The Mix-up” (Chaplin); “A Child of the Surf" (Spottiswoode Aitken); “Seeing America First.” ee Melbourne Ending Saturday Night| "Stolen Goods” (Blanche Sweet) s 6s Mission Ending Saturday Night at at McCormack Prices We especially invite the attention of mothers who have children’s school wear- ables to make up. Desirable fabrics for this purpose are very attractively priced. 284nch Galatea, in stripes, fig- ures, etc; also solid colors; regular 16 2-3¢ grade at, yard...... Juvenile Cloth, the best fabric woven for house dres dren's wide Corduroy tn wide cord effect— Black, ete; regular $ grade; the yard Brown, Navy, Taupe, 98c Here's a new weave, in shirting stripes, highly mercerized fin- ish, 32 Inches wide; fast color grade, Special this A ger ypiekar .15¢ For Women and Children Hosiery and Underwear. See our Huge Selection in Fall Lines. Very Best Qualities at Lowest of All Prices $3 Comforts $2.49 | Lace Curtains 89c Large Size Comforts, size 72x | Nottingham Lace Curtains, 50 78 inches, filled with white cot inches wide and 3 yards long; ton, silkoline covered, with 8-| white or Arabian; large assort inch plain silk borders; $3.00 | ment of patterns; regular $1.25 values at, each, $2 49 | erhag: 8p al, 89c . ° pair ... ‘ only . Call FOR YOUR FREE COPY ‘Sperry Magazine Days” All Thursday, Friday and Saturday of This Week We have never offered our friends and customers anything as popular as this new National Monthly for the Woman and Home, a limited edition of which we will present Free, every month, by special ar- rangement with the publishers The Sperry Magazine is splendidly illustrated and its Snappy Fiction, Smart Style Suggestions, Little Folks’ Page, timely Household Hints and authorita- tive information on Health and Hygiene, will interest the entire household You will miss a treat if, you fail to secure your copy of ‘this new and interesting publication. Everyone Reads THE SPERRY MAGAZINE | “The Strange © of Talmai | paid to the ingo—on seeing that the Lind” (Kathlyn Williams); “The THINKS IT OUGHT city gets ail the revenue comiag Fire Escape” {(tallian Walker). TOBEATRADE®* -____-- : Alhambra hiding Sikstday Night story of the same name by Frances Hodgson Burnett, and tells of the! love of the little country girl for a} farmer boy. Moving to the city] after they become suddenly} wealthy, she is foreed by her moth- jer to accept the attentions of a |nobleman. However, love at last is triumphant, and the nobleman | retires from the field, le clear for the country boy. eee | COLONIAL Popular demand ts the cause ad vanced by Manager Hamrick of the Colonial for the extension of the engagement of Charlie Chaplin in “The Mixup.” a four-reel comedy, | and one of the funniest hits on the screen. The picture Is composed of bits from various Chaplin come. dies made into one picture. “A Child of the Surf,” a drama |that smacks of tho salt sea, with| Spottiswoode Aitken, the famous! character actor, and charming! Teddy Sampson, and “Seeing! America First,” the best travelogue! on the screen at the present time, comprise one of the best mixed bills Lillian, of the « + $i wives.” the Colonial has ever offered to { 1 is the He Fell in & | My version of this passage of the play-going public 4 an dimples, is t Cabaret” is all |scripture Is: That when the Ark see star in The comedy — fast ome VY |Ianded, there were no people, save CLASS A W Fire Escape,” a # eriotie those aboard, and they were not| pretty Bessie Barriscale ts the} alker comed vit Mp vii asdiplaie owned by our God; had not the | gtar in the four-part Mutual master- ¥ same feeling or responsibilities |itcture, “The Reward,” which| that we have, and are still in our opened at the Class A Wednesday Wells-Fargo till 17; worked for a|solng to the battlefields of Belgium, horseman one year, then went|forms the basis of the plot of one home to mother, but found no|of the most delightful Blanche home. In the East, | served in the | Sweet plays. | Boxer war, also in Cuba, My en- o-* vironment was the wor but my | MISSION jearly mother’s training caused me| “The Strange Case of Talmat Lind,” a drama of the Orient, with Kathlyn Williams in the leading —and — A Big New COLONIAL The Family Theatre One More Chance at Chaplin Show BY POPULAR DEMAND Chaplin | PICK TOTEM STAFF Continued for the Balance of the Week “A Child of the Surf” 2-Act Picture of the Sea with Spottiswoode Alken and Teddy Samson | A Cartoon Comedy And Our Scenlo Serial Seeing America First DON'T FORGET SPECIAL SATURDAY PROGRAM From 9:30 to 11:30 10c—Children 5c “THE MIX-UP” FUNNY! VERY FUNNY! Children +