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Gonfessions of a Wife BACK AGAIN, Reidy YOu, LITTLE | ture. BOO It fs @ strange thing that no one Tt has been shee months since oan realize physical pain but the T last talked to you, little book, person who ts suffering It. jend, oh, so =many, many things) yen if you have suffered the Rave happened to your old friend, | severe pain before, you cannot Margie Waverly realize it when some one else is T must have fainted when I fel! writhing in the same agonios _ the steps as I came from | jater. hospital, The last | remem ber was the realization that Thad |, Which makes me aa Broken my leg and then—oblivion, | fententious | remark of a man | When I awoke my leg was ban. “lend of mine Maged, but I learned it was not to We have had many discussions De set until the next day—1 was on ~ es of ~ physical war dently under some sort of an &sainst the spiritual Plate as nothing seemed to mat He has always insisted that no much, }matter how much we try to de} The pretty peregtorg' nurse was ceive ourselves, “the phystcal ta} ing about and I remember | king.” Panswertng “Yes” drowstly to her| “At the last, tt will batter down if I were comfortable. all the mental and spiritual forces pect little book, that you,;brought to bear against tt,” fnanimate, do not have/sald, “Life to a materialist like | | ‘that delicious sation which sur-/1 am resolves itself into ‘we are ‘ease from pain and sorrow some-| born, we live and we die.’ times gives. I, alas, was brought [ could not let that go unchal-| Dack to the world of agony the | lenged, little book, because to mo} ext morning when they went to/life would be nothing if [ could) take an ee Serres peeves OF the frac: pleture of the frac-/ not fight and overcome the primi-/ STAR—WEDNESDAY, MOVIE BILLS CHANGE Except ‘Undine,’ ‘Escape,’ ‘New York’ ie t FEB. 16, 1916. PAGE 7. U.S.MAY OPPOSE ISTATE CAN'T SEE'QUIZPLANNED 'SEVEN MINERS GERMAN PLANS COMPANY BOOKS WASITINGTON, Feb. 16 eldent with Germany's first toward final settlement of the Luat- | public tania offictal to|pel the Inland Empire Railway Co day turned sharply against acquies-|to disclose the nature of a private niract with the Washing ton Power Co,, of Spokane. merchantmen without | preme court today holds the com mixsion t# without power to force ffictals intimated the Unit-| nuntic service corporations to dix 6d Btates will uphold the allies and | Pio. thelr private. contracts deny Germany's right to sink with. | |ROSARIANS WILL Feb, 16 writ of mandate sought Coin | OLYMPIA, | Denying commineion to com steps la service cane, sentiment cenee in the Teutonte : tack lane to at ' the #u armed out warning vessels armed for de. fonsive purpones. Germany's latest proposal in the Lasitania case was presented today to Secretary Lansing by Ambassa-| dor Von Bernstorft That the latest memorandum is satisfactory was intimated at the department and unless the White House asks a change, the case will be cloned by making today's com Seattle people have been invit ed to cruise to the Hawaiian ininnds aboard the 8. 8. Great Northern with the Portland Rosart ans, The first 400 to get tickets will leave from Portland April and return May 4 munication a formal answer to the last American Lusitania note. the | counctl | will be held Thursday evening, | the Labor temple. A quiz of all candidates for the! conducted by union, ence ed fair by OF CANDIDATES STILL MISSING <3 BUTTE, Feb, 16.—-Seven miners counse! | @re still missing 1 the bodies of 14 have thus fart removed from the fireswept levels of the Penne vine here today five bodies have identified as Fred Curnow, Walter Whitn Brance David and corporation at The quiz will be recovere@ those of sexe, Lae White and a committee headed of the from Painter been Frank Gates Ques the will be permitted if consider the committee 08 aud Ison HAIR COMING OUT? : MAYOR EXPECTS BIG.) <2 VISIT HAWAIIANS. Mayor Giil told t Pilgrim Tuesday night would be tricity in five years, municipal 1h | ting ready | business Dandruff canes tion of the sealp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling club of|hair at once and rid the scalp of Congregational church,|every particle of dandruff, get @ he belleved the city |25-cent bottle of Danderine at any heated entirely by elec-|drug store, pour a little in your and that the|hand and rub it into the scalp. Aft- plant ought to be get-|er a few applications, the hair for a big increase in| stops coming out and you can't find any dandruff feverish irrita » Men tive instinets to be always merely physical “Well,” he eald, “you fdealiatic | | lady, which would you rather have, | } & perfect love accompanied by raging toothache or a loveless life | } without pain? I, never having bad the tooth | jac he, sald tromediately that I could P ETERS | not live without love. But today, with that awful agony which A p nab bg in ath ag a showed me exactly just what the Christian martyrs on the rack suf- mRY AD DERS( fered, I know that no love in all this world would by any posstbili- ty compen: or even alleviate A pias wok of a comedy bodily pain. Before I became bedridden | Glimpeee of Java A Pathe Scenic went to a play in which one of the Wed. Thur., Fri. Sat. lohareecters said, “Husbands con't want their wives to respect them, MUTUAL MASTERPICTURES DE LUXE EDITION SupromeAtlainment in Entertainment “| Colonial Theatre TODAY, Thursday, Friday and Saturday they can even get along without their wives loving them pasaton- ately if they are only made com- fortable.” revellin, i Uttle book, fn be- ing able to once more put my tn- side thoughts “up to you” and I tell you I shall perhaps bore you to death with them, for you see, t have had three months of nothing else to do but bear pain as pa- tently as T can and think. T have almost come to the con clusion that too much thinking is not good for one. You rembmber what David Harum sald in that, ve of long ago: “A few fleas are good for a dog, they keep him | |from thinking of his other trou- bles.” The first thought that comes to me, however, is that if I apply that jaw of compensation to myself that I have ‘8 insisted w: inevitab I ve been a pretty bad citize Just consider, Iittle book, what has come to me since I married Diek. I have bad to part with my filusions, my tdeals, my love, my jloved ones, my health and now I am chained down to this bed for months to come. And yet, looking back over my whole life, I have not yet come to a ag oee that would make me —~ | kiss the and say—I deserved os tt, “THE ESCAPE’ DRAWS | ” : * ‘ *. A RE ER eS | BIG CROWDS AT REX | Stage” sparkles with lighter scenes — glows with genuine tried to be @ good woman and arr TUNARSION sean § ee ins suet ns tee ee ine Fos | Serene heart interest. A thoroughly Big Picture. has this awful thing been sent] Missoe—J. Warren Kerrigan in “Hem | | With the Rex theatre packed | % ‘ ons nee sineg Sunday, when D. Wr | In the part of Philip Van Kortland—known behind the footlights as Teck tahaane Sekar Meatex | Edwin Hargrave—Williams is tremendously effective. Lucille Taft plays the actor’s wife with wonderful sympathy and superb emotional power. A! man’s mercy in a convict camp— the wife seeking to visit her impris- aned husband is trapped by a desperately infatuated “trusty.” —Just one of the surging moments in “The Idol of the Stage.” A new five-reel Mutual Masterpicture— De Luxe Edition—Gaumont production — starring Malcolm Williams. A marvelously vivid photo-drama of intimate stage life. For all its somber shades and breath-taking climaxes, ‘The Idol of the (At top) Malcolm Willlams, In “The Idol of the Stage,” at Colo- nial. (Center) Douglas Fairbanks, in “His Picture in the Papers,” at Liberty. (At bottom) Nance 0" In “A Woman's Past” at Clemmer. oe . \ he Miner's “Ham Takes a comedy, and Pathe scenic. rROOKAMS Heart.” Mograph; American—tHla Sehnall tn * Chance.” Kalem “Glimpses of Java,” jine.”” (To be continued.) Sixteen hard, bony skulls form a \new exhibit Wednesday at the uni- versity museum. The craniums it those of Pacific coast Indians. There is also a mummy of an ae WHO Is the Man Your Daughter Is Going to Marry? Do you judge him by his MONEY, his earning capacity, or his CHARACTER and FITNESS to be your daughter’s husband? | has decided to continue the | same attraction for the re- mainder of the week. In “The Escape,” there is a strong piea for the better mating of human Se kia Shown Exclusively, With Special “ROUND-UP” AT THE HIP i Organ Accompaniment, “The picture with the powerful at the Colonial Theatre punch,” is what some critics have called “The 1915 Round-Up," which is being shown at the Hippodrome theatre, together with five vaude- | ville acts, The Round-Up pictures | give you all the thrills of the orig | inal show at Pendleton, Ore. | one | FAIRBANKS IN COMEDY Douglas Fairbanks has been seen | here before in drama and now he is the star of the latest Fine Arte | production in the Triangle series at the JAberty theatre, In what is | better described as a comedy-drama It is entitled, “His Picture in the | Papers.” “IDOL OF THE STAGE” AT COLONIAL THEATRE Malcolm Williams and Lucile! Taft are featured in the second of! the Mutual Masterpictures De Luxe! Edition, that opens a fourday run at the Colonial Wednesd The} title, “The Idol of the Stage,” gives | an idea of the plot, as the story/ is an intimate tale of both stage and society life. Manager Smith announc new comedy and the Mutual Weekly, as well as a brand new program of organ solos, THEQ)TRE|| “UNDINE” REMAINS BALANCE OF WEEK The crowds are still pouring into the American theatre to see “Undine,” which will con- tinue at this popular playhouse for the reet of the week. The story is that of a sea nymph, who sinned by loving mortal man, The screen director has taken the opportunity to tntro- duce aquatic spectacles of graceful imagery. Hundreds of nymphs and water sprites dis port In vapory garbings. Reau- tiful specimens of physical womanhood exhibit sensational feats, graceful dives and mod- esty thruout. | | KERRIGAN AS INDIAN J. Warren Kerrigan as an Indian! That's the latest wrinkle in the | career of the handsome movie star. | He'll be seen, beginning Wednes- | day, at the Misston’theatre, in “Son |o the Stars,” written by Nell Ship- j|man. A story of a gentleman burg: |lar is also presented. It is entitled, His Majesty Dick Turpin,” featur ing Francis Ford and Grace Cu | nard To Decide in Haste Often Results in REPENTANCE at the Same Speed Every man and woman in America—every youth and girl over fifteen years—should see ESCAPE And profit by its eugenit teachings. | * CENSORS KICK BUT ‘NEW YORK’ IS SHOWN ~ Fortified by a restraining order from the superior court, Manager Bill Smythe, of the Strand theatre, will now con- tinue the presentation of Flor- ence Reed In “New York,” against which the theatre cen- sors objected. When, acting upon the complaint of the cen- sor board, Mayor Gill directed Chief 19 to seize the film, Lang met with the court order, Sm: agreed to elimi object- ed to. “New York” shows typical scenes of New York's Great White Way, while telling a story of a chorus girl, black- mail, tangled lov cee | NANCE O’NEIL STAR | OF ‘A WOMAN’ S$ PAST’ | | o °° Nance O" Neil, who is starred in “A Woman's Past,” at the Clemmer theatre, needs no in- troduction to the American theatre going public. As an actress, she stands on the high- est rung of the ladder of succ: The play in which she is seen here gives her abundant oppor- tunity for her great emotional qualities. She plays the role of @ woman misunderstood and wronged; a woman willing, even when dragged to the bottom, to sacrifice herself for MISS WARD’S NEW PLAY Fannie Ward, who was seen in the first performance at the Coll- seum, will again be the attraction on the new bill, beginning Wednes- day, She appears in the leading role in “Tennessee's Pardner,” She plays the part of a girl of 16 tn the early days of California, A comedy and the Russian orchestra com plete the bits Hair Often Ruined By Washing With Soap Soap should be used very care- fully, if you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall, This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins ft The best thing for steady use is just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oll (which is pure and greaseless), and {8 better than the most ex- pensive soap or anything else you can use. One or cleanse the oughly. “More eloquent than the spoken Drama. “More convincing than a thousand sermons. “A lesson to those striving to better humanity. “A thrilling drama of sex-eugenic science.” DR. ARTHUR D. HOUGHTON, Foremost California Eugenic Authority, who made the first eugenic marriage in America. KNOW THYSELF “THE ESCAPE” is indorsed by press and pulpit because it teaches the great lesson of life with infin- ilREX JOHN HAM COMING—SUNDAY, MONDAY and TUESDAY “The Soul’s Cycle” —WITH— Margarct Gibson ADMISSION 9 Q NO RAISE Children 5c Cc IN PRICES ii two feaspoonfula * ii hatr and sealp thoy Simply moisten the hair with water and rub ft in, It makes sn abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oll The hair dries quickly and the man whom she lov It 1s (evenly, and it leaves the scalp i lay wi soft, and the hair fine and silky, # strong play with a strong star. |i right, lustrous, fluffy and enay to NEW BILL AT class A Yen You can get mulsified cocoanut . Prop. + A three-reel Vitagraph, entitled|ofl at any pharmacy, it's very “BA Peter's Kid,” | “wun heads the bill at|/ cheap, and a few ounces will 8UD-| agg the Class A, beginning Wednesday.| ply every member of the family Three other attractions are offered: | {for months,—Advertisement, w Cnty disat \ il 7 Only with Parents HUTT iI