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I] TTT n every Outing— KODAK iW BON MARCHE Bon Marche’s Birthday Cake, Exhibited in a Store Window Full of Mirth, Music and Refined Entertainment A LONG SHOW AND A GOOD ONE CHARLIE CHAPLIN The Scream of the Screen im a brand new copy of his ld stunts woven into a sde-eplitting comedy “Cuatlie the Gang Leader” A Free Morning Matinee jaturday to Kids 10:20 to 11:30 Afternoons Evenings 5c 10c One Child with Adult Admitted Free to Weekday Matinees Kodaks from $6.00 up, at your dealers. ROCHESTER, N. Y. CUTS BIRTHDAY CAKE | Ten thousand people sttended the Bon Marche's 26th birthday an-| Miversary Wednesday. Every one of the guests had a piece of the birthday cake. Which goes to show that it was some piece of pastry. For more than a week the great! }layer cake has filled one of the! | Second ave. windows of the Bon Marche. Everybody was invited to come Wednesday and have a | plece. Mr. Frank McDermott, president of the Bon Marche, acted personal- ly as host. | Each piece of birthday cake was contained, with an inscribed card, in an Individual box, This year it was necessary to have two cakes, as the first one had gotten up to 25 layers, one for each of the store's birthdays. The pieces of cake were neatly | packed in boxes for distribution. | Patnt IN THE EDITOR'S MAIL ABOUT BILL BRYAN Editor The Star: It pains me \deeply to in any way call atten tion to the empty-headedness of that “great” statesman and poll tician, W. J. Bryan, but his speech | jin which he stated that “no nation |would attack us when we are un-| armed, but should they do this we| would consider It a deliberately un- friendly act. GOD BLESS THEM,” sort of got my dander np. Let us consider, Mr. Editor, what would happen if a force of 500,000 |armed belligerents should make an attack upon this country. This country would be levied up- jon for tribute until it was sucked \dry. Our cities would be razed. | What would happen to leading lights Itke W. J. B.? | | A 40-foot hemp and a convenient tree! | | Arm, not for war, but AGAINST j war! W. MADD WELL, WHY READ 'EM? | Editor The Star: The rack and| | the torture chamber of the Spanish [inquisition ought to be reinstated r the benefit of the author of mfessions of a Wife.” After having been subjected to every torture which the evil genius of man can devise, he should be |hanged, drawn and quarte and |the remains should be burned and |a dreadful curse put over the ashes Complete social ostractam should be the lot of the man or wor who ever again dared to mention {his name or in any way refer to| |the mournful fact that such a being | Jever existed on the earth Even at this the quality of mercy | would not be strained | READER FROM ARLI | | | USE STAR WANT ‘ADS FOR RESULTS! anu speak cheery words of EASTMAN KODAK CO., | | charging the town legislation was DENTISTS. MOTHER RYTHER’S T HAVE ANOTHER TAG DAY: PANTRY ISBARE Mother Ryther Some day Seattle will bulld a monument to the kindly woman who | toiled thru the years to mother homeless children, feed hungry widows ‘ouragement to soul-worn dependenta, In the stone will be chiseled the name, “Mother Ryther." Thru the winter she has fed more than 70 persona, mothers and | children, three times every day Long ago her property dwindled away The money went for food, and the food went to the starving. People who understand what she is doing have given money from | time to time | The county does not forget Mother Ryther altogether when mak-| {tg its appropriations for charities. | There have been tag days for the Ryther home. | But it always bas been just a matter of time until the cupboard! was empty again. | It is empty now \ | Any one eager to know more about this big-hearted woman can find her at any time after 6 o'clock in the morning. | © starts tolling over the steaming kettles tn the kitchen y Today there are 20 destitute mothers, with from one to four chtl- dren each, depending upon Mother Ryther te keep the wolf from the door during the spells when they can find no work. oeeee There have been times when critictem has been! atrected against the home. Some of it has had an element of merit. But here is what Judge King Dykeman, of the juventle court, wrote in answer to an inquisitive citizen not long ago “1 have felt that this woman gives to unfortunate children who fall into her hands a mother-love and affection that is the heritage of every smail child, and if | were passing out of the world, leaving my children dependent on pubilo Institutions, | would rather have them fall into the hands of a woman like Mother Ryther, with all the deficiencies of her institution, than to go to some more uptodate, scientifically conducted homes, where the child would not receive the affection that Is Its due.” oer ee A delegation of women Came to The Star Tuesday and asked help for a tag day to obtain funds to replenish the Mother Ryther pantry. That day will be Saturday. It will not be a social event, so soclety women will not go in great numbers, probably, to help in the task. It te not a church or club proposition. There is no organization that shoulders the reepons!Dility of help- ing Mother Ryther feed all who come to her doors. It ts a chance for women, no matter what their age or place in Se} attle may be, to Delp !m a wonderful work. o- Tag saleswomen are needed badly. Headquarters will be at the Y. M. C. A. all day Saturday, in charge) of Mrs. Irene Bishop, for years connected with settlement work in Seattle. Volunteers should call Main 15 and tell Mother Ryther that they will help Saturd: | RULE AGAINST ONE-MAN CAR’: Hlected for breeding and kept from The Rhode Island public utill-; would be greatly increased under ties commission has handed down|such a system of operation, espe an opinion in the case of the New-|ctally in view of the dangers re port & Providence Railway com-|sulting from the very large in pany vs. the town council of Mid-|crease of motor traffic upon the/| dieton, against one-man street car| public highways operation because of the danger| The attention of the motorman hazard connected with them. should be directed entirely to the Street rail men have been | discussing the one-man car plan| of cutting down overhead expenses | sets oe SAYS HOT WATER The town of Middleton legislat-| | ed against the one-man care. | | The street rail company ap | pealed to the state commission, unreasonable, The town council's | . It is one of the first decisions | against the street railway plan. | In handing down {ts opinion, the | commission decided that: | “The! Drink Glass of Hot Water Be-| cop i aetna a atin fore Breakfast to Wash EAL PAINL | Out the Poisons | R ESS. Life Is not merely to live, but to! live well, eat well, digest well, work | well, sleop well, look well. What a| glorious condition to attain, and yet | how very easy {t ts {f one will only adopt the morning inside bath, Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise,| splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh |as a daisy by opening the sluices lof the system each morning and | flushing out the whole of the inter- | In order to introduce our new) "#! poisonous stagnant matter | (whalebone) plate, which fs the, very one, whether afling, sick or lightest and strongest plate known, | ¥¢!!. #hould, each morning, before | does not cover the roof of the|»reakfast, drink a glass of real hot | mouth; you oan bite corn off the| water with 18 teasvoontul ot ime | ; guaran’ stone phosphate tn it to wash from) oob; guaranteed 15 years, the stomach, Mver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's Indigestt.| ble waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach, The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on {an empty stomach 1s wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one @ splen- did appetite for breakfast. While you are enjoying your breakfast the water and phosphate is quietly extracting a large volume of wat from the blood and gotting reac for a thorough flushing of all the inside organs. The millions of people who are Mileation. Ack our custom bothered with constipation, billous fave tested our work When coming spells, stomach trouble, rheuma to our office, be sure you are in t th others who have sa skins. Fight place. Bring this ad with blood disorders. ‘and : tate toe lood disorde anc kly com pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store whict 2e7 UNIVERSITY st. Gppeaite Wreser-Patersen Un Gold crown ....--. $3.00 $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $8.00 | $10 set of teeth . $5.00. Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 | White crowns ... Gold fillings .. Silver fillings Platina fillings anteed for 16 yen taken in the mor jave im io ; Exam- ing and ination Ca seth same day. Most of our present recommended by our ers, whose work tf» still givin h will cost very little, but is sufficient to make any one @ pronounced crank on the sub | Ject of internal sanitation. STAR—THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1916. PAGE 7 Winton Annual Bargain Sale Get a Motor Car Now Sale Ends in Four Days Here’s Your Last Chance to Buy a Famous Bargain Motor Car Special Low Prices End Absolutely on May 15th If you want a real motor car—a car you will be happy to own and drive—at an unusually low and easy price, come in today. ends absolutely on May 15—four days away. We will gladly demonstrate any car you may See the various makes, sizes, styles; see what you can get in power, sta- slip away. bility, comfort, style and class. The Winton Company makes no profit on the cars offered at this sale. the benefit. for whatever they will bring. gain. But it After that all prices go up again. Our big annual sale is on. yant to try. Don’t let this chance You get We need room for new stock, and so we are selling our fine used cars No cripples, no junk. Every car a real value bar- Remember that this sale is held by the responsible Winton Company in its own permanent branch house. you miss exact! Come in today. This is our last call. Don’t blame us if y the big chance you have been waiting for. The Winton Company Winton Building—1000-1006 Pike Street. Phone M. 2261. OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY, MAY 14th DENOUNCE VIEWS ON BIRTH Mrs. Robert Liggett's views on childbirth have aroused o storm of protest among many mothers tn Beattle and neighboring cities. | In her statement Mrs, Liggett, who ts from St. Paul, and who is lecturing this week at the Moore theatre, said the sacredness of motherhood is all bosh when the accompanying pain ts considered She proposes that the duty of motherhood be confined to women, of the lower classes, brought up mostly for breeding purposes. ‘Women of greater mentality, she Asserts, are subject to greater pain Mrs. Liggett ts herself a moth-/ er, and lectures on “Twilight Bleep.” High school girls have been invited to a special lecture}, Saturday afternoon. She would select breeders from | among the less intellectual women,” says V. F. Pettric in a letter to The Star, “She would perpetuate the less intellectual child. She must feel sincerely for posterity. In plain words, she would have the world exist in direct contravention to all laws of God and nature.” “What kind of children would we ave from mothers who were se intellectual?” inquires Mrs. R. 8. Pringle. “Where is the womanly woman, who, being a mother, can truthfully say, “There fs not @ baby in the world today worth the suffering iy all things operation of his car, No matter what rules may be adopted to govern one-man opera tion, the combination of duties would tend to develop carele: habits on the part of motormen. SAN FRANCISCO, May 11—For ty million bags have been used by the French and British armies tn | bullding trenches, according to C.| 8. Colby of Calcutta, India, a jute manufacturer, who is here today He declared the British had used 26 per cent of the Indian jute out-| put for trench work, RHEUMATISM CURED TO STAY CURED Torturing, grind ing, rasping pain in and polsonous urt out of your system. It does this gently and quickly Wear Electra Vita while you sleep. It fille the morning full of vim, free and aches. Flectra-Vita te a self-charged bod: battery, which pumps a steady, un broken stream of galva into the nerves for bh sleep, infusing them wit and building up the entire « a strong, healthy condit the spirit restore you to Cal) or write for our beautiful 90-page book which tells all about our 206 Kmpress Theat cond Ave. Cor. Spi Sonttle. Wash A story hour for children will be held at 10:30 a. m. Saturday at the Moore by Mrs. Liggett. Superintendent of Schools Coop- er has asked teachers in all the schools to announce the program | today and urge the children to at-| tend The object of thene story hours is to give the children an enter tainment especially for themselves and to furnish a substitute for the| much-discuased movie Mra, Lig gett says. The plan ts to tel) stories which will supplement the work of the schools, and also to teach mothers the importance of story telling in the mental devel- opment of their children.” Following the story hour, Mrs. | will talk to the mothers on Art of Telling Stories.” n admission will be charged. ATTEND .TO YOUR TEETH NOW CUTTING THE CUT RATE PRI Silver Fillings UNION DENTISTS—Cor. Third and Pike. Entrance 306% Fike G1, [STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS VINDICATED BY THE COURT Medical Board Ordered to Restore License to Dr. J. Eugene Jordan After Evidence of Remarkable Cures Was Produced in Court On Janvary 7 of the year 1915, Doctor J. Eugene Jor dan was arraigned before the State Medical Board and his license to practice medicine revoked, the contention of the board being that the ad- vyertisement reproduced, which had been running fn the local newspapers, was untrue, that Doctor Jordan could mot cure the diseases mentioned theretn. Doctor Jordan appenied to the courts fn the matter and the trial of the case which followed, in the Superior Court, produced evidence of a character that caused Indge Walter M. French to award a decision to Doctor Jordan, restoring to him his leense. Judge French stated tn hts decision: The court ennnot find tn this caso that any credulous or ignorant persons have been deceived. On the other the witnesses who on be- half of Doctor Jordan are among the best people in the city. Professional people, people of standing tn the community, people who are known to the Court person- ally and people who are known to the citizens of this city genernily as being among the best people tn the city. And I don't think that it can be contended that they were either credulous or ignorant except as the laity generally {s somewhat fgnorant of medical matters. There is no contention here that any medicine has been given which {s at all harmful. In fact, all of the testimony tn this case seems to show, as far as that {8 concerned, that any medicine that ever bas been administered by Doctor Jordan has ténded to benefit the patient, There is no contention on the part of the State, {t so stated by counsel for the State, that there was anything in this advertisement that was and {njurious to public morals, So that it gets own to whether or not this ad- is so grossly untrue as to Involve moral turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan, Under all the testimony tn this case, I cannot find that the adverUsement is so grossly untrue as vertisement Cured of Tuberculosis by Dr. Jordan’s Remedies Doomed to « Crippled Condition for Life by Other Physicians, Absolutely Cured by Glandular Remedies READ HIS TESTIMONIAL Seattle, Nov. Twelve years ago I bed tubercular abso peck and under my arms, and the doctors out them out for $500, but admitted that it in crippling my arm for life. Doctor J. Buge! cured me without an operation, and I have remain well ever since (Signed) c. BR BOYD, 2716 Fourth Ave North I have been giving practionl demonstrations of the merits of my system right here in Seattle for the past thirty ye 4 hundreds of aligned testimonials on file in my office, written by qratetul patients whom I have cured, will attest to Its wonders. ures of Asthma. Anaemia, Blindness, Chronic Inflammation of ° Chronio Dyspepsia, Eptleps: Chronic Gastralgia, Hard Lumps tn the Bi @ (including Heart Leakage) Hip Disease, Infanti Sciattca. Senile Gangrene, Jaundice, ralgia, Paralysis, Spinal Curvature, al 7 Danee most of the other so- called Inourable diseases. There being @ number of Doctors Jordan tn Beattie, it ts well to bear in mind the full name and address of Doctor J. Rug Jordan, 619% First Avenue, Seattle Office hours, 8 a m. to Pp. m.; Sundays from ip m. to 6p m Consultation free Corre- spopdence wolioited. Watch each Saturday Star for remarkable cures. to involve moral turpitude on the part of Doctor es and judgment will, therefore, be for Doctor jordan GREATER VINDICATION C°ULD NOT BE DESIRED The Medical Board claimed that these diseases were incurable, meaning, of course, that they could not cure them, Doctor Jordan not only claimed to | cure them, but produced in court scores of actual- ly cured patients as witnesses for his case. The stories of their remarkable cures have been stated under oath. Doctor Jorden has caused this statement to be published tn order to acquaint the public and his many friends with the proven facts in the case. Dr. Jordan is now located on Second Floor of the Mutual Life Building, First and Yesler.