The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 10, 1916, Page 3

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4 % SUB FOR “GAS” Beauty Combine in the New Bill at the COLISEUM | EDNA | Good- rich Is the Beauty in “The Making of Maddalena” “PIRATES OF) WRITES: THE AIR” Supplies the Thrills A Pictograph New Music 15c—Children 5c Same Bill Until Wednesday CLAIMS TO HAVE CLEVELAND, July 10.—About a month from today George A Eynon, a local machinist, will be gin to market a carburetor that will, it is claimed, giadden the mo- torist’s heart by running his ca with coal ofl instead of priceless gasoline. , Eynon accidentally discovered! the principle by which he devised | bis carburetor. One day he spilled some oi] on a rag and carelessly brought a hot fron near. Vapor was given off. The problem was solved. Eynon wrapped four inches of '27 DRUG CO-STARS WITH JUNE Thrills ¥ Twent n drugeie accused | violating the dry law will be| lined up Wednesday before the| state bow of pharmacy, sitting tn sup court room No, 1 | Testimony will be taken and the| Om board will decide in private wheth-| to revoke the druggists’ Heenges | or not | In case anything ts divulged suf-} ficient to warrant the starting of| jortminal proceedings against any of| fis willie burgar & has a nise moth-| thin wire around a few shreds of} asbestos and rent an electrical cur rent thru the wire. The asbestos acted as a wick and the h ofl vaporized enough of) to the engine is started, the electricity is turned off and porization is maintained by the burning of a little of! in a combustion chamber. A test proved that a car could be driven 63 miles on four and a start As soon as the engine half gallons of coal oil. Heavy cars fitted with the carburetor have made 11 to 12 miles on” jon of kerosene. STAR-—MONDAY, JULY 10, 1916. PAGE 3 ON TRIAL the accused, Deputy Prosecutor Pat terson said Monday pr would follow in addition te tion the pharmacy board pcutions} any ac | might a druggist at 2401 A new movie © arrest Monday 1g 34 gallons of Claussen ave at The Strand alcohol in six days While Police Chief BReckingham and a squad of policemen were wrecking the store of the Puget * Sound Drug Co., 1626 Firat ave., Sat-| cess. Judging urday night, the place broke into] flar The police ax ke up} about $ worth of at k and tle maiden at The fire t ts believed, | “har Mention goes pal basics home” with the city. Alle baseball players of for mer school days are warming up|} their arms for the Red Cross b | Scene From “Whispering Smith,” at the Alhambra fit ca between the Univ the College club at D * ~~ oe * * rz dale Saturday. The proceed PROGRAMS TODAY a ‘odin at war (diene will go toward the relief of f COLISHUM—"The Making of Madde-land the late John I Phi we Jependent upon National Guards. |teea,” with Bana Goodrich rp ee diem ‘how. ah the’ bore: STRAND Caprice of the Monntaius r Um dune Capeien, new Fox star, and | UTILIZES PASTORAL SCENE “The Deserta with| E. Mason Hoy Sirector’ of Tangled Skeina,” the film at the Colonial thin wee an been recel the he movie handles AS FOLLOWS :- "wat Ste attae Sot ate Mountains ; » Ma AE ai f ‘and 1 . is the name of ‘the picture, and te shee boa ayenebansaiee . ela honestly, folks, wera Liege lh erred berate i 6 best we've ever offered. fam Fox star, in “Ca-|a terrif first etlor er & father but 1 evening he got Hin Me las ok pathwe mad at his dad because his dad|... 4 ae , ney for the love « ' gone to the border—Showing them leav- spanked him for Areca “ ‘ aduate rl g ing Seattle— procadingec onder sake siieian” penne |X tee American Lake—Showing Gov. you can wt & find yureself an he said, “to work| “The Prince and. the . reviewing them—Showing them getting uther littel boy | with Marguerite Clark, is the new aboard their trains to the father & mother talked over| He had ser ia scoute all Over | headline photopiay which was pla: South. This is a great big feature, and while willie was packing up his|New England to her. TheY/ed on the Rex bill Monday. It is a you don’t want to miss it. grip & they desided it wood be best| were looking for the “sweetest” Famous Players production of Mar to let him have a taste of running | Young girl in the land, and Fox said | Twain's widely read romance. Mar away trom home #0 when willie|they found her. June Caprice look®| guertte plays a dual role | came down stares his dad says to|and acts like Mary Pickford | ee 6 | him, willie, 1 am sorry that you oe | PRODUCER HAS LEAD PART | feal you ought to go away but !|LEAPS FROM AIRSHIP sring Smith.” et the will give you my pocketbook which Fdna Goodrich attracted big a ten parts. It i has sum money in it so you wont! giences to the Coliseum Sunday ment of the picture. | be broke when she opened in “The Mak! the Coliseum the first | willie took the pocketbook &/of Maddalena which she takes ast week yn Holmes started for the door the part of an Italian artist's model J. P. MeGowar the fea.| his mother & dad watched » \ Her fight with the villain Is a stren abe 4 Be ty Mr. McGowan, who thrugh the winder & he hustled off | vous The L-Ko comedy, “Pi-| directed plays for about 1-2 a block @ then|rates of the Air,” is a daring melo y. In stopped & then came back & érama. The leading woman leaps ir i eaee vigittece walked into the house & went up| midair from one airship to another Sagi tee’ auala stares to get his tooth brush & white he | then he came back down stares but LIKES TO FLY ee | this time he walked purty slow & Lillian Walket, the star In “The FAIRBANKS IN COMEDY | when he got out side on the porch Ordeal of Elizabeth,” at the Clem The Deserter.” the title of the! he stopped a long time mer, fs an expert swin a g004d | five-part er-foature 2 a purty soon, willie opened the|rider, a {kes to cruise around the Libert th Char in door and slid pa way into the Southern California in an aero jesding le. is one « > house plane gest productions o | he said, dad, if {am going to run| The movie actors call her “Dim-| Thomas H. Lace away aloan hadnt | better take ma | ples.” ne nam ts her. Miss The art Mr. Ra with me yures resp. Walker's dimples have been help play is hea P. &.—he dident run away becans!stage and movie managers for five brotherly love to he started to cry & his ma ran to/or six years back again him & then his pa did & they all| In the fall of 1913 she was elect-|8"d Reasie Love are seen for the called it off ‘ed queen of the Coney Island Mar-| first time Joining the Tri Cena : Oe cea .|angle company in a tworeel com-| od titled “The Mystery of x Fish Leaplt SHE’S “THE GIRL WITH THE PERFECT RIBS” ets *) HAS ISLAND ATMOSPHERE Boils and Benetol Ointment used as ke the germs that cause bolls and carbuncles. No germ ean live re Benetol is our- self of bolls, carbun cone. ma and other skin bles with Benetol. Get a bottle of Benetol and a jar of Beneto! Ointment, tse them as directed, and see the re markably quick res 2 will ob tain Beneto all drugeiste Caw ene For any desired re garding Benetol 5 aa dress The Benetol Co., Benetol Bldg., Minneapolis Laborers Wanted WAGES ON SHIPS: 50c Straight Time 75¢ Overtime WAGES ON DOCKS: 40c Straight Time 60c Overtime Free Board and Lodging. APPLY AT DOCKS or 549 CENTRAL BLDG, SEATTLE Waterfront Employers’ Union The Heart of a Child,” at the Mission, is a play of English so-| |elety, the stage and 1 from the] jums. For atm eric effects, | quaint English autiful scenery magnificent mansions. juil highlands, the way of the e, the je of the siume in ndon nhabitant his Frpeneet ion saat cing it ie| My Dear Miss Grey: A recent if My Old Dutch,” w 4 ;correspondent of yours asked if she hi ome time aa na Fiu./might remove her rose bushes and grath, to whom the lead female [plants from rented property. My role was given, takes the part of first thought was: Thou shalt have jno other gods before me. My sec the waif. . ond was Oh, for a larger under standing of the wonderful principle of SYMBIOSIS—that socialistic co operation realized between dissim: ilar organisms, that giving of health, happiness and joy in con. |junction, And roses are the high Jest expression of symbiosis, whose chiefest appeal lies in its utter op. |position to PARASITISM—earth's |greatest shadow—the canker eating at the heart of human happine | Roses seem to reflect the “smiles of God.” Why be greedy with any jof God’s bountiful belongings? Roses could never be just OURS, unless we builded high fences around them and then their perfume would be come symbolic in rebuke. We are loved and remembered by what we are, ourselves reflect, and not by our possessions. Nor by our puerile devotion to parasitic pets Possession’s danger lies in its chief attribute—greed, Greed is a broth er to false pride. False pride is mercerized self-opinion. We are best loved in proportion to our sym biotic power of commingling so cially. Specialists in Painless Dentistry ave made Pain tracting at ~— Di _ Nothing beautiful is easier grown in Seattle than roses. So why not ‘ your correspondent beautify her MARGARET EDWARDS Alaminetisn and opneiltelion(fl present home, and all cthere she CHICAGO, July 10.—Girla! Would{their ribs out of shape with tight ee 2 . may Inhabit, leaving them to charm you acquire perfect tibet akirt bands and corset National Painless Dentists§ and cheer future tenants, ever a Listen, then, to Miss Margaret “Live naturally, bring every Fourth Ave. and Pike St. worthy reflection of her real self? Edwards, called “the girl with the muscle of the body to its nor She may “slip” her choicest plants, perfect rib mal development, keep clean, = —\or, better still, buy new ones. The Nature put my ribs in the right) keep well. When we do all SUNESr inti Moat, Joy of watching over the new ones place, and | kept them where she this I’ll no longer be THE girl | exceeds all the older bushes can put ther n ties Edwards, tr with the perfect ribe—I'll just * * give. The writer has planted vines, ng to explain wh er ribs are at be A girl with ‘em.” ving roses and dahlias (of her own) by et the tention of the world T yerfect r that to the hundreds to bloom for others, i fl eo “perfect rib he “ate and that in itself reflects a joy the j | love beauty of line and color he stomach ordered exer Jand couldn't bear to be misshapen, cised daily, and dtd not eat cake or [could not give. most. women Pp. Mi as are who squeeze| candy, initial bow to Seattle yesterday scored an instantaneous suc- lighted crowds that packed the house all day, this winsome lit- William Fox has told her he will make her the most famous film star in the world inside of a year, and judging by the way she starts off he will not have much trouble to make good. “Caprice of the Pictures of our soldier boys who have Showing them in camp at Grey, don't ever let ask permission to call? Makes a star made her She theatre. from the de- once “won a people of this it’s one of the Lister leave for the CAPRICE Big Hit Selig-Tribune Weekly—A Mighty Good Comedy— A Mutt and Jeff Animated Cartoon Altogether one of the best, if not THE best, programs to be found in Seattle MANAGER SMYTHE SAYS: I have never seen a better picture than “Caprice of the Mountains.” I predict a Caprice, for certainly a sweeter, more winning and attractive little lady never was shown on the screen. _ ES STRAND Second Avenue, Between Spring and Seneca The Perfectly Ventilated Theatre any of us become a Hetty (Greed) | Green—in roses, or anything else, especially money—“the emptiest wealth man possesses,” as Lester Ward says, and Ward, scientist, will be long remembered after Hetty Green is forgotten, Are not Tho- reau, rose lover, Emerson and Mrs. Eddy today tenderly loved by mill ions, while this generation couldn't name the richest man of their day? As roses reflect symbiosis, they also are the finest symbol! of social justice—equal opportunity. MINNIE B, FRAZIER. A.—I think your thought is beau tiful, and am glad you have given it to the readers Q.—Please tell me if you think there is any excuse for a business firm to open an employe’s mail when it is addressed in care of the firm? L. D. G. A.—-No reputable business firm would do i except by mistake There is no penalty for “opened by mistake As you know, this often happens. Unless plainly marked “Pereonal,” it is a ver easy matter for a letter intended for an individual to be opened by a careless clerk in charge of the of fice mail Q.—Should a gift be taken when attending an engagement party? If 80, to whom and in what manner should it be presented? Should one offer congratulations to the en gaged pair? RUTH A.—It is usual to send a gift one is not obliged to do so. It best to send the present home of the young woman the time set for the party, Ye: should congratulate the man and express good Wishes for the girl tho is to the before Q.—I am afraid that thru my ig norance | have disregarded some of wrong to call a girl by phone tol When call- CYNTHIA GREY’S ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS _ ing. may | ask to call again, or should she invite me? When walk-, ing with a girl, should | walk at her right side or her left? ANXIOUS TO KNOW. A—It is right to use the phone make an engagement to call. You should ask permission to call, otherwise she may think you do not care to do so. Walk on the outside of the walk, or where you may best shield the girl from dan ger Q.—! am my husband’s second wife, and wherever we go, he con stantly talks of his first wife. Rel- atives and friends have remarked about it. When | object, he says he knows it is embarrassing, but it won't happen again. But when the first opportunity comes, he is as bad as ever. Shall | leave him out right, or would it be better to hire some one to run the house and go out and work and be independent? UNHAPPY. A..-Don't do anything as either of the so foolish you pro: courses pose. Your husband does not mean to slight you. He simply got the habit when his first wife was liv ing, and if you are patient he will soon substitute you and your good deeds for her Q.—! am 20 years old and in love with a girl two years younger.| About a week ago | saw her out with another young man, and it hurt me more than | can say. She} thinks it is all right for her to have other company, but not for me to| do the same. Is this on the square? FRANCIS, has a perfect company promise A.—Kach of right to hav there is no tween you you other bond of To be exactly as be each privi sq the of you has same sng {Possession of all of them together|the rules of etiquet. Is it right or|leges Q—Will you please advise me if great future for June my boy is an American citizent. § am a British subject, my wife an American, and my son was born in | America, and his name recorded In the American courthouse at the time of birth, A READER. A—Your son is a fullfledged American Anybody can get along with single-track mind—if it has plent of switches. REAL SENSATIONS Promseid by Mae Weston’s “GIRL REVUE” —IN— “A NIGHT —IN A— CABARET” OTHER SHOWINGS CHARLIE CHAPLIN In Our Latest Comedy “The Police Officer” “PEG O’ THE RING” Seventh Hippodrome THEATRE Third and Cherry EUGENE LEVY, Mgr. Instaliment

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