The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 25, 1916, Page 3

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LAST qw WEEK 42 Packages Staple and Fancy Groceries Worth $7.50—Absolutely FREE! With Every BUCK’S ws: RANGE Your choice of any Range in the YOUR OLD STOVE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE The $7.50 Grocery Premium Off. ring Closes Saturd: Added to customers’ counts any time without the usual first payment. ac- WE CHARGE NO INTEREST M.A.GOTTSTEIN| FURNITURE CO. SEATTLE: S POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS | SECOND AVE., bh iWEEN PIKE AND PINE | BLaters To Cunthin, Grey STAR—MONDAY, y “tam a married woman with!overcome, will you kindly let me a baby girl 2 years old | am working out and having a lady take care of my baby | have a good home and every thing | want, but | am not a bit satlefied with life, and it just eseme 1 can't stay home and keep hou like other women, | just want to go around with other fellows and have a good time, I don’t want to stay home, and it some | am more dissatisfied every day. | want a divorce and to be But my husband Is so good to me; he just cries and begs me to atay home and care for my baby. He even promised to get me more furniture if | would etay home, but | don't care anything at all for him, » Mise Grey, say something that really will help me, for, God knows, | am in need of advice. WANDERLUST A.~You ask me to say something that will really help you, I only wish T might, but you are the only one on earth who can help yourself, jand you must save yourself from yourvelf, I do not believe you are different from other normal young women, Inasmuch as you wish to go about a great deal, meet new faces and cultivate the society of young men. But you are different from some young women to the extent that you do not look far enough in to the future to see your doom. Evidently, you know little of the true nature of man. He fs ever in lsearch of youth and beauty, Should you leave your husband and go your own way, the path of pleasure would extend over only a few short quainted with him. |years—after them, what? Many, Many years of heartaches and re- |mrets. Fallacious pleasure always |demands its price Believe me when T tell you you do not know when you are well off JA good husband, a happy home, and la little child are the moat precious | jsifts that God ever gave woman. | Alas, that you have not enough of the true spirit of womanhood in you to appreciate them! ou | There comes a time in the life of pent to visit relativ every one of us when we are almost! panied by any other person? Ww. Joverwhelmed with discontent— when our surroundings are practi cally unbearable drop our work and hie away in pur. suit of diversion, the result? The only way ever to work that is xiven you to do, do it well, with a glad heart and a cheery jamile. The road you propose to follow will lead you to the land of |Nowhere. Better turn back, girl, before it’s too late. bashful | cannot speak to a rt. | What ie the cause of bashfuiness, and If there is any way it can be but should We rules for the engaged couple. can you imagine | jt overcome discontent is to do the|chaperone if she must know as soon as possible. | will anxiously await your answer in The LARRY really self this state or fear of Bashfulness in jousnens, Unually by timidity critietam or of failure, He becomes morbidly sensitive to the opinion | of others, and imagines that he does |B nothing right. The cure is, of | cour olf-confidence But do not long, as many bashful per and strive so hard to ap pear sure of yourself tYat you make yourself offensive in your manner The opposite of timidity is some times that of bravado, ‘This te far from the real confidence In yourself which puts you entirely at ease. It ie far better to remain bashful to a certain extent than to rush to the other extreme none do, Q.—Will you kindly print a recipe for prune conserve, or tell where | can find same? you. A.—-Following pounds of prunes oranges pound of raisins, ‘4 pound of wal nuts; 4 pounds of sugar, Squeeze the juice from oranges, put pulp and peel thru food chopper, with | raising and prunes, add juice and sugar and until thick Add! chopped nuts sinutes before re moving the orve from the fire.) | Q—I am a girl, 15 years old, and| am interested in a boy of 17 to/ whom | have never been introduced, altho he lives in my home town. Ple. tell me how | can get ac-! VIDA towna in the recipe cook A.—Residents of small usually do not have to walt before meeting all the other de able persons there. It is not b ing tn a girl, however, to make any effort to meet boys. Hetter put the |thought out of your mind and enjoy the friendship of your present ac qualutances, long ir om: | Q.—le it Improper for an engaged to take a night boat when unaccom- A.—There is no confirme must use thelr own discretion, But is customary for an unmarried woman be accompanied by a travel at) night with a man Ha as bod PT Q—My son left home for Eastern trip in February. | have not heard from him during the past! month. | sometimes think he h To| Da grit str am very prejudiced against it. whom shall | write to find out? A MOTHER Your suspicion is a j alle A natural) SEPT. 25, 1916. PAGE } DOINGS IN FILMDOM SLA DO PAPAL LLL LLL SAI IIIS 'NEWS—NOTES - ~GOSSIP Wm. &. Hart, In “The Dawnmaker,” at Liberty ROGRAMS TODAY TY—William Lockwood te M—Clare Kimball Young ty of D Faroum LIBERTY Never before rt drawn to # he did all erty, where h yer in “The Dawnmaker,” t super-feature has afi might wnmaker m North uggle between exiance. It is a poetic chronicling a and rac the adv love ecites diences is the featured ve of the frozen | Joined the army, and does not ‘eat | North where man loves and rules | Q—I am 19 years old, and s80|me to know it, because he knows 4) 5¥ right of primal “The tale of the mighty tal or one, and yet it does not seem that| res of a half-breed Indian, a man | wood wnd May Allison in the stel- { B . Inelves to emotional drama and per sonal grace and charm that are ef fective in screen work. Her play fs powerful. It keeps on at the Coliseum until Wednesday night. ee CLEMMER Mister 44," with Harold Lock lar roles, is the attraction at the Clemmer This is | productions ular stars of the finest which these pop- ever appeared. There a alth of beautiful and | wonderfully picturesque mountain | scenes, where much of the action takes place, There are glimpses of elty life in the factory district and among the slums, while in striking ntrast are scenes enacted at an exclusive country club, in which | |scores of prominent society folk jactually participated | . one in have | STRAND | One look at huge Willard Louis, of the FROZEN NORTH—AS GRIPPING — AS UNUSUAL AS A BRET HARTE STORY! © Our Keystone Cocktail is « merry mixture of good nature, contagious comedy and laughable Mack Swain. The Columbia Highway —that marvelous scenic auto route up the famed Columbia River. Until Wednesday Night Only First at Pike—Continuous, 11 to 11—Matinees 10c — Evenings 15¢; Children 5e who appears on the screen in |"Fires of Conscience,’ at the rand, will convince any one that in whose veins runs the blood of |two races and in whose intelligent mind surges an ambition to uplift your son would do this, It is more| likely he has been #0 engrossed in his trip that he does not reali one Valencia oranges dos Wenatchee and Yakima | Pears Pork, 4 a | Selling Prices to Retailer for | Butter, Eggs and Cheese i na Batier . 20-1 erate Florida, erate. Rhubarh. Tomatoes, ‘Turnips Watermel local Jocat 20-1b. bx. Wenatchee Grav Local cooking “arpiee. | Jettens e }Ontans, yetto Onto Watts fiver ima Geme Bwent potat ‘CHEAP RATES FOR ~, Cat mn, local la. "xe rm Wisconsin twins 12.09 @25.00 Young America . Fo e+4 16.00 @rT 90 Kelect ranch sees 269 April case - Country Hay and Grain (Prices paid producer) Alfalfa Mo. 1 Betta Washington oi Puget sound cats Special one and one-third rates | will prevail on all railroads from points in the Northwest to Seattle during the Northwest Land Prod ucts exposition, which will begin at the Arena October 4 Samuel Collyer, chairman of the executive committee irging ex hibitors to arrange for their entries jat once. October 7, it was decided, will be Dairy day. EARL OF ESSEX DIES NEWMARKET, Eng., Sept. 25 The Ear! of Essex was found dead | today. Eastern W ‘compressed timothy 25.00 @s708 Beans, green, per ax, per | | CHARLIE CHAPLIN |Marie Dressler | Chester Conklin | Mabel Normand New Copy The Funniest Key stone Comedy Ever § Made j 6 ACTS | Your Last Chance AMERICA’S GREATEST MATINEE !DOL AND CHARMING MAY ALLISON “Mister 44° is the nick- name the girl uses in ex pressing the measurements of her ideal man A bigger and better pic ture than any in which you have ever seen these two popular favorites. PATHE WEEKLY Spanish Pyrenees Tropical Birds CLEMMER Seattie’s Best Photeplay House Cs ip sew tS 1917 MODEL « LAND SHOW HERE — ° MARGIE ENVIES ANNIE, WHO GIVES BIRTH TO A BOY; MARGARET ANN REJOICES —- J It was like Annie to arrange send little Margaret ia brother. Margaret beanty, and this morning, quisite. Ann is a radiant in her excited state she was perfectly ex gie, Margaret Ann,” I said. “You haven't been to see me for ages. No,” she answered, “but see, Aunt Margie, I had to stay home and take care of dad while mother went to the hospital pick out a baby. The angels must have brought a fine batch last time, for mother has been able to get a hummer of a little brother for me.” “Merey, kttow you Margaret Ann, don't you must not talk slang. jeven when ordinary words fall you in describing little brother?” "That's what dad calls him when he doesn't say ‘little cuss.’ | Alte laughed as I groaned Worse and more of it! Little Margaret Ann's face grave, and she said I've come here to ask thing. “Go ahead, dear child.” Jo you think there is any mis. take about little brother?” “Why, honey, what in the world do you mean “Well, you see, when I went over to Aunt Eliene’s to achool yester- day, I told Pudge and Toddy that 1 had a little baby brother, and they asked me where we got it, and sald mother told me God sent hen that horrid Toddy ‘TM bet it fsn't yours! hen he explained Don't you remember, yester- when we met Willie Standish in the park, and he told us his lit tle brother waa put in the ceme- |tery? Didn't his mother say God |took him? ‘Well, don't you see, Ann? That same night you a little brother. } you've got Willle’s baby Do you think I have, No, dear, your ver: not allow laughter. babies Before the child left I gave her a note to Annie, I had written | “Again the great miracle of life has come to you, dear Annie. I am happy for you, and I must con fess I am @ little nervous, too, But |I may yet feel the dear little head jof a child on my breast. “In your happiness, dear, will you not spare a hope that it will |be so? I shall try to see you be fore you are out of the hospital, for, Annie, I can walk a little al jready, and you may be sure the first visit I make will be to you the friend of my girlhood who has never failed me.” (To be continued) | grew you some- sald, Margaret God sent >w Aunt Mar gle own,” my ‘God T said, face to never and I did register mixes |since Rumania de Come right here to Aunt Mar-|Russian detachments you | |retain the Initiative. your little brother 1a} Ann to mejans have halted the Teutonic inva with the news of the birth of a|sion on their northwes land have taken the o! to}in the fighting Aunt Margie, /of all the countries at war are giv n’l¢ | | | of the alli jing firms how long it has been since he wr Write first to all the ad-) * he has given you, and to wii]! the points he (ntended to cover, put ting return address on your en velope. If you still wish to do so. write to the war department, Wash ington, D. C., marking your en velope to show it fs an inquiry | Col about recruits tur not ale Hu len pla co wonderful dark THE RUMANIANS = ROME, & | Russian detachments, Reinforced the Rumani by rn frontier, | naive at Vul-| can pass | Russian troops now fighting | Transylvania for tt st time] fared war. Some are even ported as far west as Orsova In Dobrudja, the battle is grow-| ing less violent, but the Rumantans are re The allies have suffered a reverse| east of Vardar, in| Macedonia, but on both wings are pressing forward. A fierce battle is going on south of Kenali, where the Serbians attacking strong of Bulgarian defenses, bar. way to Monastir BAZAAR FOR ALLIES For the relief of the widows and orphans left by soldiers and sailors 1 armies, 4 bazaar is to be held in the ena on Octo |ber 17, 18 and 19 d women A Men ing most of their time and devoting all their energies toward collecting thousands of dollars’ worth of use- ful and rare articles for disposal at the bazaar. Many valuable articles, from art treasures, valuable books and beautiful china to electric! stoves and other housekeeping ad. functs, have been donated by lead ranging SUES HOTEL MAN FOR HEART BALM 1 UCILA oH TQMENS Nalin 4 Miss Tompkins, ward Yale, 7i, w er of Stanfordville, » 000, charging breach of promise She says she will testify regarding a violent courtship and produce love letters, { Cc brothers, Its 4 in the frozen territory daon Bay country and da magtificent rm red oh to LISEUM lara Kimball Young {s at iseum in a motion picture f ‘The Dark Silence,” but it same girl who was here is theatre a few years a develor ” halr and eyes, features that lend the aslve Y oO U N G is a hit at the COLISEUM in “THE SILENCE” Until Wednesday Other Big Things Too! 15c Children 5c Loge Seats 30c scenes are of the thereby the the en in at £0. ped ith ex “mm e is @ man who must ha of the best bass voices in the coun tr A big, husky fellow, with « heayy chest, he is able to put al most three hundred pounds behind the lung power, which was one of| | his finest assets when be worked on the stage. | But Willard Louis's voice was not bass. It was a high soprano |whon the actor first began his ca jreer. He sang tn one of the prin- cipal churches of San_ Francisco! when he was § years old, and he was known for one of the clearest soprano voices on the Pacific Coast. COLONIAL A synopsis of the story of “The Folly of Desire,” now at the Colo-) nial, follows Simson Krillet, a Boer, wedded the penniless Deborah, to the dis gust of his family. He is a re- ligious maniac To this household came Robert Waring, seeking forgetfulness of | home in England, wrecked by his wife, a morphine maniac. | But Krillet took away the books given her by the Englishman, who could stand it no longer, and inter-| fered in such a determined man-) ner that the Boer was convinced! t his wife had been untrue to| |bim and determines to kill her, A} bullet fired by a devoted slave saves her, but it looks as tho the Englishman had shot Krillet is shown not to be the case Englishman forgives his erring wife on her deathbed and devote | his life to the modern Shulamite. loLass A Robert Pennington, a young New Yorker, falls with Eugenia Blondeau, a girl from | the woods of Canada, who is a guest of her aunt, Mrs. Allison, in} New York, in “Pennington's| Choice,” at the Class A Sugenia jloves him, but will not marry him until he has proven himself a man” in the eyes of her father, Jules Blondeau, Pennington agrees to go to the fastnesses of the adian woods for the test. Eu. nia gives him a letter to her fa- ther and tells him about her sis- ter, Marie, who is her twin, and looks exactly like her. Unknown to Robert, she hurries home, arriy- ing there ahead of him, How the plot works out to a hap- | py ending is handled in a remark ably clever style. . wealthy in love} REX Their first stop is at a cabaret, where Tillie takes the first drink of her young life. Things go alor smoothly until they are disturbed by a pretty young damsel, named Mabel, who has followed them since their arrival in the big city She turns out to be Charlie's city jgirl, and he, on getting hold of the money t Tillie kept on her per. |son, leaves with her. The above is part of the story of \“Tilie’s wunctured the Rex. | MISSION ® |. An allstar “ast of film players, headed by Anna Little and Frank | Borzage, and which include Harvey | |Clark, Laura Sears, Perry Banks, |Jack Richardson (filmdom's most | noted villain), will be seen at the | Mission Wednesday night tonly, in Land o' Lizards,” a five-part cial feature. ‘Those | who saw “Jack” at this theatre, with the same stars, will know what to expect in this picturiza- | tion, as it surpasses anything these capable characters have inter- preted heretofore. For the screen- ing of this fivepart feature, the entire company was transported for a period of several weeks to the hilly regions of northern Ari- zona, The striking background furnished by this location, the rocky passes, the splendid trees, the hills and valleys form a set+ ting of almost unrivaled beauty. A News Pictorial completes. the pro- gram. SECOND AVE., BETWEEN SPRING AND SENECA WILL FEATURE FOR FOUR DAYS ONLY DAY: AND WILLIAM FARNUM AS A FUGITIVE FRON JUSTICE TWO SEATTLE GIRLS IN CAST NELL SHIPMAN WHO STARRED IN GOD'S COUNTRY AND THE WOMAN AND LITTLE FRANCES KIERMAN or 1919 SRD AVE. W. R o a ( » WE ELIAM FOX ROQUCTION; Impelled by the faith of a woman, returns to the scene of his crime and gives himself over to the law. The father of the man he had murdered sits in judgment on the slayer. But he asks for a verdict of acquittal, IN HIS LATEST AND BEST SIX-ACT PHOTOPLAY FIRES OF CONSCIENCE TODAY—MUSICAL NUMBERS BY FRANZ ADELMANN’S BOHEMIAN CONCERT ORCHESTRA Traviata, Screiner ....... -Romvack . Brahms .wrigo Joyses, Wienna Hungarian Dances Serenade .... Franz ‘Adeimann

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