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Pretty, By the Master English LOUISE HUFF (ESTELLA the Peer of All Writers A Rollicking Farce The Brainstorm Starting Fifth and Pike Faithfully Reproducing the Atmosphere of Delicious Romance Which Made Him 3 DAYS We Now Turn Back the Hands of Time Demure Louise Huff Jack Pickford In the Quaint Old English Romance “Great Expectations” Grand of all Novelists CHARLES DICKENS Today 15c—Children 5c Continuous 11 to 11 COLISEUM Presenting Mary's Brothe “Pip JACK PICKFORD just my; luck to have to sit down by a young lady, which, | suppose, lis very good luck, but | am of an or feet. When this occurs, is it proper wants to know 1 sit down and th tation about something, or just! keep looking straight ahead, with! my hands foided? This sometim happens to me , when | go into a theatre and sit wn by a young lady, who is the ly one in the row. It is my de hg in getting good ats like Ple. fSe, but | can’t get crust enough say anything. ( ward in the end, and joys that her situation. Nice girls do not start conversations, or pick up chance acquaintances with strange men tn public places. When you are seat ed by a young lady, if you can con ceive the idea that she is so inter ested fn her own affairs and ap pearance that she perhaps does not even notice whether you are a man or woman, it will relieve you ot some of your self-consciousness | honestly and fal | H f the || Dear Miss Grey: Not one o e living, jelly girte? gone? Has the girl who h: o Cunthin. Gi why good, ; | peace, an = ct iy VIRTUOUS GIRL OUT OF DATE? . lextremely bashful nature, and usu- Has the desirable man ceased to seek her in marriage? ally/don’t know where to put my | A girl who doesn't want you to quote hackneyed “don'ty jolly girls must waste their for me to say something to her as! lives without a man’s companionship Cynthia asks start a conver. ) readers to answer Dear Cynthia Grey: Ie the day of the “nice” girl forever gone thru the melting pot of mod ern society, and retained her virtue, no chance for the pleasures ister, who has stepped out into the highways and byways always managed to get? Miss Grey, | pray you DON’T expound on the theory that only goodness and virtue in womanhood gains the true re for | (and many other girls) can give you nu rly, why Thanking you and wishing you merous cases of clean, fine girls and women who are and have success, | remain N.R. |) been for years wearing their lives out in some sort of work, who A—it is a fortunate thing for never know the pleasure of a man’s companionship. On the you that you haven't “crust other hand, everywhere about us we see the other girls, who enough to speak to the young la have deliberately and with eyes wide open to the consequences, dies. Your lack of nerve has saved taken the broader highway thru life you from mary an embarrassing We see them going to theatres, dances, games—everywhere that any normal girl longs to go. with exactly the kind of men we have a right to know, and, eventually, this same sort of a girl ALWAYS marries the most desirable type of man. So far as | am personally concerned, any girl who repents her mis deeds has my utter respect and sympathy if she truly redeems herself. But to see, all around me, these girls, who deliberately continue to lead the sort of life neither you nor | can sanction then to see them invariably gain what Is the heart's desire of those of us who try faithfully to live cleanly—it isn't right, it can't be right, and | for one vehemently resent this condition Don't quote me Scripture, or “copy book don’ it? Why don’t men want clean * but tell me, 7 Are we euch bores? Or is “virtue truly Its man answers to “Ruth” as to)) vhs ‘ahether poverty will kill love has |) ONLY reward”? REBEL struck at the vital point. ( A—Are “Rebdel’s” statements true in regard to all communi It all depends on what you are,|/ ties and classes? Or are her assertions overdrawn because eco both the man and the woman } homie conditions have compelled her to live in an environment if the man lets his inability to which will not permit her to meet desirable men? Do the major {ty of our worth-while men spurn the companionship of virtuous provide for his family make him morose, discouraged, repellant and unlovable, love will surely die. For) ene must be lovable to be loved je may be respected and even ad. red for his honesty, or goodn é he will not be loved unless able. ful of baubles? this! Concise le bitter and rebellious and unloving, love will also dle, for you cannot Jove unless you are loving. Thus, if poverty kills love, It may be the fault of either or both the husband or wife. | used to wonder what “more | than conquerors” meant. Poverty, | eee Rolfe umnea if Pocahontas Smith. A.—The celebri Pocahontas, j like “Ruth's” taught me the mean- a ing. Our lives certainly are a true 3 reflection of our thoughts. If we| Dear Miss Grey: 2 Swell on our disappointments, ithe letters in regar 3 ‘| ‘ SHANGHAI 4 RESTAURANT - Let’s try a meal at the Shanghai today. They al- ways serve delicious Lunch and Dinner for less Money. Excellent service and foods. Most exquisite Chinese and American Eating Palace on the Coast. The finest Chop Suey and Noodles. 106 Second Avenue So. (Near Yesler) Half Block South from the Smith Buliding \ tters —————— if a woman lets poverty, and the|4i31. ang hardships, we will In- |tion of poverty, | would like to say | Y _sord, rasping privations make her | deed ‘be unioving and uniovable MRS. F Q.—Please tell me, thru your col- married John ANXIOUS. ated Indian married Jobn After reading d to the ques to the point, will be printed girls, to marry the ones who barter their womanhood for a hand Miss Grey would like to know what the readers think about |a few words. | | All of these people who bemoan | #0 bitterly their fate should read |Hunter’s book entitled “Poverty,” |also Upton Sinclair's book entitled “A Cry for Justice,” also the book, |“The Jungle,” by Sinclair. If you wish to read more, read the book entitled “Woman, in the Past, Pres. | ent and Future,” by August Bebal.| | assure you that any one of these books will convince any sane person the folly of being poor. If it were not for poverty, would and could the U. 8. support one million | unfortunate women? Seventy-five | per cent of all crimes committed are traceable to poverty. The ques tion Is, what makes poverty? Why hare we poor, we who are doing and are willing to do anything honor able for a living? One word ex plains it—PROFIT, The rich buy the poor for profit. Those who do| all of the work have nothing. And those who do nothing have every-| thing. It's a fact. The w. woman washes silks and wears rags. The men who make fine homes live in cheap shacks. Government ownership would do away with profit, and give us all a square deal. Therefore, | beg, yes, | implore you, to work for govern.| ment ownership of everything. | A SUBSCRIBER. i— we It pays to read The Sta 3 sad Page. STAR—THURSDAY, JAN, 25, 1917, PAGE PIPPI AAK ‘NEW S° Jack Pickford and Louise Muff, in .GHAMS TODAY an Walker to weekly STRAND Keefe in othe X—Mery Pickford and ti weed Ie “Tess of the Country”) Matt and Jeff comedy toon MISSION—Willard Mack and Mary The Bdge of the Abyna') ASS A —Vila Malt CLEMMER iiitan Walker, alia ng on Sunday and pr 4 sosem jLIGERTY Ful hing labeled Starting Today THE EDGE OF THE ABYSS A society play by C Gardner Sullivan, runs the gamut of emotion » its sensational devel opment, graceful in its beautiful social ensem bles, strong In its in terest compelling situ- ations, magnificent in ite superb staging and all-star cast Mary Boland Willard Mack Robert M’Kim, Frank Mills First Time Ever Shown in Seattle Fourth, Pike and Union Continuous 11 to 11 SSION Ten Cents Any Seat Any Time DOINGS IN FILMDOM NO TES G OSSIP’ iration”) musion! comedy *« to the Clemmer Thursday| threeday visit in “Indiscre-| Lillian (in the pletare) delight » shock the villagers by going fish he thru the town barefooted. After @ se sion at boarding school she slightly reformed. Later peared | liead to « crisis tn the life of the|tation of Charles Dickens’ novel, | Nicholson, full of mystery, would-be ne eee Sas harum-scarum girl, but she emerges|with Jack Pickford and Louise/Khosts, shudders and what not, and —~ ~aeaedeaata| [the thousand tapers from which the appeals to the masses—-because it surpasses 3 Days Starting Today FLOWER GIRL A delicately colored romance—as fanciful and delightful as the dainty flowers our little heroine sold, sta- ring BESSIE LOVE A new comedy, together with a scenic “From Gibraltar to Algeria,” complete the picture program “Ses “Great Expectations,” Coliseum tdrama we and ¢ EAL MU: , Wortrzer! Rex PICTURES First at Pike—Continuous 11 to 11—Mat- inees 10c—Evenings 15c—Children 5c. where he i and performs an ¢ popular man on ing the railroad piral iw at Ob ance of the we | “The Rail Rider has Peters for its star Leena " pease oLAse A : Pees MOTHER’ ver mother. Instantly his fiat ne ouse of a usand went forth. Th lcouiseum Candles,” adapted from the novel rected to stop all aumbting aon adap-|of the same name, by Meredith * ggar otedda tations.” an | Huff, Great Expectations” entaile th adventures of “Pip, [te raeen ters om week the 'SLAV FORTS FALL epee itn 2s—orhe! BEFORE GERMANS ‘oneneant, of the | igar store dice games have made tha inneie | boy a gambler. He had $200 in ; RD vier: a the ery Of/the bank six months ago. Now he| BERLIN, via Sayville, Jan. 25.— the rest of the Week . VANCOL Harry Mestay hi inlaw b to flee ar ce ped « ee has nothing. Every cent has been/ Capture of Russian fort postons of to h : him semey COLONIAL cen out bi play army and navy"| more than six miles extent, with 14 vat p” ts ahield-/ COL : : : j and with the dice, and all his) crpicers Wh Weston went salary has gone the same way. He fficery 0 men and 13 machine ead « her's opery has giv nothing for his board| S88, Was announced by the Ger ed oe jin all that time. 1 implore you,|™an official statement today from PR ronce your worship, to do something to| Prince Leopold's front, on both 7 curse leectée) him independ make a deligt Mary's father bad trusted! ‘This was the letter Mayor Mc-|°° picture nag ys Mar cuuoink bs Beath found on his desk at the city| If success came as easy as colds | ar ae Big Dosis =: 1 |ball this morning from a Vancou-|—-OH! BOY! MISSION tut the best laid plans gang af -_ The Edge of the A a Ka ale and Mary cantfe into h own nas Bee Triangle prod will be Her Soul's Inspiration” ts the] the feature at the Mission for eof the play, Ella Hall stars. | Now balance the eek, Wi ot tia | Playing Mack, a actor and playwright | REX | Capacity Robert McKim, Mary| Wh s of the Storm Coun-| Thig ank Mills handle thet the Rex Oring | Week Ma 1, Only are n e plainly ap | {| pare rhe ma al dapse \ erfly, tho we can't see that she is eve man who, seeing the little] BREAKS A COLD tri Jeff" comedy con HER FAMOUS DR. SAVERY TO TALK First Dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” Relieves All iety, a Grippe Misery I Don't stay stuffed-up! aii Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound taken every two bours foxes are taken will misery and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or | limbs. | It promptly opens clogged-uy \nostrils and air passages; stops nasty discharge or nose running relieves sick headache, dullness rishness, sore throat, sne 6 and stiffness Cold Compound” is tt quickest, surest relief known jcosts only 26 cents at drug stores Jit acts without assistance, taste nice, and causes no inconvenience Don't accept a substitute [Taam Br wr | For Stiff ‘Neck teur ly an's Liniment with-| Chance Anita Stewart out rabble to the sore leaders| T° IN , | See / and the pain will soon be re-| Fe |” “THE GIRL ioe : | Picture | ” or rheumatic aches, neural-| Millions PHILIPPA! gia, gout, lumbago, bruises, | Have COMME SUNGAY trai prait and muscl eae CLEMMER stiffness, ha t bottle handy.| Quickly penetrate and othe et alt tee te all druggis’ 2 he 50 and B Bh i dy Sh © «nd Greatest eh CHILDREN 5c LOGE SEATS 25¢ __ De Sloans Brand Third Ave, Near Pike FILLS PAIIY | SER