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Matinee | Tomorro Last day in which to see this greatest of photo- play triumphs— will be taken to that chil- dren without guardians are well taken care of. Show starts 11 a. m., 4, 3, 5, 7, 9 p. m. prompt- ly. Due to the peculiar theme and unique intro- duction, you should ar- Special care see Adults ... .15¢ and 25¢ Twelve reels, a Love Story of the Sahara—it is a tale of vast stretches, sweeping horizons, caravans, camels, oases—big, vital mystic things that cannot be encompassed within the walls of a The picture is the story—the scenes recreate the Ori- ental charm of fabled Beni.Mora and the desert—sunlit, barbaric, mystic. | OLIVER G. WALLACE | has arranged a wonderful musical interpretation of { the immortal story on our j First at Pike, Continuous 11 to 11. Admission 1c, COLI SEUM Children 10c. Some seats 25. Loge seats 30c. | OBSERVE FOOD PLAN ing system. Nearly every Amert-|@ ve — can home in London is now re A Noten a ht pay for — stricted to the prescribed four| America’s war at | every LONDON, May 25.—American of bread a week, 245 pounds) pony ee ey Sperty housewives in England are gener t and three-fourths of alg". - ally observing the voluntary ration-| pound of sugar. VERY time you see a man smoking a Fatima, you know he is getting all the comfort possible in a cigarette. STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1917 Cynthia Grey’s ANN 1S PESSIMISTIC Dear Mins Grey: My experience has brought me to the conclusion that there can’t be many men such as “George” in this world. He says he wants decent girls with whom he may have a jolly good time. I'm frankly skeptical, and can you hon ently blame me? After having lived in Seattle all my life, is it too much to expect the companionship of the eligible men of this commu nity? | haven't spent the evening the companionship of a man for six months. | am young, not ugly, and 1 dress well, and | love dancing theatres, books and the firesides (and am more than willing to pro vide my share of the latter), and have no matrimonial designs which might frighten a man away. What keeps them away, then? | know. And #0 do you, Cynthia Grey, and you, “George,” and you, reader, but | have given up expecting any of you three to answer me truthfully The reason | am heartsick and lonely for clean and wholesome amusements and pleasures is be cause I'm decent, and frank, and human. If my body could be bought with a jewel or a good time, I'd be in going any and everywhere with the | sons of the best families, and the husbands and fathers of said fam) ties, too, Mrs, Wife and Mother, in your smug respectability, does that mean anything to you? Mr. Man, I'm beginning to know that it means naught to you. But, girl like me, you know that | speak the truth, Men, you don't want us. Our cleanness and our love and brains bore you. You rant about ideals, but you won't give us a chance to live up to those idea We don't come first with you, but last. As housekeepers and moth. ers, we are considered for the wel fare of your home and the continu: ation of your name—but as compan jons, never, We aren't supposed to have clean red blood in our veins or youth in our hearts, And so, thru the years which should be joyous, we are waiting, waiting, for what never comes ANN THEY'RE LONELY, TOO | Dear Miss Grey: In answer to A Boy"—We are three girls of 17 and 18 years, and of a tittle worldly experience, and we would like to y that “A Boy” should not judge all girls by the ones he hae been accustomed to associate with, as there are lots of lonely Girls like ourselves that would en joy a respectable boy's companion ship My two friends and | think that any boy wishing a good, clean g for an associate cBuld easily find some one not of the type that “A Boy” describes. The main question is: Where and how will boys and girls who Fo desirable qualitie t ac quainted? THREE LONELY GIRLS. |SHE WANTS GOOD TIME Dear M Grey: | think this “Boy of 19." who holds so many! honorary offices high schoo! | should not judge all girls alike, Of| course there are many disgusting girls everywhere you go; but, out) of his years of experience, | |should think he would be able to |find his “Goddess.” Does he expect a girl to go with) a fellow who is a tightwad? And Goes he expect her to stay in all lthe time? Of course, a girl ex- pects a man to spend some money on her when they go out for a} \good time, but she does not usual-| ly need a car. That is exaggerat-| in PAGE 3 The Woman's Army Against Waste Are Your Children Forming Bad Habits of Eating? BY AN EXPERT Have your children been allowed to form unhealthful habits of eat Ing? How many times a week do you allow your child to have an ice cream soda or a nickel’s worth of und Children must have sugar more sugar than adults, but candy hould be @ real Iaxury, not any part of the daily diet, Good food habits are an important t ver sonal t ne and economy, and every 1 ris np eting an im portant duty to her child when she does not inculcate such habits by erving suitable amount nit ible foods to her ebildren, and ex pecting them to eat what is set be fore then It very easy to prejudice child against # certain foc If child hears a mother sa I never eal cheene * dollars to dough buts the child will never eat cheese and thus will be deprived of a spler did 1, as rich in protein ax meat Most foreigners are great cheene eaters, and they usually eat ft in of meat. 1 have in mind a family whieh includes husband wife, son and daughter. The wife did the housework, The family was very fond of griddle cakes for brew but no two members of he household could agree on the kind the housewife and mother sade buckwheat cakes for father cor for won and bread cakes for daughte This’ family wa wasting the most precious thing ng, don't you think so? Boys, just a word of advice: As s00n as you stop expecting us to come all the way to meet you and expecting us to converse like a modern “Cicero,” then and only then will we enjoy your compan lonshio A GIRL DOESN'T WANT MONEY Dear Miss Grey: | am a girl of 19, and | would like to say a few things to “A Boy.” All girls do not look at the boys’ pocket-books. There are lots of girls who would be glad to get acquainted with a boy who does not always try to spend more money on her than the other fellow How often have | longed to have a boy friend who found pleasure in! spending a quiet evening at my home with my parents ard myself. 1 do not care for the fellow who thinks that unless he spends a lot of money on a girl, that she does not have a good time ! much rather go for a nice stroll with a boy friend than a joyride, to a theatre or some such place, altho 1 do enjoy a good show or a dance once in a while. | do not care whether my friends have money to spend on me, so long as they are clean, upright fellows, and there are lote of giris who feel the same To “George” | would say that we | girls cannot distinguish between the boys who mean all right and those who do not, if they try to get ac quainted with us by speaking on the stree other social functions you can be in- troduced. | am sure that George would not think much of a girl who did speak to him on the street with: out having been introduced A GIRL. AVOID TITLE Dear Mise Grey: In reply to the communication signed “A Boy,” | am glad to see a letter whose con-| tents | can conscientiously in corse. | am ten years his senior, | traveled in every large city in| United States, Hawaii and Aus tralia. Girls, beware of the beau brumme! type of man whose flat tering words are full of empty Promises and deception; | have found in their wake scores ot wrecks that make me wonder when we are going to do as we would be done by and not make fools of each other. Nothing will gain the respect and confidence of young men like being reasonable, reserved and re- fined and considerate of his pocket book, for your name will soon be advertised among his companions. You may make him spend hie money, but you will lose his re-| spect and finally his friendship. Most young men will spend al! just to avoid the title of “tight-wad.” And, young men, when we rec | would At church, dances and) they had, had they but known it.| They were wasting the energy and strength of the wife and mother Many children will not ¢ yolk of an exe mother obit gives them the white of her breakfast, when she should make them eat a whole exe Heal hunger finicky, and a little hunger ¥ then is good for a pampered child It will show him that no fe ° be looked upon with disdain I know a home where the cbildrer were taught to eat mea cereals and milk, simply the mother had a preju milk and cereal Hoth parents of these died of Bright's disease the children has succumbed to high | blood pressure; another is full of rheumati»m and toxic poison. One| of these children, grown to woman hood, found that buttermilk was a specific for the apitointoxic which troubled her. When she began to drink it, it almost elf in perfect alth, and drink N great gusto at least a quart of yuttermilk a day, 1 her favorite overage a bateh of oatn es or give him a slice of bread, butter and ugar, Don't send him to the candy | shop with « nickel and jet him buy ar mupowition of glucose and] ukar that pleases his fanc bors Prices to Ketaiiee tor ovate er, Kass sound hay iby b08 n Washington timothy ern Washington double com- pressed timothy 5 eo0s049 (MOTHER SAID _ TRY IT Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve table Compound Cured Mrs. Copner After Doctors Failed Cincinnati, Ohio." want you te know the good Lydia EF. Vegetable Com pound has done for me. | was in such bad health rom female roubles that off had my doc } time, and my wat Lydia E. ham's Vegetable Compound.’ | did a well woman, I on to try Pink am able to do} my housework and am so happy, as |I never expected to go around the} 1 i5.08 Pinkham's ‘ould hardly get bed. i toring for along mother said, ‘I 8o I and it has certainly made me} ognize in all girls only those qual-|way I do again. and | want others ities of refinement, and respect them as we do our sisters, | am sure we will have more to be thankful and less to be sorry for. Complete Report of Market Today F Prices Paid W | Vegetables ° lere for Asparagus Beane Gre Broceboli « 125 ebopeis Fegplant-—Florida, per tv. Garike Cal Horseradish. LettuceVer Okra Onions. Australia wRvits Applee— Maman Winenap TY 8 New, cane 359 Near Semeca 5! to know what Vegetable Lydia E. me.”—Mrs. Josie Copner, 1668 Har jrison Ave., Fairmount, Cincinnati | Obio, | No woman suffering from any |form of female troubles should lose hope until she has given Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound fair trial This famous remedy, the medi inal ingredients of which are rived from choice roots and herbs, | has for forty years proved to be jof the female organism Pinkham's Compound has done for de-| a | most valuable tonic and invigorator | | R, J. R. BINYON FREE Examination ON EARTH BEST $2.50 GLASSES | We are one of the few eptical stores in the thwest that really | grind es finish, Seattle x motrist. Glasses n s# absolutely 1116 A neces- |BINYON OPTICAL CO., Phone Mata 1550 Satisfactory Terms Always tHe GROTE-RANKINCS. OTTO F ALG General Manager Seven Styles of BRASS BEDS Have Prices Reduced Nearly all of these represent floor samples and are mar | quick carance Brass Bed, wit! neh square posts and l-inch $32 50 quare fillers; reg $45.00 value; special ° | Brass Bed, with 2-inch square posts, one-inch $35 00 ie. square fillers: regular price $50.00; special : : Brass Bed, with nch continuons posts, %-inch $37 50 | 4 fillers; regular price $60.00; special * a Brass Bed, 2-inch continuous round psots neh fillers; slightly #9 damaged; regular price $22 50 | pecial at o a Brass Bed, with Z-inch posts and heavy brass $29 75 a. mounts; regular price $45.00; special ‘ . Sie Brass Bed, 24-inch posts and heavy fillers; $21 75 } regular price $30.00; spectal , ° j Brass Bed, with 2-inch posts and 1%%-inch fillers egular price $42.50; special dp lpi $29.75 | Set of Glass Fifty Dozen Tumblers, Special Turkish Bath Towels 25c f Special, Each | sot of six good, strong f Glass Tumblers, on sale Saturday - a 19c mine... 250 Seay absorbent Bat 4 leached’ pure | 50c Bottle of Wizard Polish white. Size x4 nches b _ | and finished with ned 4 ends. These are especial 39c " ly desirable for household Wizard Polish cleans, dusts and 9” use. Only fifty en are polishes floors, furniture and all | offered for Saturday at the | manner of woodwork cial price sale Saturday, 50c size .. 39e- Only Fifteen More MONARCH RANGES at a Saving of | $10.00 | The Monarch Ranges are the same as the many thou- | sands of Monarchs now in ] use in Seattle — have }} all the exclusive Mon- ] ogee arch features, except the 7 acoy vitreous enameled linings | ks installed inMonarch Ranges in March of this year. | All the Monarch Ranges jf in our warehouse not | equipped with vitreous en- jf | ameled linings must be | sold at once. , Make your selection as early as possible, as several | sizes are already closed out | Your old stove taken as part payment on any one | of these splendid new Monarch Ranges. | Grote-Rankin—PIKE AT FIFTH—Grote-Rankin } b NOTICE! To Fuel Consumers In these days of increasing prices, the fuel dealers of Se- attle are making every effort to keep down your fuel bill. As an important step for the benefit of the public, these dealers find it necessary to an- nounce that— Beginning June 1, 1917, fuel will be sold only for cash with order, or cash on deliv- ery.