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AND HAPPINESS “GOD'S GARDEN!” What does it convey to business man’who desires tet mat “oa anes you? a profit-producing coun- This is the beautifully ie try home within forty descriptive name given to Picture a life of com- minutes” ride or drive parative ease and plenty with your children breathing the same pure, wholesome - atmosphere of the country; with little “Betties” as playmates, ALDERWOOD MANOR by a litile child of inno- cence who lives with the over beautiful boulevards, from the heart of Seattle. The magniticent Dem- onstration Farm at AL- DERWOOD MANOR with birds and blossoms, with its model poultry fruits and berries, fields building and pedigreed and trees to impress the stock; the flourishing fil- bert nut orchard; the so- cial and educational hall; the handsome farm home—these are the Mecca for hundreds who are planning to enter upon the New Life. It young receptive mind rather than the empty and often contaminating influence of city amuse- ments and pastimes. Contrast the gathering new laid eggs, the An Alderwood Manor home, where the Nature's heart of STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1917. PAGE 4 ALDERWOOD MANOR Little “Betty” Calls the New and Beautiful “Little-Landers” Community “GOD’S GARDEN a “wei 3 children live close to healthful ride on the pet ae gh ve be and thorough research. book, “Filbert Growing ony, the romping in the Oras can descri ine pea 4 > Sure Carica and ps Fi with is within your easy reach To. understand .“thor- rl Sia . tek Lr the cold cement a “Little Land and oughly and to appreciate Sound” (price 50 cents). $ an Liberty.” the wondertil plan. of Come out tomorrow, ments and the da I that surround childhood There is no longer any “evelopment now fully Saturday, Sunday or any life in crowded city uncertainty about the Under way at ALDER- re t best suits your Echo June Zahi visits streets. profits from poultry, $2 WOOD MANOR those convenience. Alderwood Manor The “New Life of the net per hen per year be- imterested should either — Electric cars on the Land” is the answer. ing just as sure as the in- Cail at the offices of the Everett Interurban leave birds and flowers in this * * « terest from United States PUGET MILL COM- the depot at Fifth and place of freedom and AALDERWOOD MAN- government bonds—pro- PANY, Land Depart- Pine every hour on the ‘ ; ; ; dt rave: sal ment, in the Walker half hour, reaching the ppiness, prosperity and OR is brought into exist- viding always that you mei ence to release the city follow the methods Building, Seattle; or bet- Alderwood Manor sta- man from bondage; to unshackle him from pay- roll dependence. It is a adopted by practical au- thorities. There’s no se- cret about ii—experts are at the service of ALDER- What a wholesome en- Ament it must be to WOOD MANOR land owners to teach them (free) all there is to know about raising poul- try successfully * Filbert * * growing = for profit is just as certain. The finest filberts pro- duced in the whole wide world are grown in West- ern Washington and AL- DERWOOD MANOR will be the most exten- ‘sive filbert nut center outside of Europe. The i Pacific Northwest is the only place in America where filberts are grown or will grow on a com- mercial scale. The five-acre farm is the ideal area, according to the statistics published by the agricultural de- Educational Hail BEE Biles 2ahi examining the bude on the young filbert trees at Alderwood Manor. PUGET MILL COMPANY Land Department WALKER BUILDING SEATTLE “4, Phone Elliott 182 Miss Zahi at the entrance of the handsome Social and partment of the State of ter still, visit ALDER- tion, right at the Dem- oe Washington, and this is WOOD MANOR at the onstration Farm, in 45 “Make so sincere an ap- place planned alike for the size adopted and rec- very earliast opportunity. minutes. If you drive out peal, to inspire so pure a the man or woman who ommended by the experts Descriptive literature will go via Westlake Boule- thought in the mind of is willing to forsake the in charge of ALDER- be given or mailed to all vard and the North little Betty Irwin. city entirely for a better WOOD MANOR. All who desire it, also acopy Trunk Boulevard to Al- Se cnr, ilicome from poultry and are agreed on this point, of the copyrightededition derwood Manor, a beau- “GOD'S GARDEN!” filbert culture, or the after long experiment of Mr. A. A. Quarnbe tiful 40-minute ride. | | | lon RUSS WOMEN BY WILLIAM G,. SHEPHERD Vnlted Preae Staff Correspondent PETROGRAD, June 27.— Mrs. C. Russian People stands side by side with her husband In this revolution. She 6 at meetin, votes, nd writ lor @ scores of little newspapers that have rung up all over Rue sia, just as if she were an or dinary male human being. In the simple, ohildlike Russian mind, no question seems to have arisen as to the rights of | women d whether she woul Russia, the fF realized immedia women tan American. Why | it,” ging her shoulders “We've ha | bigger things to fight for in Ruse than the ught side by wide with th human rights with no q “FIGHTING ALONG WITH THE MEW that | wax either an Englishman or| there's no question about sald one Russian woman, shrog right of women to vote We will have an_ Important Announcement to make in this Be sure to look It space Friday. for it and read it carefully. will be to your interest. FRIDAY BARGAINS White and fancy stripe Wash Dress Skirts in poplin, gaberdine, P. K. and diagonal. Skirts $1. 75 worth up to $2.50; Sale price id) Skirts worth up to $3.50, $ a Sale price ......ccccecccescvesssorcwers 2.25 | : . Extra quality Middy Blouses in all-white; ws all sizes to 44; Sale price.......--+++-+++> 95c i aavaiven mar aan 4 Child's Middies, white with fancy collar, 29c © jail, and we've even died and Wo've even taken our turns at as- fq cuffs and pockets; Sale price. . t sassinations, Only an Anglo-Sax-| | on, if you'll pardon me for plain} | speaking, would think of raising FRIDAw The answer Was calculated to make an Anglo-Saxon feel like a | wife-bea Served in Jail | 1 approached four of the women|[| One lot of Men's .Suits | Monarch Union Suits for |who sat at the various committee of splendid materia all | women; 36 and 38 sizes; tables around the duma building sizes; sold to $20) at Ke and plainly put to each one of them | old at $1.50 ....++. 79¢ this one question Madame bad--all four of them told their stories with} proud emiles. They had not been | prisoners in the cat-and-mouse fash- ton ,don have been jailed, Ovlight manner in Jeates in jthe bare-—but d silen es Years of waiting Side by Side been put we in jail for rights?” 1 asked one o had these women, whe for a part in ¢ Ftolypin assaesina tion. Sh s sitting In the offie of th new National Peasants unton, presiding over the book in which the incoming peasant dele- gates from every part of R | were entering their names ‘ever! Never!” she said, phatically em | ezar Bat we Ruestan English women. men and women, for them. All us, women, have considered re ash an beings, without any differences. Now that the coral is won, men and women are by side of oni N of wo! s righ tion, unt " you Mish newepnper men cai “But are new covernment?” Why, just ae sure as the mer The question isn't even rais tell you, It hasn't occurred te that women might are ed, 1 anybody vote Crops in Eastern Washington will net suffer from a labor shortage, according to reports to Immigration Commissioner White, made by special agents of the department of labor, de- talled to investigate needs of farmers in various agricultural commonities. “There is no actual scarcity of labor,” says White, “and there Is a pretty well-balanced equilibrium east of the moun- tains. The farmers need lots of workingmen, and there are y there to fill the bill. Any rmer can get all the men he wants. If there is a short- age at all, it le in the sparsely settled counties. “In Seattle, there is about mal times, but they because they have are to be lar lines.” Commissioner White said condi tions may be different at harvest time, but he thinks there will be no special shortage of farm labor in f Washington even then. MARINES MAY HAVE BEEN FIRST ASHORE. A Vreee Leased Wire NTIC PORT, June 28. ther official announcement landing of American troops By v of th in France will show that the ma rines under Col. Doyen were ac tually the first men to set foot on French soil, was a subject of lively speculation at marine head. quarters and recruiting here today. The marines still at home be lieve it will be found that Doyen’s 2,700 men representing Uncle Sam's “first to fight” forces held to their tradition, and were the @rst ashore. | The landing of the merican | troops was expected to give recruit ing a decided boost. Bands were blaring, flags flying and recruiting officers going strong here today ‘Demand Enormousky! Demand for Russian “text books exhausted the supply in Amer- jea, and the university has to get them from London, have you ever been in in which the suffragets of Lon-| nor in the] | which Mrs Sanger and the birth-control advo. New York have lingered \for a few weeks at a time behind in the way of the Russian evar, with cold, dark celle) little food and long,| Has any woman in Russia ever! demanding been jailed “That's one crime that has never been charged against the women |baven't been like the American and “The rights of all human beings, have been at Stake in Rossa, and men and wom- fen have been fighting side by side men and ‘y had raieed the question you women sure that you will be allowed to vote in the NOT er Article Will Follow Soon) the ber of idle men as in nor not idle They either don’t want to work or else | they are waiting to get into particu- stations, Extra fine Summer Vests, sold at 35c; 20¢ Boys’ Khaki Knicker er Pants; all size g sleeves to close Khaki Coats sold at $1.25. in all 69¢ Men's sizes ; Boys’ Balbriggan Drawers, knee length; all sizes; sold 25c; to close 19¢ at 2c; to Close..... One lot Men’s Nightshirts and Pajamas in fancy , : stripe madras; slightly | Boys’ Shirts, Waists and soiled; sold to $1.50; to] Blouses; big variety in all CLD BE cccccscces sizes 9¢ Up ' “THE STORE MAT, HI SAVES VOU MONE VJ a} Money’ makes the war go. Haynes makes the watches go. Next Liberty theatre.—aAdy, —STRENGTH— And How to Gain It The demand “today is for men CLUB MEN TO HAVE NEW RIFLE RANGE Attractive new club rooms, with complete equipment of gympasium, hand ball courts, running track, |swimming tank, and rifle range, | are being offered to new members | in the membership drive of the Seattle Athletic club for 500 men/end women who are strong in ev- this week. The first two days |¢ry Sense of the word—possessing added nearly 200 new names to the |‘e Physical strength necessary to lis of the club. Sixty-seven ware |Cudure hardships and fatigue; the - - mental strength to grapple with dded Wednesday |ditfieult problems; the nervous 4 : + @ | force which endows the body with 1A MUSEMEN TS vigor ana vitality: the wit wowue ——_ to triumph over adversity and turn defeat into victory. But such glorious strength is impossible so long as your nerves are weak and lexhausted, and therefore if you | would be really strong you must |first care for your nerves. Weak, ‘exhausted nerves need food, and for this purpose physicians strong- |ly recommend the use of the or- jeanic phosphate known among druggists as bitro-phosphate, which [most druggists stock in Sr. com- ts, so that if you feel ‘your strength is fafling from any cause, you should get a supply of these bitro-phosphate tablets and take one with every meal, Prac- jtcally all of the minor ailments affiicting mankind, as well as many of the more serious maladies, can be traced to nervous exhaus- tion and lowered vitality, and prob- \ably this explains why such a re- |markable improvement fn the gen- jeral health is inyariably noticeable when bitro-phosphate is taken as ‘directed, and the nerves are there- by revitalized and made strong. , “THE BLUR ENVELOPE” A rip-roaring farce with « laugh | n every line Comedy, Pretty Muste “WOMAN PROPOSES” With a cast of eight PALACE HIP Afternoons 1:39 to 5; Eves, 6:20 to 11 New | Princess Ki Reantiful Show Vampire ver.” Today | Harrah and Girls, Other Big Photopiay, “ Mag! Aftern Fves and Sun Of Summer Wearables On Credit Price concessions on our com- plete stock of Women's Wearing Apparel gives you an opportu- nity to select your Summer out- fit at a saving. We invite your | inspection, : |The |One | Store ; Where |CREDIT Is an | Accommo- dation. Open an Account Now and make your payments later—by the week or month, just as you please, 1332-1334 Second Avenue |