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a Sa By Popuiar Demand and Capacity House, Held Over Today and Tomorrow Husbands and Wives Have Either of You a Dark Secret Love Affair, Past or Atraid seal at oF. aki Preseni, That You Are to Tell the Other About The SingleCode Solves Big Husband and Wife Problems Crane Wilbur and Star Cast CHILDREN LOGE SEATS. 15¢ ze MEN UNDER 31 WANTED IN NEXT _ RESERVE CAMP | WASHINGTON, of the tendency on the alified men unde J without military experier hold thetr applications for nd series of officers’ train 3 because of apparent mis he war and Saturday July 6—In view depart um of informat Met issued the dated June 4 e adjutant | {cllowing st “The statement that mature men will be given preference second series of officers camps seems to have been derstood in some quarters ference will only apy nalifications are equal , no intention to bar ont applicat by men under 31. In fac \ing officers have been to regard the ages of 25 to able re is also ‘standing about evious milftary government is lo for intelligent a and experience, tho rictly necessary Applications for the camps will Core July 15, tra mis some m the ne experience king primarily forceful desirable, UNCLE SAM WANTS SKILLED WORKERS | Government civil fnations will be he : building July 25 for veterinarian srsistant crop physiologists, end fruit specialists, steam engineers and a field jfalaries range from $1,2 $2,400. servic: Id in the Don’t Use City Office Not many liook for jc Japanese or Filipinos 8 from the city employ inent office, but those who do find work easily, says Superintendent | J. H. Shields. | [PACIFIC OUTFITTING COR. THIRC & UNIVERSITY DRESSES MEW WOMEN FoRS e wrEK YOUR CREDIT IS O.K. in his record-break- ing — fastest—fun- niest — snappiest— comedy “WILD AND WOOLLY” Adults 15c Children 10c Return Engagement Sunday, July 8th Today Until Saturday Night Edith Storey Antonio Moreno “The Captain of the Gray Horse Troop” A picture of the great West, with many thrills and tense with the conflict of the un curbed passions of the fron tier, showing life as it was in the days of the persecution of the Indians. The Greatest Motion Picture ver Made Rex Beach’s THE BARRIER wonderfully vivid picturesque portrayal wild, rough, lawless Alaska in the early Admission 15 € Children, 5 Ce | STRANDI Admission 15 Cents Boattle’s Re.¢ Photoplay House | porter. STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1917, PAGE 8 VALESKA DONATES ?$?$ Favorite of Fox Films Gives to Red Cross Harold Lockwood and on Sunday Scene from “Battle of the Somme,” Strand. Carmel Myers in “The Haunted Pajamas,” Mi ‘come acros The Red Cross, however, did not in ald of the She has given to the cause, Wiltam Valeska Suratt has and that nobly Red Cross war fund. * ealary famous star. Mins with Suratt's the motion pict ow ularity ft ts » star to fol! last to come fron up the nuns of Brus | prman occupation, | ire proceeds to the society on which as the successful relief workers. war as upon t Mine Suratt has also army and navy. She believes the o “mother t whose prosperity depends on pub- Fussiliers, ore lic favor shouldn't hesitate to show tor, William } their appreciation by doing their © ; bit to care for * young men who are called to defend the nation. “eee for undertaken company of Fox od by her d at the Fort Lee offered see fort when prosecution of Bhe to | | to arme. marry him,” and believes it until she learns differently. “The eee MANY PICTURESQUE SCENES IN CLEMMER FILM STORY There are many resque and ving scenes in Vitagraph's novel, “The Captain the Gray| Troop.” at the Clemmer touching of the Indian} i bowed in grief body of her b and, Cut “EYES OF THE WORLD” HELD OVER FOR WEEK The big business done by Eyes of the World,” a screen ver sion Harold Bell Wright's fa mous novel, has prompted the man agement of , theatre hold film over for week in order to give all those who de sire the picture a chance to do #0 this to most bee wife we ore over the Inger LIBERTY PLAY WRITTEN IN DEFENSE OF MALES E Hater of Men with Bessie Barriscale in the leading role, at th Liberty, is a comedy drama, written a man in ofense of men, and concerns Janice Sals WRESTLER SUPPORTS DOUG FAIRBANKS IN PICTURE y fans who have seen Doug} irbanks in Wild and now showing at y the Col b @ young newspaper ‘ a ee . r have who the] who becomes disgusted with i. ‘ males of the species and severs her "| ts. t is} engagement relations with Billy ame man that playe the crook | Williams (Jack Gilbert), also a re In Again, Out- Again.” He Janice says “The best way © the monicker of “Bull”| 8 friendship ty and was a wre { u ring the movies tler of P , a. os © J § GOVERNMENT | THEATRICAL ROMANCE : | SHOWN AT MISSION | A romance of the | INDIAN LANDS stands” is “The End of the Tour,”| ‘eaturing Lionel Barrymore at the Half million acres of valuable) Mission | lands soon to be sold by U. 8. Gov Col. Je oung wife! ernment on easy yearly payments |from their home by his harshness. | without taxes until fully paid for.| she the first means that/ Chance of a Ufetime to share in!eame to hand and ran away with a Uncle Sam's bargaina, All In the | traveling theatrical company The} great oil belt. You-do not have to| young wife died, but her boy lived live on the land or improve it. For and he, in turn, went on the stage. tore and speculators as well “muddy” Bennett, as he is known,| seekers. becomes the leading man of the| Visit the Big Pullman Exhibit Chicago Ideals Theatre company, al car without delay and learn of the barnstorming troupe, which comes creat possibilities of the Great to grief on the road. Chance causes | State of Oklaho' s “Buddy” to be stranded in the| Admission and Information Free.|iown from which his mother had M Charts, Plat, Blue Prints, fled with him, and in which his Geological Surveys, Agricultural, | father and sister still live. How Mineral Products, etc., with demon-|he saved his sister from an un strators to explain all conditions. | scrupulous man and waa reunited Car open daily, 9 to 12 a.m; 1 tO) with her and his father, are told 5:30 p. m.: 7 to 9 p.m a in a sympathetic way, with many ar under direction of Tulsa! numorous touches. Lionel Barry Locating Syndicate. y more is excellent as “Buddy” Ben-| SEATTLE OKLAHOMA EXNBIT CAR WILL SHOW MOONEY ——— TRIAL IN PICTURES =m moces eM be-4 8 Five thousand feet of film, show- THEATRE ing the events leading up to and| | including the trial of Tom Mooney ‘ charged with plotting in connection More 21 . wou to lose any n to sup drove his chose M Twice Daily shown for a week the Arena, | starting Sunday afternoon Kdward Nolan, one of the ac cused, directea the production, |which is being sent here by the i prominent labor leaders is revealed | |in the film,” says Selig Schulberg, | | representing the International | Workers’ Defense league, who « 0 [companied the film here, Mooney case has attained tterna |tlonal proportions, and ambassa By Mavelé Rell Wright dors othe United States in Rus- sia, Holland and Italy have, been| of the Worl see the beginning, nor will it have seen the end of Miss Suratt's gen-| ty, She has already ¢ her t for the Liberty | 1a year ago—before this nat nvol¥ ed in the world struggle war iving freely of her money to ald Belgian relief r thi aoe whe sold sev ) jollars worth of rare old lace NOTE: sion of the author, F. W. Phelps: What a Big Concern Is Doing to Put Thrifty Men and Women on the Land, Equip Them,Supply Them, Teach Them, Market Their Wares, and Other- wise Lift Them to a Life of Usefulness, Profit and Pleasure Is Told at Pretty and Instructive Demon- stration Farm, on Everett Interurban, Where Chick- ens, Filbert Nut Orchards and Other Evidences of a Big Constructive Enter- prise Are to Be Found. Put the man on the land; provide him with a comfortable hom water; light; stock him up with what he needs to energize his nts; find out what he wants to do, and, if he doesn’t know how, teach him by giving h gratia the serv ices of an expert; supply him at prices below the market; market what he pro duces at a price above the current aver age of an economic desideratum, a community scientific and recreative 1 we have at a glance what a large corporation operating in the ter ritory and state of Warhington since 1853 is undertaking to do, and is actually doing, at Seattle's door. 1am not writing of Utopia. This d is working. Nor of a philanthre terprise, for it is a matter of bus in ways, and from some angles, as Prosaic as the clay and sand and stones of these Puget Sound hills; and yet there seems to be about it all the fam- iliar stuff and coloring of air dreams, something of poetry, some richly tex- tured something we have struck from our hopeful fancy! Imagination in Business But, after all, is not imagination as much the handmaid of business as {t {s of science? From the time of the British chartered companies in America, on down to our own time, ou y cap tains have been men of large imagina tion, and ome of them missed the bag of gold at the end of the rainbow, others, following the same allurements, have found it Mixing a little imagination in with the hard and often sordid practicalities of business, and putting a dream into action and fitting it into th parse vestments of common clay, the Puget Mill Com pany, in the Alderwood Manor enterprise, has simply followed the age-old impulse of dreamers,—dreamers who also have been doers, And if Alderwood Manor, by some now unsupposable turn of for. tune, should not pass beyond the stage of a social and industrial experiment, the fault, surely, will not be the company’s, nor will it be on account of any basic weakness in the dream Things Accomplished Alderwood Manor ts a fact. It ts not a bundle of blueprints and flamboyant promises. It is rooted to the soil midway between Seattle and Everett. The demon stration farm, chicken houses and chick ens, filbert nut orchards, residences com pleted and occupied, others in course of construction, a townsite, and a cozy and serviceable community hall, are some of the concrete things of Alderwood Manor. The demonstration farm and {ts equip ment, the townsite and the community hall are on the first unit in the series t i and add to this quick, rough outline, to he developed on the company’s 16,000 acres ip this one tract of land. There are about 700 acres in the first unit Development thus far has been confined to & comparatively small area lying di- rectly on the interurban railway betwoen Seattle and Everett, and on the public highway. Ninety days ago this area, now beauti- fully parked, and dotted with shrubbery, and rows of filbert trees, and handsome buildings, was absolutely In the raw, and covered with charred stumps and logs and unsightly weeds. The rapid progress made, the character of the work, the plans and purposes of the company, and ite high rating In the Northwest, have attracted to Alderwood Manor much won- der and much intelligent and studious interest Service of Experts Free An important feature of this enterprise fs in the fact that settlere will have at all times, without cost, the advice and services of experts in the various lines of industry to be undertaken at Alder wood Manor. Men and women who know the actence of poultry raising, dairying, ewardening, filbert nut culture, and who know all about animals, fowls and plants will be on the ground to help the settler who finds himself facing a new and puzzling problem tn field, orchard, yard or chicken run. Demonstrations and talks on practical subjects will take place in the community hall This hall also will be used for recrea- tive and amusement purposes by settlers at Alderwood Manor. The company con- the hall with all modern con water, lights, lavatories, and has also provided for the installation of & moving picture outfit and the produc tion of moving picture shows Marketing the Products Things produced at Alderwood Manor will be sold practically at the door of the producer, unless the producer wishes to market his own wares. The company will do the marketing. Produc also are to be standardized with a view of selling what {s produced on these lands at prices a Uttle above current quotations. For instance Exes will be sorted ac- cording to size, and they will be the products of layers carefully selected on points agreeable to scientific standardiz ing All other products will be treated same way and properly stamped. These practices, it is believed, will give Alderwood Manor products an enviable standing in the marxets. Scien- tific methods fn production, tn handling and marketing will be the rule. The company now has 5,000 or 6,000 White Leghorns in houses and ds constructed and maintained according to the best approved plans; these birds are of select strains; they are of different ages, ranging from chicks to layers, and the company is using them to demon- strate what it believes to be the final word, up to this time, in commercial chicken raising and ege production. The chicken houses are models of cleanliness and convenience, and represent a_sin- gular combination of art and utility in poultry architecture, Nothing seems to have been overlooked to make these places convenient, healthy and pleasant, not only for chickens, but for caretakers as well, Filbert Nut Orchards Filbert nut orchards will also be a big feature of life at Alderwood Manor. A A. Quarnberg, one of America’s foremost nut experts, has demonstrated the fact that these nuts can be grown in com- mercial quantities on Puget Sound, He is now growing them He will be the expert in charge of these young orchards at Alderwood Manor. These tr will thrive in chicken runs, Rows of them method in the A copy of “Filbert Growing for Profit on Puget Sound” (illustrated) handsome folder in colors, descriptive of Alderwood Manor, free to all persons interested in the “New Life of the Land” idea. Call or write Puget Mill Company, Land Department, Walker Building, Seattle, Wash. | ploded in his hand when he pre sd|could bring him to consciousne “New Life of the Land” NIAD | ‘ALDERWOOD MANOR | “A Dream at Work” The following article, from the July issue of the Pacific Coast Mechanic, is republished by permis- are now growing in the chicken runs of’ the company. The trees begin to bear in three years and usually become a commercial asset when five years old, the yield increasing with age up to the time of the trees’ full growth The demand for these nuts is prac- tically unlimited at prices ranging from 25 to 40 cents Mr. Quarnberg bas found, as the result of twenty years’ study, that the Barce- Jona and the Du Chilly varieties of the filbert—large, meaty and finely flavored nuts—are the best varieties for this cli- mate and is now growling them in profit- able quantities. These are only some of the things con- nected with this large enterprise based upon what is called “the new life of the land.”—a rather comprehensive phrase, when we come to think of it, for it seems to mean new life in a big, bright, sub- stantial sense, not only for the men and women who settle upon the land, but also for the bleak, barren acres of land which for years have remained idle and unprofitable. Not a Speculative Venture But this is not a speculative land scheme. Speculators have been barred from the first unit now being developed. Settlers must start something on the lands they buy, bulld something, produce something. * * * The company will furnish material, and plans and labor, if desired, to build necessary houses. * * © Settlers may get their stocks,;such as chickens, for instance, and nut trees, from the company. Supplies also, such as chicken food, will be furnished by the company at prices below market quota- tions, for the company is now buying and “will continue to buy in big lots, It is able to do it, and wants to do it, because it is anxious for every settler to make @ fair profit on what he produces. * © © What It Means T like the community notion of this big corporation. This is a constructive ven- ture. It ought to mean much for Wash- ington and this whole section of the country. It will open up new and fresh opportunities for thousands of men and women who find their lives stinted and staled by the deadly grind and routine life in urban centers. The tired journal- ist will have a chance to take his nose out of the ink well and stick it in the ground; the bookkeeper, the salesman, the mechanic—men and women of all useful and respectable classes—worn by the hard exactions of their calling, ought to find, and can find, at Alderwood Manor, not only a restful break in their daily cares, but also an opportunity to live in an atmosphere brightened by new forms and new energies, and it will all tend to sweeten and to lengthen the days of the earthly journey. The Large Outcome But there is even a greater meaning in this big constructive undertaking of this company. New productive energies loosened at Alderwood Manor will con- tribute more toward the upbuilding of this section than any recent enterprise of either urban or rural significance. It will open the way to a conversion of the land, and a way for the return of the man to the land, and on a grade, too, not too steep or hard for him to make the landing safely. In a nutshell, this corporation will not only put the man on the land, but it will capitalize whatever talent he may have, and give him a chance to work ovt his destiny in his own way. And why not capitalize men who are worth while? Moreover, it will hasten improvements in transportation, and help to bring about a condition that will make the city half country, and the country half city. by A. A. Quarnberg, together with HEADS DEAF SOCIETY | San Francisco trade unions. Pro. asked by foreign labor organiza-|Old Easter Egg Full [ceeds will go toward prosecuting | | the alleged “conspirators” against | tions to intervene . rt re etc al of Gas Nearly Kills OMAHA, July 6.—Joe Spiser, 8:15 | with the San Francisco prepared: | Days . labor leaders involved. 14, was nearly asphyxiated by gas ness parade bomb plot, will be “The alleged conspiracy to jall| from an old Waster egg which ex- ra Dxpertence” and “Everywoman.” STAR WANT ADS | BEST FOR RESULTS Pricest Nights 25¢, 500, 70. Boxes $1.00. Matinees 260 | SOc. Boxes The. LAB EV A YE Bla LRT WN PP | it too hard. The family is in the|by pumping oxygen into his lungs habit of Keeping old Easter eggs|with the aid of a pulmotor. SPOKAN y 6—True Pat ‘or years, as relics, The report of the exploding egg | messin uk Joe was playing with this one| was paath by talahtors bas locks | tTidge, of Seattle, was elected prep when it exploded. The gas ren-| away, and bits of the egg shell were | ident of the Washington State At dered him unconscious, and it was/ driven thru the skin of the youth’ elation of the Deaf here yeste™ — two hours before the police surgeon|face by force ef the explosion. day, ¥ } By United Press Leased Wire