The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 30, 1918, Page 3

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in her first Petrova picture— —produced at a cost of over $110,000 — the feature you in the national magazines, “The Daughter of Destiny.” Fatty | Arbuckle in two reels of new stuff, “Out West.” First at Pike FAILED TO MAKE GOOD ‘Witter Blevins, alias Raymond, machinist’s mate of the U. Uncle Sam is taxing tobacco $60,000,000 to help carry on your war. Part of the cent added to Tom Keene’s price is due to this. Cigar makers are now getting higher wages than ever before in the history of the industry. Theycan- not otherwise meet their higher costs of living Tobacco, boxes, labels and freight costs have all mounted up so high that they too get a part of the extra cent. No one can dodge these facts. Your own Good Judg- ment will tell you that. TOM KEENE SN OSS TWN Wy \ Continuous 11 to 11 Admission 20c; Children 10c protect you. \ The Cigar made with good Judgment Uncle Sam ipecmmions prompt deliv- ys. It’s Good Judg- ery to his ment to send them Tom Keenes. Hemenway & Moser Seattle, W: Cigar Co. — pleaded guilty to a charge of grand lerceny before Judge Mackintosh, and was sentenced to from four to 5-115 years in the penitentiary. STAR—WEDNESDAY, JAN. 80, 1918. PAGE 3 “TODAY S RATION FOR COMPANY Bltuuuunumnmimianmnnes! FIVE BEANS’—COOK FAINTS Rimrock Jones Starring Wallace Reid and Ann Little The army cook who got that order fainted dead away—and he is a strong man, too. Beans are beans, thing»——well, they seemed to be in the ‘They're called the Guinea butter troduced into the American back ya Cal. Five or six are actually a meas as an army chef knows, pink elephant class. bean, originated in Australia and in-| ra by Dr, KR. F. Tind of Oakland, | for a company of noldiers but t Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS & TTT LOOT Find Information In Encyclopedia Dear Miss Grey awer to Clarence kaiser wan a Catholic Would ph answers to quer you found your know there is the Vatican and ACA You will find the nted in the dia, volume the heading “Wil rich Wilhelm Victor I read your an asking you if the you state tn your and when READER information American In XVI, under IL. (Fried. Albert). Soldiers Permitted to Accept Clothing Dear Mine Grey: WI! the gov ernment accept a drab-colored, knit-| ted sweater for soldiers, when sent directly to the soldier? 1 thank you} for an answer. MRS. RORT. R Soldiers are permitted to ac cept any kind of clothing sent directly to them. Must Obtain Special Permit Dear Mise Grey In there any law that prohibits registered men from going abi but haven't been planning on a trip ONE OF YOU You would have to have « per. mit to travel, if you would be allowed to make the trip at all. Consult the officials of your lov cal board about the matter. Should State Case ‘The one here shown, huddled so confidingly in the young lady's arma,|to Army Authorities weighed 23 pounds, was 30 inches long and 6 inches thru One bean will make soup for 17 people. Brakeman—please shove a freight car this way squash, or fried like an ee plant It in boiled Uke | Sennett Comedy “His Hidden Pur- pose”—2 reels. An I was about to go, little book Harvey's old father looked at me from under his shaggy white brows and sald rather curiously, “And your husband, does he know that you have attempted this Sir Galahad sort of undertaking in my son's behalf? “Not yet. Mr. ———. I may tell him all about ft when I go back home, but I am not sure. You see I do not feel that I have a right to tell any one this adventure, as it is Fifth at Pike Continuous 11 to 11 Admission 20¢ Children 10¢ END INDIGESTION OR STOMACH PAIN | This Coat Slips | Over Girl’s Head ee ee Bt a Diapepsin” makes wi ppg Bh gy =f es Time it! In five minutes your sour, acid stomach feels fine. No | indigestion, heartburn, or belching of gas, or eructations of undigested no dizziness, bloating, foul or headache. pe's Diapepsin is noted for its specd in sweetening upset stom- achs. It is the surest, quickest and | most certain stomach antacid {n the whole world, and besides, it is hartpless. Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without |fear—they know Pape's Diapepasin will save them from such misery Please, for your sake, get a large i fitty-cent case of Pape'’s Diapepsin stomach right. Don't keep on be- miserable—life is too short are not here long, so make your stay agreeable. Eat what you [like and enjoy it, without dread of |acid fermentation in the stomach. Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your home anyway |family eat something which don't jagree with them, or in case of an/ attack of indigestion, gastritis or stomach due to fermentation and acidity, at |daytime or during the night, it is dyspepsia, handy to give the quickest, surest) po known, | | | When the Children Cough, | Rub Musterole on Throats and Chests Oyster Khaki Kool, of which the] ,,NO,telling how soon the sympteme costume in the photograph is made. |then’s when you're glad you have a has all the charm of a heavy, rough jar of vpn 3 ‘aon x give silk, which lends itself well to semi-| Prompt, sure relief, It docs not blister. tailored lines, with a lightness of HY es aoa ae eee, texture which suggests sutnmer ma mothers know it. You should keep a terials, This suit is one of the jar in the house, ready for instant use. smartest designed for the Palm " pp is the remedy for adults, too, Re- Beach season, The coat is of the jieves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, new slip-over cut, which suggests the croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, sweater, with a self-lacing cord of headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheu- the silk at the throat. | matism, lambago, pains and ‘aches of ‘The collar and broad, soft sirdie back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, are of navy blue and white checked chilblaing, frosted feet and colds of the moire silk, the pocket slits and cuffs chest (it often prevents pneumonia) are lined with the same dark silk.|” 30¢ and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, and the dark, covered buttons add a chic bit of ornament. The skirt has a new touch in that the full side pleating is stitched tight at the hem line. SPANISH WAR VETS WOULD OUST GERMAN IN FIVE MINUTES; from any drug store and put your) Should one of the| derangement | | Confessions of a Wife not my own, but the very Intimate, personal experience of another.” “I confess the modern woman is a purale to me,” said Harvey's father, who had again taken on the more or lems sarcastic manner with which he kreeted me. “But there is one thing you have demonstrated to me, mad. ame,” he #aid, ax he touched the buzzer at hin elbow, “and that is that the modern woman does not! lack courage. I will go tonight to |my son. I am an old man,” he add od, “but I don't think that age has blinded me to beauty or to courage,” and he bowed me out There you have it, little book Inn't it a beastly kind of world that makes @ man think he can get away with anything with a woman if he| only flatters her? That old man| | rehabilitated himaelf in my mind by that bit of flattery thrown out to me as I left. I did not get back to Donna's un- til late that afternoon, and when I got In I found ber engaged in a mys Uc and mystifying rite. She was gowned in deep mourning, not a bit of white anywhere to re eve the somber blackness, Her hair, in it# beautiful whiteness—she had somehow contrived to make it quite white again—was the only | thing that was not sober about her. jer lips were unamiling and her leyen were not only sad but a little | hard, ax tho the grief she had un dergone had crystallized her soul a | little. I was cudgelling my brain to think if it was an anniversary of Bill's death she was celebrating, but soon came to the conclusion that I wax on the wrong tack, for Bill died, 1 distinctly remembered, in the spring of the year. I went into Donna’s own little sit ting room and found her placing a bunch of violets under a full-length Picture of herself when she was a girl of 16. Beside the picture she had drawn up a cheval mirror, and from time to time she looked from the pictured girl to her own face and form in the mirror. I had come up | nounced, and she the aia stairs unan not hear me until I waa in the room. Aa I turn ed suddenly to go out—it seemed mo that I had surprised her doing! something that wan for the eyes lof even her devoted friend—I made &@ little noise, and she turned. With a little sigh that might have been a laugh or a groan, she turned to me and put out her hand. * on in, Margie,” she said. “Yor inadvertently caught me at a little ceremony that I have gone thru with on the recurrence of this day for years, Ever since my first birthday jafter T had left Will, when I found that he was in love with Kitty Mal- ram, I have been foolish and sent. mental enough to go back over my | hit my birthday, and also by ing a few flowers under this pic |ture I have tried to tell this dead girl pictured here that I remember | her. “But, Donna, I have always thought this was your portrait.” | “It is a portrait of me painted |when I was 16 years old, but the |irl in that frame is just as surely | dead as tho she had been buried and had crumbled away to dust.” | 1 looked at the picture, little book land then I looked at Donna. She |had told the truth—the 16-year-old girl was dead and the woman sitting |near her was some one quite differ ent. hes {ao changed from the girl who way | |back in the old days had taught |school and who had fallen so des-| | perately in love with Dick at sight.| (To Be Continued) on wondered, little book, if I were Spanish-American War Veterans want the German language thrown from the high school course. Members of George A. Funston camp Tuesday m formal protest the third received by the Seattle school board. Supt, Frank B. Cpoper was instructed to notify the Veterans of the board’s previous action, BUTCHER’S GARAGE YIELDS 70 BOTTLES Seventy bottles of Canadian Club whisky and $400 bail money are in the possession of King county today as a result of the arrest of John McKenzie, a butcher, 1807 Colby st, West Seattle. The sheriff has been watching his novements for some tine and pounc- ed on him Tuesday, finding cache underneath McKenzie'’s ga Aree ‘ “Fastest Game in the World” Vancouver vs.Seattle down in his heart thought he had|, Dear Miss Grey; A year ago, when Uncle Sam needed boys in| Mexico, my husband was called) away. I was left alone with my 2-month-old baby. I have not heard from him for over eight months, and | letters from his mother always say how fine he is doing. I have nev told her he does not write to me, and I find I'm up against a wall too high to climb alone, My baby is in the| nursery during the day, and home| with me nights and mornings. | work from noon until § at night, and I've too much to do to rest, and hard | work has made me old and cranky I am but 20 years olf. Couldn't he be made to help me’ that I have only had $5 in all from him since he went away. Please tell me what to do. To make you understand me, my husband is a sergeant in the 2ist in fantry, now in California, Do you think Unele Sam is proud of men like mine? Certainly the government {ts not | proud of men who join the army tn order to shift their family responsi- bilities ALONE. You should make a clear, written statement of the facta of your case to the adjutant gen eral, Washington, D. C., giving the number of your husband's regiment and company. Provinces Have Been Long Disputed Dear Mise Grey: Please give in- formation as to how France got Alxace-Lorraine, also when, and on what principle? My friend contends that it was original German territory, while I have always been of the opinion it was French before it was German. A STUDENT. From an early period, and for many ages, Alsace has been a disputed territory, and has suf- fered in the contentions of rival races. It formed a part of ancient Gaul, and was, therefage, includ ed in the Roman empire. The Romans held it nearly 500 years and on the dissolution of their power, it passed under the rway 1 have proof |} Satisfactory Terms Always tHe (ROTE-RANKINC. “VOGEL, Prosdert Fine Domestic Patent Heaters At Specially Reduced Prices All that remain in stock of the New Pat- ent Heaters are marked for immediate clearanee, All sizes are available, but it is important to make an early selection, as several of the sizes are limited in number, Patent Heaters use very little fuel in com- / parison with other heat- ers. Patent Heaters are constructed to heat the floor, where heat is most desired. Patent Heaters look well in the room and are easy to operate. and Imported CURTAINS At About One-Half of Their Original Value At $1.85 the Pair Regular $3.00 Value Nottingham Curtains, 50 inches wide, 2% yards long, in white or ecru colo. At $1.65 rs. the Pair Regular $2.50 Values Nottingham Curtains of attractive design, extra wide and long; white only. ~ At $2.35 the Pair High-grade Lace Curtains, 50 inches wide, 3 yards” long; white only. $6.50 Arabian Curtains, the Pair $3.85 Made of good quality round mesh French net, trimmed with genuine Arabian braids. $6.00 Net Curtains, the Pair $3.65 Plain Nets in white and Ara- bian color, trimmed with 3-inch Battenburg insertion and motif, with Rattenburg edge. | | } | with | ance, trimmed with 3-nch fi insertion and fine quality laos edge. White only. % Curtains, the Pair | ‘$1.95 All white, beautifully designed | Curtains, 2% yards long. These will give excellent satisfaction of the Franks, and of the early French monarchs, by whom it was governed until the time of Otho L, emperor of Germany, who reigned about the middie of the 10th century. It was at this period that Alsace became Ger- man. Part of it was ceded to France at the Peace of Westphalia, in 1870. U.S. R. for U. Reserves Dear Miss Grey: Would you kind ly print in your columns the mean ing of U. 8. R. in the army? The letters U, 8. R. mean United States Reserves, when ———— CLEANS THE BLOOD Stands ‘The gratifying results attending the faithful use of the new medici-| nal combination, Hood's Sarsaparilla before eating and Peptiron after eat ing, are seen in purer blood, strong er nerves, improved condition of the | TONES THE NERVES! , Grote-Rankin—PIKE AT FIFTH—Grote-Rankin used army. in connection with the No Reason Why She Shouldn't Take Trip Dear Miss Grey: My fiance's pec- ple live in a small town, about 100 miles from here. Would it be proper for me to accept their invita-/ tion to come with my fiance to spend the week at their home? This means that we would leave here about & o'clock on Saturday evening, and arrive there after a three-hour ride, Then we would start for home Sunday evening. This seems to be the only way they have of becoming acquainted with me, Of course I have my parents’ sent. ANXIOUS MARGARBR, 77 Since you are engaged to the young man, and the invitation — comes from his peoplg and you have your parents’ consent, I know of no reason why you should not avail yourself of the hospitality extended you by your future husband's parents, fi LONDON, Jan. 30.—German oners in England don’t think of conscientious objectors. employed near Sheffield have fe fused to work with them, ee. oss whole system. ‘They are results that make this course of treatment the most eco- nomical for sufferers from impure, impoverished blood, weak, unsteady rves-—no other accomplishes so; much for each cent expended. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Peptiron ald each other, and to take both is to derive a four-fold benefit. If a laxative is needed in connec. tion with them, the gentle and thor ough Hood's Pills should be used WQMIEN! OTHERS! DAUGHTE | (World's Champions) TONIGHT-—8:30 P.M. ra n worn; nervous le: time every day in the year. For breakfast serve butter and syrup. in the year. pensive to prepare. It helps as conserve, and she finds { I 7 = si A Albers flapjack flour it’s flapjack these light, enticing hot-cakes with a little t Observe how they are rel- ished by all the family; notice the cheerful- ness that predominates and how enthusiastic the folks become for flapjacks every morning Albers flapjack flour makes a perfect hot-cake, simple and inex- the housewife save as well it a pleasure to prepare hot cakes from this famous flapjack flour, Acquire the cereal habit— It's a patriotic one. Albers cereals and flours “look for the miner” ¥ Albers Bros. Millin A Member of i" Grocer in supply you air-tight packages. Co, the U. 8. Food Administration

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