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UNITED STATES MUST HELP BLEEDING RUSSIA Lomonossoff Tells | CONFESSIONS | of Slav “Thru Seattle, the helping hand of America must be stretch ed to save Russia from Ger many, And the help must co: quickly if the revolution is to be saved.” This is the plea of Prof V. Lomonossoff, head of the I mission on ways of communi: He addressed a crowd which 5 the Hippodrome to overflowing day afternoon, told toty of Rus wia’s economic suff pleade for sympathet hel Ame cans, The meeting was held u the auspices appointed by uunedl and oe You tell us to fight, but how can have no food, no sked the pre which th no raitros pads Hunger is the force made us quit the war Foreed to Germany “If America does not send us what we need, shoes, agricultural mple- ments, and locomot! then we w be forced to turn to Germany for t help. Thus, Germany, which start ed the war to get economic markets, will have gained a victory which can > efforts of your brave Western front. . “Seven million Russian lives have Deen sacrificed in the war. Russia ts perishing from cold and hunger “CASCARETS” SET YOUR LIVER AND BOWELS RIGHT "re Fine! Don't Remain Bilious, Sick, Headachy and Constipated. t for Colds, Bad Breath, Sour Stomach—Children Love Them. soldiers Get a 10-cent dox now. Be cheerful! Clean up inside to Bight and feel fine, Take Casca- Tets to liven your liver and clean the bowels and stop headaches, a bad cold, Diliousness, offensive breath, coated tongue, sallowness, sour stomach and gases. Tonight take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel Cleansing you ever experienced. Wake up feeling grand—Every- body's doing it. Cascarets best lax ative for children also. NUXAT IRON STAR—SATURDAY, FEB. Suffering | } America, in the first year of war, a ready feels a she of food Mow much more 1 ackward Russia, which has been the war from its beginning Hunger Is Power and fuel ie the prime Russia today erthrew the rnment and Kerensky's and put the Bo! power sheviki which overth had existed also prove too # America m “Thin power years may revolution tated that he wa that when it came and The professor bu between hose Troteky fon will go in his than in the dir junkeriam,” he no Bolshevik to Germany a choice Trotaky he ¢ oly n rather Prussian red Lomonoasoft told of causes wh brought about the graphically pictured sian peasant, who, he ted its true v eanitien grew agricu railw pouring ed part change. Hl how the Rus living close to everyth porseased to. K¢ the standing of due to lack of and instrum gestion, and the ugees from the conqu Russia | March Barefooted 4 shortage. caused w barefooted, at luck of food. The army th the pathians waa forced to consume dead horses to keep from starving, he wuld | “No matter how patriotic or brave }an army may be,” thundered Prof Lomonossoff, “It cannot fight when it is hungry, half clothed and with equipment. We were forced to t the fight. “From Amerh curr a the ald must come whict establish our freedo Will you not save us from Prussia | militaria At the conclusion of the professor's speech resolutions were adopted by the unanimous vote of the thousands present, stating, as an expression of popular opinion, that everything | which America in able to do for stricken Russia should be done The professor spoke in Russian which was translated by his secr tary William ot hort, president th State F ation of Labor, presided. President Rhodes, J. W. Spangier, S. H. Hedges and Secretary Corbaley of the Chamber of Commerce were | on the platform. | Prot. Lom inspecting terminal and rail facilities, | and will speak to University of| Washington students at 10 a m| Monday . | J. G. Brown, of the Shingleweay- | ers’ union, presented the resolutions | that were bows esata — spent Saturday | jin man’s | OF AWIFE WHAT THE THEATRES {XT WEEK} , 28, 1918. PAGE 5 HAVE FOR NI pL ders TEe Custhin. Grow innic ee ra Replies to Critic BEMIND NOM sugerct DE 1 only and t ie re | WOMEN MUST ALWAYS FORGIVE | got home Dick had just He did look tired, 1 will him. I was too hure to m, but when he tried to and then he it out, Margie; I aim. disappointing you wom, N n could ft closing 1 un went to bot It was houra/before I What a state of mind tonight last night! It never pr me when t slight or unkir woh ould et to sleep differen: in my ceases to sur simple my w out on gray not ¢ was nothing for low my doubts and rom rosy pink to gloomy Dick's explar ing, but try to forget It neem the ation was there 4 axked one his office to could not get and to Way he would later. She must have do it or misunderstood or something, I don't know what he di for her. He had excuse mak A with | ot dtoan boring town by | boar meet ie had } c us at th tied up so tong he it @ school sald, to it had been I suppose it's all Tam too rt and allo Uttle thing to make me ittle book, it an he ways, th w every unhappy. But, mt that It's pretty when « wife is al ways pushed aside for business, when she never can depend « hav ing ber husband wants him, even when actually east or she needs him. his estrangen me will be over lived thru the b will be sifent and glum, very polite and considerate, and be will wear an injured air, I will stand it for a while, and then I shall have to be the one to put things right No matter how little for the estrange: I whall have pologize t ent i door, k and at my De manure thi for the ole That » jot in ating of man ever be changed. It is a never-failing source of inter eat to me to ponder on the changes the modern woman hopes to achieve | attitude toward woman. With the one typical example of the male gender I have at hand to ex periment on, I confess I've not been very successful. And yet, as I look about at other men, I find Dick squares up pretty pre of the cause | sid not make | MOORE Vanity Falr of 1918.” a musical comedyette, featuring Jack Tratnor/ jand Olga De Baugh, will be the chief lfeature of th new Orpheum circu! vaudeville bi at the M Twen of this entertainment A comedy sketc Adam Killjoy, will be presented by Harry Cole: and company, featuring a father son and pretty stenographer at the day's work Other ts on the new bill are Harry Regal and David Bender in ‘Drop Us a Line” Harry and Etta | ia the comedy At the Old! ° Nick Basit and Dick Alien in Recruiting Charles McDonald and land, Iriah te Hip: ‘ he kit Jamen com pr Friend the ts t in a wheel act. { T Travel Weekly will show scenes from faraway lands, The |concert orchestra will present inter esting numbers. eee ana, ing | Cycling | WILKES “Officer ." the farce made fa mous by Coban and Harris, is the new offering coming up at the Wilkes, beginning with the Sunday 1—Fred and Lydia Weaver, Palace | Will Armstrong, Galety; 5—Melania Poros, Orpheum. of offend articles, | lomt it uch! It be—can | for among oth Dear Minn ( thir t legs, from ¢ tho it ank me froe nin k orgiven help me. and feminine it eralls, wou n bloody » ywhe nd “m at the It me fin ph, k nthia Gre As MID FRAZIER Did You Find This Photograph? pica Deaf Mina Grey May 1 photograph of my soldier aanewhere downtown, Thureda ra we 7 t a he places I visited yester not been successful in my NIE B. er to ¢ Seventh dintinet 10 | women | | noede nidiers ever rls t ne, lover psychology that It t trouserette | general do not ¥ | but good worke put her wkirts The Io women wear fig-leat fen | next break fc | economy 7 ont the first sneeze or shiver. conductore been fightin and had the rime, when first furlough ast Christmas. The ‘On Active Matohir may skirt nim, 0 Lo or male freed be t liom in dre at manual labor trousers came from as @ working cla Jeveralls have no |They are too ¢ tructio and panned out 4 an the Jers of f Artful | nity and grace trousers.” Orien | oceidentalize in a #eaxon! Jare not a hip xmall-footed nat | heaven!—living neclusion, We see aan of these we y also r no head ¢ Why not tiam in this particular THEATRE Third and Madison. EUGENE LEVY, Mer. gument ¢ f Chinese women in al customs do r And we wlende: tha in parasit the merchant mer 7 erings. women nowt Sunday to Tuesday—6 Transconti- nental Vaudeville Acts. wi push our patri economy? Artful are suggestive |tary." Bo, too, toothbrush innai Sunday Only—Fatty Arbuckle in a New Comedy. arguments again: “Skirts indecent and insant are the broom and ary. Who will sug gost a poor man's guitable substi tute? Granted ‘that those who ape | Paris demimonde nox ere. |by announcing that of thelr acquaintar sire them in marrta tise their charms (7) in man-markets, promiscuously—those skirte are in decent designedly. These social par. axites would twist an ‘# robe | into indecent lines. her and the | rest of us do not | Mins Grey, tell ° Buddha, a Jenus, an Woodrow Wilson po: profundity in monosyllables spaee in your column could not be given to predigested details. And Giscunsions of PRINCIPLES, rath r need ™ as the 4 aat m Monday and Tuesday — Ethel Barrymore in “Life’s Whirl- pool.” 2 they m er Every Matinee Except Sunday, All Seats 10e— Every Night Except Saturday and Sunday, 1,000 Seats at 20c and 1,100 Seats at 10¢ enn the gift of Precious 2—Janet Leland, Pantages; 3— go Barnes, Wilkes Players; 4— it the day previous, sc it to show some friends and than I can say MES. F, O. this photo bring it or send i tar office, 108 T the very best recate tee “Seventy-seven” breaks up Celis that hang on—Grip. All Drag Steven, | well withthe average. I guess his | ag | faults are those of many men, little | They repatch the last ounce of | book, and perhaps he's not Frenchman to make hin fith a uni! | He ha been such a devoted |form—and he'll fight until he's un-|since he's been sick that I had al |patchable any more. Read of the| most forgotten ,th iapees. Once Is of France—in The Star Mon-|he gets back into the game of busi ness, all other Interests of his life are made to take second place. Men are‘like that Maybe they have to be t cod in this day of keen increases strength of delicate, nervous, run-down people in 16 days’ time in many instances sed and highly endorsed by for- mer United States Senators and Congress, well-known physicians and former Public jealth officials. Ask your doc- WILKES THEATRE PLAYERS Mat., Tomorrow (Sunday) °'*;-¥="" Other Mats. KEEP YOUR EYE ON be Charles Anderson's Krazy Kata| ~ Sat. “OFFICER I irl vue in singing and danc John and Mae Burke, funmakers, Imitations NEW PANTAGES |) ‘Goses’ |= 2 Other numbers: James Silver, the Matinees, 2:30—Nights, 7 and 9 _ot 8 rube character actor, and Helen Duval, in “Simplicity” Walter Ben fon, eccentric comedian, and Janet ani Warren Leland in “Painto | = : . name for a quar BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOO 9 tetie, whe B8ve. seme Ad noueer B. | offering called “Fun on a Wharf The Funniest Act in Vaudeville er Ss _The Flying Weavers will prevent THE LOWLANDIES Chocolate ihr Johnny and Wise combine air dancing and instrumental pla mr. H. Giles ia a whistler mimic. Frank and Equestrians Supreme and Their Funny The genuine rolier skaters. Topsy-Turvy Riders. always have this trade- mark on the package and are made only matinee. | It is a play of food comedy, melo | dramatic na and wildfire tn cidents keep the audience gudesing what will happen next. It w full cast of Wilkes players and should prove a production that will incre the growing popularity of Seattle's stock company } eee ompetition | At any rate, myself utterly PANTAGES Topping the new bill at Pantages opening with the matinee perform ance Monday, will be the Lowland les, In what in declared to be one of the funniest acts in vaudeville | They equestrians, and have with riotous topay-turvey ern For the added feature there will why should I make nhappy over a fail ing that to be pretty gener ally characteristic of the malic? Tonight IN| do my best to change the aspect of things from gloomy gray to rosy pink again. (To Be Continued) are them olumbus | WAR CAMP FUND The “Copper” of Infinite Fan in Cohan and Harris’ Melodramatic Farce of the Same Title Nights, 22¢ to 55e—Matinees, 17¢ and 28e. eee PALACE HIP The new show op Hip has for one of features a comedy playlet, “The Morning After. which will be pre rented by the Allen, Carrel and Pier lot company. The sketch has a num. ening Sunday at Notice to Public NNOUNCEMENT of the result of the K. of C. Drive, which was to have been made at Times Square, 8 o’clock P. M., Saturday, February 23rd, has had to be postponed until SATURDAY, MARCH 2d, same time and place, account all returns not yet in. ng and Lilian Vernon ar ORPHEUM © Sunday vaudeville bill at the Orphe theatre, Third and Mad will be headed by Mme. Mel oratura soprano, and Ern- | tenor, in ballads and late JOHN AND MAE BURKE In “Military Monkeydoodles” Other Big Features—General Adm REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which t# the highent | and strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth: | you can bite corn off the cob; | uarantoed fifteen years m Poze, ¢ est Light, song hits R. A. Miller fa a jazz saxophone and cornet player. Eleanore and Roberto are comedy patterers. Bruce and are eccenttic dancers. | Triller Is a artist who fab. ricates art pictures with bits of col ored rags. Fields asd Brown are comedians and dancers. Sunday will bring |Arbuckle film comedy, }ana Tuesday Ethel “Life's Whirlpool.” Registered U, 8. Pat. Of, Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. DORCHESTER, MASS. Established 1780 ion 25c ae : . Everyone interested in automobiles, particularly Packards, Hudsons, Buicks and Maxwells, should be present. novelty a Fatty and Mouday | Barrymore in J. C. FORD, Chairman. Gold Crown . $15 Set of Tee $10 Set of Teeth ++ ++ 4,00 (whalebone) 85.00 Bridgework, per tooth, gold $4.00 Gold Fillings . Silver Fillings Platina Fillings -#1.00 Up -60¢ -7B¢ Characterizes our methods in every transaction, and our cus- tomers are accorded every cours teay consistent with sound busl- ness Judgment. will be First and Madi Armstrong Follies company present “Sourdough Nell; or a Night ina Dawson Dance Hall,” for the attraction next week. Characters of the early seen at the Galet son, when the days ‘Swift Harry the North will be portrayed: water Fill," “Soapy Smith,” Woolrich” and “Cherokee Bob. Will Armstrong will be the prin cipal funmaker fm the role of “Soapy Smith,” gambler of the North, There will be a bevy of dance hall girls, miners and gambling parapher- 4% Pata Savings Accounts Accounts Subject to Check Are Cordially Invited. All work guaranteed for fifteen yearn. Have impression taken in the jing and get teeth same day. minations and advice free. TF Cali and See Samples of Our Plate and Bridge Werk. We Stand the r ‘of Time. Most of our present patronage is recommended by our ‘arly customers, whose work is till giving good natiafaction. Ask our Gustomers who have tested our work. When coming to our office, be are in the right place. Bring this ad with you Open Sundays From 9 to 12 for Working People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS 9 UNIVERSITY 8ST. Opposite Vraner-laterseon Co. Peoples Savings Bank SKCOND AVE. AND PIKE 8T,