The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 7, 1918, Page 9

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\ ago, and " x ITMORE SPUIS 'scascsnoe __ the Top” at Orpheum Saturday | IS FOOD APPEAL. ust, the foot administration says prostces prov the necessary ele ments given by bread, and will help to save wheat and win the war, They should pay as big a part in the American diet as corn and other ative products consumed and the wh jeoast tne ¢ Fat still more potatoes, Everyone re were urged to grow pota he shortage of a year | nm hand, Only about in which those | They must be | oat saved Great Britain has 7.700 miles of dofend | Scene From “Over < entaan LT Sergeant Arthur Guy Empey, the Orpheum, Saturday neenes. | rect from a milit were made un tion of Sergeant Emp wh dition to his part in the served for a number & grandma whe Friend. Not on her own experience, remedy. Mothe: plication Heving tens | Banding | gratefu aturally leas. and happy anticip A 2Reel Laugh-Maker larace, and she rem sion when nature ls unaided Write the Regulator Co. he |Lamar Bidg., Atlanta, “Motherhood Book,” sable lexpectant mother time do not by any Adults 16¢ Children Se Prices Include Tax ome | plied Stmost regularity Nature provides good teeth but neglect destroys them. That’s why intelligent care and the skillful work of the. dentist are indispensable. Many ills due to neglected decaying teeth There’s no longer any doubt about decaying teeth being the seat of many diseases. It’s a proven fact known to every doctor and dentist. When you permit teeth to go from bad to worse, ever postponing until tomorrow that much-needed visit to the dentist, you are simply inviting more expense, as more work becomes necessary. Modern dentistry as practiced by our experi- enced dentists is so skillful and painless that you'll hardly realize you've been in a dentist’s chair. Electro Painless Dentists LABORING PEOPLE'S DENTISTS _ 8. E. Corner First and Pike Phone Main 2555, | Manager Eugene Levy of the Or. | %——-———_——__— } TODAY'S FROGKAMS Hes Ha: |pheum theatre, Third and Madison, has landed another big feature,| | “Over the Top,” which will open at “Overthe Top” has the official ap- | proval of the war department. More than 7,500 U, S. soldiers were em: | | ployed in the filming of the trench} y standpoint. They | | the 5 nal direc: | in ad present war years in the jas a note book, became world fa of through her recommendation that so, ©¥' |many expectant mothers dertved the | Warchester on the map. comfort and bless of this famous) The Star-Liberty Weekly on the ment to the wom- roth hood. “Oho act f Moths Friend action of Mother's Friend! Gr ., sy the muscles free, pilant and rw ed ingyen apne ‘When baby arrives they | ‘Uzation in the play he Eyes o! 4 n and danger|the World,” now at the Clemmer nerves and lign-| menta is lessened, and in place of a| consequent | Of the producers. Almost every one calm repose|is surprised at the type which was n. | Mother's Friend enables the moth-| ler to preserve her health and natural | pretty | tesque expression at times, yet the Cartoon otherwise accompanies such an occa- ea bottle of Mother's Friend the Top,” With 8S ergt. Guy Empey (Himself). at the Orpheum Saturday in} | | STRAND — Marguerite Clark in | The scenes depicting “No Man‘a| | _Jrenelle”: “Mer Mustle Homes,” | | Land” are declared to be Choroly cor! | MISSION — William Desmond in for sale Antonio Moreno in “By | | © National} w Jersey. | # clonely in Empey which, designed orig’ 4 accurately book, "Over nally | the Top, charming romance has been woven jin which leading parts are taken by Lois Meredith, James Morrison, and other Vitagraph stars. a) lee | LIBERTY Charles Ray stages a “comeback’ in “His Own Home Town” at the Liberty this week. Altho Jimmy Duncan (played by Ray) is practica |ly Kicked out of his own home town, [he returns after two years with a lot of pep and city ideas, which eventually put the little burg of same bill shows a group of yeoman .| ettes at the naval training station }eaught by Photographer Jacobs in an extremely happy mood. eee CLEMMER Selecting an actor to take the part | was probably a matter that required @ good deal of thought on the part selected, & man with somewhat | hunched shoulders and almost gro STRAND ‘The scenery of Granville Barker's Prunella,” in which Marguerite ;| Clark is starring at the Strand this week, is built to resemble stage sets, }and the w film carr yut the conventions, Instead ary movie fadeaway, at scene, the effect of a ris & and falling curtain is employed Just how to take the innovation has puzzled Seattle movie fans. Con | flieting opinions were registered on all sides. Recognition of the incon gruity of the artificial scenery, how: lever, only goes to show how real Marguerite Clark makes the fairy nt or audiences, He he fairy ste Jeth centu seem to makes 4 into twe he painted scenery seems doubly unreal COLISEUM Dorothy Dalton is the Coliseum until Satu: Mating of Marc Dorothy has a role to her liking, and, as Marcella, the dainty little modiste, she makes things hum when she hops off to |Reno from Ne York and there Mrs. Under. wood in order that society ma tron may sect a ree | Thurston Hall in seen as Robert Underwood and Juanita Hansen as Mrs, Underwood. ° pose | | | MISSION | William Desmond breaks into #0: | |clety this week at the Mission with | the aid of Gloria Swanson, his new| | leading lad It all happens in “so. | ciety for Sale,” in which the “Hon orable Bill ed by Desmond |down and ot pts the financial laid of a prett | It ts all ver y until! | he realizes he loves his “ood fairy,” | | and his efforts to prove it meet some startling set-backs. | H “7 @ i} | COLONIAL A new show comes to the Colonial n which Antonio Moreno is] d. Mary Anderson plays op-| Western p By Right of | IS DISCUSSED NEW YORK, June 7.—Mobillza-| tion of manpower in the United States for war industries and other] | exsential home activities was the problem occupying the attention of [saeys sessions of the National Con ference on War Time Economy he I. D, Roosevelt, assistant seer of the navy; Samuel Gompers, pri dent Amer! eration of and V. B. Macy, chairman, shipbuile ing labor adjustment board, wer speakers at a session for discussion of “The Government as Employer, bie ae oP care welts bs ory |lad, we inches tall, United States Civil Service District (Compris- Brief Cases, Card Cases andy | tempted ¢ e' ©) weight 210 pounds, registered in Fy Purses, qt prevent the government from active: |‘racoma Wednesday, He i, Ralph ing Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, We ‘make end repair Ease ly entering the war. rding to! Madsen, born in Kansas, Madsen | Wyoming and Alaska) Handbag: d evidence submitted by United States | was ix feet tall when he was 10| Yes; S. S. S. Is Purely Vegetable | Medicines made from roots, herbs, ( STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1918. PAGE 9 Follow the Crowd 2 and Save Money #} “The world will make a beaten path to the door of the i man who makes a better mouse trap or anything else.” 2 Emerson was right when he made this statement, and there never was a greater truism. Henry Ford did it, so did Thomas Edison and many others. The world is constantly asking for something better, and wherever and whenever the better thing is offered. the . — public will follow. — The crowds come to this Great Up- stairs Clothes Shop for better cloth- Save Money on ing and greater values. We have cut | Your Straw Hat the cost of selling to the bone—we | Genuine South American pay less for rental and more to the manufacturer. We don’t lose any- Outing Trousers for Sport Wear White Flannels, Plain and Stripe Serges $3.50 and $4.50 You'll Save Money Upstairs Panamas thing on charge accounts because we _ ome don’t have them, and with our inex- Milans and Toyos pensive fixtures, etc., we have cut the $2.50 : overhead to the minimum. Suits and Overcoats $15 to $35 Why not follow the crowd? Thousands of Seattle citizens are saving money on their clothes by patronizing this Modern Upstairs, Money-Saving Store. Why not you? Store Hours 9 to 6 Upstairs Clothes Shop FOURTH AND PIKE JOSHUA GREEN BUILDING 1 belief that! labor, Finley said. Letters of Jack | Late District Secretary in Charge of the Eleventh SPECIALTY CO. (GEO. JACKLIN, Manages} Has the best equipped plant tm the Northwest for manufacturing Law referred to attempts he | said he would make to fix a jury | which was to try an I, W. W. for murder. CHICAGO, June 7—The Indus. trial Workers of the World, 110 of| ago A 21-year-old attorneys years of Testimony of tanooga = attorne: He has been five| ward Finley, Chat-|times refused by branches of the related to Ray-! United States service. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF AN OFFICE AS EXPERT CONSULTING CIVIL SERVICE ADVISER In Connection With the Success Shorthand School | appeppeenrerere CLERKS Nature’s Safe Blood Treatment Known for 50 Years as the} pepsia and often entirely ruining the Best Remedy for Rheum- | ea!th atism, Catarrh, Scrofula, 8. S. fs made entirely of gentle. | Pri ' Jacting, healing, purifying — roots, | Skin Diseases. Jherbs ‘and barks, possessing proper: | Sclentists have discovered that the| ties that build up all parts of the | forest and the are abundantly | system, in addition to removing all supplied with ation of various | impuritie poisons from the kinds, that furnish the ingredients | blood. a safe treatment | for making a remedy, for practically | for Rhe Catarrh, Serofula, every ill and ailment of mankind. | Sores Ulcers, Skin Diseases, | Blood Poison, and all disorders of and barks which Nature has placed | the blood. It cleanses the entire sys at the disposal of man, are better] tem and it's permanent, Get 8. 8. 8.| than strong mineral mixtures and|at any drug store today, It is a concoctions, Mineral medicines work | standard remedy recognized every dangerously on the delicate parts of | where as the greatest blood antidote the system, expecially the stomach |ever discovered, If yours is a pe and bowels, by eating out the lining |culiar case, write to Medical Director, producing’ chronic dys- | 442 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga, where he will conduct special classes for the purpose of preparing young people for the United States Civil Service. The Government advertises that it has not been able to secure sufficient qualified stenographers and typists for its work. Why not prepare for this insportant service under the personal supervision of the only civil service ex- pert in the Northwest? Gregg and Pitmanic Shorthand Taught.

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