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FIFTH AT IKE—CONTINUOUS uToi Tonight and Saturday Comprise Your Last Times to See This Wonderful De Mille Production S MARIUS BRAMBILLA Conductor Admission 20e—Children 10¢ Saturday, June 15. 2:30 Mw Adults Ze. Children 15¢. MME. LEPPER’S HALL Free > erat gre: bia ton in Particular Place for Particular there is really wonderful music at your command with a phono Those who prefer the type of instruments This Portable Columbi it haa all the Exclusive Colum aplendid and will be sent to selections for $4% ith our # 1604 Foarth Ave. oD! “Light and Airy” BENEFIT SERIES ES.— WED. DANCES fitsar. Season Tickets for sale at Mme. oa ranke 00. GooD for 15 Admissions. Couple, eet extra lady, 25¢. Tax. Free Punch ‘tus Wa: cua | | SOUSA’S BAND Will Play for You no limit to the you will have graph in your home—and here is the way to make this music possitle, We are showing TWO FINE INSTRUMENTS smaller will at satisfaction in Improvements , double spring motor, ete you with elgh $1 a Week AN OUTFIT FOR CAMPING—Music 1 camp outfit that sells for $: of exchanging for a larger machine in the Call and hear the latest re it will be a pleasure to play find and pay only trola r t ords on as man comp! erything ready to amuse « tertain you and the family. This Splendid Cabinet Victrola a beautifully finished ment with accommodates offered (eight 6.80 offered on the most Inviting Terms and ev nd on: e with records instru splendid Vie cabinet that 100 records—is sixteen selections 85e records) al terms of all the atures—a with double-faced In the 20.26 A y model you are interested as you wish to hear camp is pomsible with the privi STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1918. PAGE 3 TONIGHT SATURDAY Naughty Naughty Words fail us—tike the eclipse, “Naughty, Naughty” must be seen to be appreciated. We advise the one-eyed fans to stay two shows! It’s C. Gardner Sullivan at his best. WALLACE xt: WURLITZER FIRST AT PIKE—CONTINUOUS, Admission 26-—Children 10c u TO 1 LAST TIMES FRIDAY ATURDAY FRANK KEENAN ENID MARKEY WAR'S WOMEN Second at Seneca—Contingous 11 to 11 Admission 26c, Children 10c | CONFESSIONS OF 8} wan befuddled with drink. or Goon. “If poor Eleanor Fairlow knew that I was writing this, abe would wake in her grave to hate me. “Margie, I wronged her much more than I did you. I sometimes We all know of those lovable men who can say anything or do any thing and be forgiven just because they are unfailingly good-natured. And I believe, little book, that a woman is oftimes forgiven—provided she does not break the eleventh com mandment and is found out. “She DENTISTRY We offer you the best Dentistry obtainable at reasonable prices. Our Fridge and ¢ unrivaled for beax wn work y and perma by One who never sinned and who || nence. Our Perfected NMubber and by one who never sinned and who one i tha stand in & clase by ni “gh emacives for fit, comfort and made love the crux of His life, but I] Satisraction. Consultations and sometimes think that men who know the value of temptation often | forgive because their wives are al-| ways happy—aiways good-natured You remember, little book, that examinations are free ment work guaranteed. NATIONAL DEATISTS, 34 and Pike | Entrance 1504 Third Ave. All perma- qa ‘WAR PIGEONS | SAVE LIVES OF FIGHTING MEN LONDON, June inter eating stories ¢ ihe work of the naval pigeon ser ng add to the records of Amiralt The birds, which number several thousands, have been the means of saving weores of lives, and their | work of delivering messages in 96 | per cent succeswful | | A French naval officer, flying a |meaplane, recently was driven down | |by @ German airplane and landed in the within range of the enemy ast batteries | Shells fell all about him. taing that he could not be sent his pigeon out with | masse | | “They have got the range. All in| lover, Vive la Mrance!* | How the pigeons bring back news of the progress of an engagement in shown by these measagen, recetved | * at & seaplane e#tation In Flanders “Am shot down 10 miles N. N. Nieuport. Send fighters quick, One Hun down, My tank shot Shortly after this mesnage was re ecolved, apparently from the same aviator “Machine turning over. Have jet Usoned everything. Am on wing tip. Sea calm. Machine has seemingly Nothing in wight. I think shine will float a long Ume. Send small craft at once Land ‘bus has Just made one circuit, but I don't think he saw me. My love to my and waved thin, mes: real he steadied ™ mother, Tell her I am not worrying If machine winks, I will swim to a| buoy close by.” The crew of another flying bont found itself in difficulty at nea and dispatched a pigeon. The weather war bad. nd the bird had to battle against a head wind. He fought his way to the coast line, however, and fell dead a few miles from home. The | mensage was delivered and the crew was saved GRAND DUKE CI CLERKS; WIFE KEEPS HOUSE} LONDON, June 14.—One of the| Rusuian grand dukes, known as the “London Michael” to distinguish him| from the Grand Duke Michael, haa| fallen from great wealth to compara Uve penury as a result of the Ku» sian revolution. Before the war he lived in one of the finest residential estates in the neighborhood of London. He is now a clerk at $2,000 a year in an office near Westminster Abbey, Hin wife the Countess Torby, conducts their small home with gest and without grumbling | Spent yeast which collects in breweries and distilleries in put thru & process which turns it out in the form of buttons, door bell plates and knife handler, A WIFE am almost glad that I believe that death in eternal sleep, because | pies hate to meet, in the long ume coming, the accusing glances of | Eleanor Pairlow's grief-«tricken eyen *L try to tell mynelf that I did not ruin her life—that it was Fate—and then, Great God! I know, Margie, I know, and ail that has come to me in what I deserve-—only what | have richly deserved.” (To Be | Continued) WASHINGTON, Midvale Steel ¢ June 13.—The! will make an ex- tension of its plant near Philadel-| phia, under its agreement with the government to provide greatly ir creased facilities for ordnance pro- duction TWENTY-ONE | happy home AEROPLANES OF FOE LOST 14.~'Twenty-one and a balloon we Jun LONDON German airpls and four enemy dentroyed machines driven down out of control in day and night fighting by Pritish airmen Wednesday and Thursday, the war office announce toda Your Prit inh planes are missing. Several tone of bombs were dropped on enemy ob Jectiv oS Cynthia Grey’s 2 [ LETTERS vi UBLIAU LULLED LDN Ts Thinks Mother Shouldn't | Seek Child Adopted Out | Dear Mins Grey: Sometimes 1 really feel provoked at the worman who cla to be the real mother ds out such slams at the mother or the would-be mother as on ntured to call us mother of a six We took him from a home when he was six weeks old and he certainly is a bright, beauti- ful boy. Now why should his moth er by birth come to our house and tell him she i# his mother instead of me when I have sacrificed and done for him for six years, and expect to continue to do so, Why should ahe spoil the child's life and our for the anke of natiefy year-old boy ing her curiosity, which she calls love? She claims she could not take care of the child, then some one! must; but I think if it was real mother-Jove she could find some hon-| est way to make an existence for herself and child. I know if I were| left alone with my boy, even tho he in an adopted one, I would find some way to earn my living and his and have him with me at least nights, A READER. Drinks Siz Cups of Coffee a Day. r Miss Grey: I am asking little help from you. The other day) my doctor wanted me to give up the! use of coffees, I have been chewing coftes for 15 years and I drink six cups every day. I cannot get along without it for my breakfast Il can not drink tea or milk. Do you think it hurts me to chew coffee? Do you think {t is right for the doctor to tell me to give up the use of coffee? CATHERINE. That you are in {ll health ts evident, else you would not have consulted a physician. Six cups of coffee in too much for anyone to drink day, It is ni reasonable to suppose, after vs ing so much coffee for so long, that you could entirely give it up at once; but try cutting down on it gradually, For instance, make it weaker and drink five cups one day, or for several days, then four, and so on until you get down to one cup. Ordi- | narily I would not advise any- | one to chew gum, but In your n one particular case, I believe it would be much less harmful than chewing coffee To regain your good health ought to re you for any amount of sacrifice About the Minute | Men's Organization Dear Mise G Would you please inform me what the Minute Men's business is? What ages they take in and how much it costa to join? A PATRIOT. | ‘The Minute Men is an organ fzation of private citizens en | gaged in aiding and furthering war work. You may secure | further information thru your wonderful story of De Maupassant —_ Those New The wife was always charming, 4) | ways beautifyl—a cons it une ment and joy to her husband, who was somewhat slow and stupid. More | than anything else in the world she loved jewels, and she was always showing her husband rings and neck \iaces and other gauds set with imi tation gems, and was alw | thinking that the imitation gems set off his wife's beauty more than r ones would set off the some other woman At last the wife lied, and th husband wa solate and eved so much | He became poorer at last found that he take the pitiful little imitation je and sell them to keep from starving. It almost broke his heart to them for sale, but what was his sur good looks ¢ and wou Following Three Grades prise and consternation to find the of the Style Here Pic- jewels real, worth almost a king's jransom, He was rich beyond his tured: | wildest dreams, and he was able to* marry a woman of wealth. The story nen’ nee Jended with the Monsieur “ PEARI GRAY KID OXFORD econd wife vamp; size | was a monument of ail the virtues, PATENT 1 OXFORD. but she made him very unhappy C widths Mra. Trent haa been a monument ALSO PAT 7; A to virtues all her life, but she has made two men unhappy, and helped to make the lives of her sons }and daughter at times almost a liv | ing hell. i] of all the 2 widths. Price PEARL GRAY SUE Perforated vamp and lace stay; | 1 am afraid, little book, if these pe ey eae LAB vie act pre confessions of mine ever get into print, some one will say that I talk }too much about Mrs. Trent, But Made on an easy fitting last: has you and I know that it is time that to 7% and Band C widths. P the women of her type should be past, where they be Women's White Canvas Pumps, egated to the lon She made other day t | doing some political work. “Politics is no work for a woman,” she eaid with that finality of the unthinking abaloo the nd I were a terrible hu cause Molli Boys’ White and Black Tennis 0: Women's White or Black Tennis Youths’ and Best Quality refoot S | I have become rather diplomatic Best Quality Barefoot latel nd I said nothing, but Mollie Children's White vas Mary J exploded Girls ni Leather Mary div to ¢ Misses’ Also Boys’ sald, “because pers are 1 suppose," she saloonk mothers the a power in wives should politics, and Childret let liquor ruin their sons and hus bands, rather than to tr to have In both our Regular Line the saloon put out of busines 1 variety of Novelty " Jim Edie, who stood by at thi And the eains wearing qusllt time, said soothing “Don't get The Symonds Prices wi yor excited, Mollie, The time is not so many years off when this whole country will be prohibitior | TH “1 wish it could have come before | GOOD my darling baby boy died,” spoke up| Mrs, Trent virtuously Oh, how I wanted to say, “It is 202:8 women like you, who have been per Laftes aatel eae fectly content to be parasites, that Hintrenge have kept the saloonkeeper in busi: | ness ull now Iam thinking this, little book, for ALL 26 St I have just been reading in Dick's} ALL 1c Sho manuscript, and he says, “Margie 1| ALL 15e Shoe never did a wicked thing, a silly jUning, in my life, unless my mind Are Here THE SYMONDS SHOE CO.’S REGULAR LINES T LEATHER OXFORD 1M is’ White or Black ndals, sizes Best Quality Barefoot Sandals, sizes 8) to 11 andals, sizes I1'y to 2 and Children’s Patent Roman Sandals «Shoes at ind in our Bat Shors—Oxfords and Pum for which you RO, CHEAP . Bldg., m0 USK ELEVATOR and SAVE MONEY °.@ Has blind eyelets 4 to A inch Louis at $6.95 sizes 4 to 7, At $5.45 4 to 84.905 The same style Same style and size DE OXFORD $6.95 inch covered walkin. Price A BROWN PUMP FOR $6.95 the rice Louis heel; comes in size $6.95 with Louis heels, all sizes. xfords Oxfords 8 $1. 10.81. 25 sizes 24 nes, prices white leather soles, si. Prices Surprisingly Low in Section we have u many dollars YMONDS SHOE (CO. SHOES / D) AFG eae ird at Union St Avenue Third Se 10¢ 10¢ Polishes: Polishes, Laces at local Council of Patriotic Service. | Letters to Germany Hard to Get Thru Dear Miss Grey; Is there any possible way for me to communicate with my relatives in Germany? T. T. B. Not unless you could arrange it thru the Swiss consul at Washington, D. C.. who handles German affairs in this country. Not Giving ‘Out This Sort of Information Dear Mixa Grey: Tha | lering how many decks the Vaterland, the being for transport 0% ps ou er se de and thought hten me | you perb INQUISITIVE L, J. 8 No official information has been given out regarding the Vaterland because of reasons pertaining to the war | Rridesmaid Usually Provides Own Dress Miss Grey: Should the bride} the gown for her b ssmaid, | buy her ow ELIZARETH | It is usual for the bridesmaid | to provide her own dress. If for any reason the bride pref or is more able to furnish it, she may do 80. | Wants to Operate a Phone in France Dear Miss Grey: I would like very much to go to France as a telephone operator, but I cannot speak French they would let me AMERICAN Telephone operators assigned to duty in France must have a speaking Knowledge of French Do you suppose Better to Disregard Talk About Slackers. Dear Miss Grey much has been 1 about shipyards; that all oung men in draft age are going to he yard, Aw there are three of 18 shipfitters who worke t the around together and have heard re varks as to bein ackers, do you hink it our d to enlist or stay at our ¥ SHIPFIT If you read the daily paper und everyor that our building important he war as training of this fact patriotic must nment con. just W rs the s vitally of ships to winn’ men In it would seem view the these p whe ick to your 4 more to disregard ty remarks of peoyte ra Uncle ) calls you elsewhere ) THE DAT — FOR WAR me GROTE-RANKINCS: Store Hours From & Two Hundred Large and Comfortable Rockers Rockers for Camp, Porch, Lawn Made The high back and broad arms make these Rockers especial No C. d we reserve the See to limit ieee Satisfactory Terms Always OTTO F REOLL, President On Sale Saturday 2.95 or Home of selected hardwood, finished golden. ly comfortable. O. D. or phone orders can be accepted, andl +g “THE Excellent Steamers Through 1,000 Miles of Splendid | Gallings from Seattle, 9 a m. May 8, 18, 29: June 8, 15, 3%, $8) CANADIAN PA For that Vacation or Business Trip—go East, through “The Heart of a Grander Switzerland.’ Hotels—Steamers—Al Canadian Pacific Standard— None better. ” Trains— ALASKA — LAND OF THE TOTEM POLES” Scenery duly 6, 13, 20, 27; August 3, 10, 17. For rates and other information, apply te E. E. PENN, G. A. P. D. CANADIAN PACIFIC RY. 608 Second Ave., Seattle —have you bought BRADBURY They're terns a gorgeous a latest creations of dependable shades nd colors. Solids, in browns, bly tans, ete, and in catchy stripes, They are very rea sonable in price and are still sell ing upwards from 2 iCreait ‘Gladly| It is e the East an ace jit is tt |buy and is refles sonal appearance. | morrow the cleverest designs and in utfitting 1332-1334 SECOND AVENUE your summer SUIT? here in the snappiest pat of the season's Tay asy to buy from] ern, Just open unt—that's all asiest. way to the advantage 1 in your per