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RAL SERVICE FOR CHARLES B. LUTHER) funeral services for tative for the Luther Brothers’ wufacturing company, of Mitwau- | who died at the ae of 60, at T41 Rolmont ave. home Tuesday, - scheduled to be held from the (Special to The Star by N. RA) Only Titles Boasted by Her Fiance at 11 a m. Thursday. | pet princess, Patricia of Connaught, —_—— ————e | ia betrothed to a commoner’’--a Plain, untitied naval bero! But he's a most un a Title Insurance moner, Alexander Ramsay, com Facilitates Land Transfers ‘The privilege of freety deal- tng in land is purety of Amert. an origin and was, at the eee of Me thewption, & wide I!) vant a title, as evidenced by this Geparture from the restraints |] jist of her discarded suitors @f Monarchial Europe. | King Alfonso of Spain, Ask any tmmigrant and he ‘Will tell you his highest ambi. tf © acquire a piece of that will be his very A home owner makes a citizen—-hence the im Of encouraging this desire by removing all Of loss by reason of titles, § Tithe Inwur affords the best title pro- to the home buyer and dealing in land, the Distinguished Service Order! It'a a true “affair of the Commander Alexander Ramsay was one of the three alds to the duke of Connaught, former governor general of Canada, and the princess saw him every day when they both lved in Ottawa. | Princess Pat has refused the hand and name of each of a whole flock EYES OUR SPECIALTY, Years of ax- perience tn fitting lassen, and ow low operatt pense, on: to make lasses for lese oney. Reading or Distance Glasses, tn gol fed tr Broken Lenses duplicated oo ehort notice at reduced prices me, Rramteation and Satisfaction Guaranteed SCHOONMAKER OFTICAL CO, One Blech Seuth Fublic Market 1338 First Ave Mate 6677. First Among Foods for Babies Is Milk The first mission in a child's life ts to eat and gtow; and fret foods ts milk. ‘Condensed Milk provides mitk In {ts most sanitary and whole form. We handle all of the advertised ONDENSED MILKS ‘We also make & specialty of INFANTS’ FOODS. These come We weekly and we always guarantee thelr purity and freahness. THERE 1S NOTHING TOO GOOD FOR THE BABIES. Let us fi your next PRESCRIPTION. BUTLER DRUG COMPANY PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS and James. Phone Fillots 49. J. P. CHASE, Mer. modern Union Drug Stare is diagonally acrom from New Orleans Molasses needs - he introduction. Just go to your and ask for ‘“‘Brer Rabbit’’ you will get the most delicious, sree nvolocecs you evertasted. “you\want the finest molasses pos- to get—the kind for spreading on waffl-s, biscuits, sliced bread Piiideen—nek for GOLD LABEL Rabbit. It is the highest grade. here is another Brer Rabbit—the EEN LABEL. Itis especially selected cooking, baking and candy making. for cakes, cookies, ginger bread, bran sede Se Bae , —o eT are AMAT a9 a588% & PRINCESS PAT, WOOED BY KINGS, Pit T. Luther, Pacific coast rep. |“Honorable” and “D. §. 0.” | ington Cremation Society's) LONDON, Feb. 6-Great Britain's | amon com | mander, royal navy, and owner of | of royalties, She really did not! and makiog) King Manvel of Portugal. ot Ger-| but he is m Prince Bitel Friederteh. Prince Christopher of Greece. Prince Gustavus of Denmark Prinee William of Sweden. Count of Turin Adolph Friederich of Moecktenburg-Strelits Duke of SaxeCoburg Gotha girl she declared marry no one but an Eng and she is sticking t Alexander Ramsay titles of his own, he is the son of the her intention mother was a @Gnughter of the sixth earl of Tankerville. | educated at th biography for the English he sketched his own charac | | hopes are at rest in a silent grave was|near Sofia. About the Hertin.Bag Pritish fleet in the cam. Dardanelles, 19141916, | the east the Japanese prevail; South |and North America and Anstrafia| the Order of Distinguished |are lost to ua There in therefore paign of the and there won his 0 Princess Pat is the only member | Her elder sister, Victoria, is now crown princess of Sweden, and duchem of Fife. But any girl of good and average emotions can see «x-)| actly why the princess of Connaught } will marry Alexander, THE eb haat enter FEBRUARY 6, 1919 } and title alone! Of courwe, It will be Former Grand Duke Michael of fun for him to speak casually of the king and queen,” | “my coursing, ro likely to apeak fre quently ‘my wife, Patricia.” RUSSIA FINAL HOPE OF HUNS, » Bpectal to The Star by N. BA) LONDON, Feb. 6—Germany sees in Russia ing her shattered fortunes, This from the Munich Post, written be fore the signing of the armistios, gives the viewpoint “Our ultimate salvation fee tn our own hands. To rise again from the depths into which we have sunk When he wrote his own very brief | We must be enabled to work. “The dream of Central Burope has) parsed. and the fantastic Halkan dad tine no more will be heard In Dut one hope ieft to us—Russia” NOT EVEN HALF DEAD YAKIMA, Feb. 6—Mourned an Prince | dead by relatives and friends, Wil | the | liam Wheat, an 18-year-old veteran of the Canad@ian army, walked in Judgment | on his folks Monday on @ 20-day fur lough. | BLOCK SUFFRAGE VOTE titles No woman refuses such com: | | pefling and humorous eyes, much a| firm chin, such a strong and tender|enta of the Suxan B. Anthony qut- It simply tan't done! ‘As for Alexander, we don't think | | ne loved the prim | Would You Like Some Real ew OrleansMolasses for Breakfast? bread, candies of all kinds, either the GOLD LABEL or the GREEN LABEL is splendid—depending upon your per- WASHINGTON, Feb. 6.—Oppon- frage amendment yesterday blocked an attempt to have a formal vote on the question taken. Many housewives use Brer Rabbit exclu. sively as a sweetening and flavoring in thei: cooking and baking. Brer Rabbit Molasses contains a large percentage of real sugar. It is | ont made from sugar cane—like sugar. | S38 ribie yer only hope for rebutld- | | wealth of ¢ | no and meat we have | MU Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS SHVTOUIUUCNONNOUUETUOUNOLUUOUUEA Pe Girl, Not Escort, Responsible for Purse | Dear Mina Gre The girl T have been keeping company with for nome Ume lost her pocketbook re contly when we were out on &@ pleasure trip. It contained her | watch, some money and a number of other valuables, 1 havo tried, |thru advertising, and every other |means at my disponal, to have tt returned by finder, but have been unsuccessful, altho the pocketbook lcantained means of identification. I foel it my duty to make good the tom, while she contends that there Is no one to biame but ber |melf, I constéer that I should at| wart shoulder part of the blame since she was in my company Please inform me how I can mak« moot the Loss, i, ¥ The girl Is right; her pocket | book waa her responsibilit and not yours If howe you wirh to stand part of the | lows, 1 might give her an | cther pocketbook or a watch ‘abaret” Jasked mo how I would pronounce the word “carabet,” to which I re plied “kabera,” first two a's |whort and the Inet one long. He} |told me I was wrong and that he would wager with me that “ka-ba- * the vowels all short, wile the | correct propunetation ot the word. I accepted the waged, as I was born and raised in New York | city, and if any one were to pro-| |nounes the word a# he doo we would ugh at them, An arty reply will be greatly Apprectated CONSTANT READER. ! You are both right. Punk | @& Waenall’s Standard Diction- of the wort, altho your pro nuneiation of the word is the one commonly used. Salary Expenditure |Of Red Cross Low Dear Miss Grey: To settle an} argument, will you state ff any member of the Red Cross organi. | sation fs paid a anlary?§ T. Y. When {t {* tmpomible for a | Red Crome chapter to obtain | Clerical help gratuy {tt must be employed. The members of the war council, the division managers and most of the de- out expense to the Red Crom. The total number of full-time volunteers on October 1, 1917, was 73 An @ result of this viee and the regulation of sal at Red Cross headquarters has been kopt at a low figure, | stepfather Is Guardian Dear Mim Grey: Kindly er- plain the retation between step- father and stepchild as applicable to the following Can a stepfather command mame position toward her as a natural father? I have reference to @ case where the mother is away on & noceneary misnion, leav- ing the daughter in care of her The girl, tn 4trect viotation of her father’s orders, persists tn go- |alone, sometimes tn company of lady neigtbora jenforce his orders? Has he any? And can he be held responsfble | tee her being out after curfew hours? HB. In this particular casa the stepfather has the rights of a natural parent. The girt's mother appointed him as guar- dian over the child during her absence and he would be held directly responsible for her Create More Shifts | to Employ Idle Men Dear Miss Grey: In a etter atened “J. A. H..” the writer says “If there are not enough jobs to go} |around tn an § or 10-hour day, why | | not work six hours, and [f there are | | wtill not Jobs enough, we ean work | | onty four hours a day,” Let's carry it a little farther and } | see what the outcome is. If there| jare not enough jobs at four hours| | per day, let's reduce it to two hours | jand if there are still not enough jabs at two hours, why not reduce two hours further and not work at lall? Absurd, ian’t it? | Dispute Over } | Dear Mise Grey: A certain party} | | ary gives both pronunciations | | partment heads of the Red | Crom aro serving whotty with- | mobilization of volunteer ser- | arion, the average salary paid | obedience from « 15-year-old step-| daughter? Does he not hold the! stepparent, | | ing to the movies every night and | twice on Sundays, sometimes} What power has the father to! FIFTH AVE Anticipating Spring Needs in Women’s Knit Underwear an extensive showing of desirable weights and textures has been assem bled—many of the sort that serve admirably for year- Mercerized Lisle Union Suits in flesh- color, with silk tops in bodice style and ribbon shoulder straps, $3.00. | Silk-top Lisle Union Suits in, flesh- color, with band finish, Lisle Envelope Chemises in flesh-color, with silk top and band finish, $2.50. | Silk-top Lisle Vests in flesh-color, with | band finish, $1.75. Lisle Union lation style, with band facing, at $2.00. uits in bodice and regu- FREDERICK & NELSON —PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE admirers, are $50.00. round wear also. $2.50. tt —== = Hughes Rubber-Cushion Hair Brushes | —Perfected so, that they may be cleaned with water, these unique Brushes, with single bristles set in rub- | ber cushions, have added cause for popularity. Large size Brushes with stiff double black bristles, $3.00; smaller | Brushes with rosewood white quadruple bristles, $3.75. Brushes for men, with dull wood backs and stiff, double bristles, $1.50. $5.00. | | | ‘A New Shipment of | } Medium-size Brushes, with extra long and stiff quadruple bristles, $3.50. Brushes with ivoroid backs and double white bristles, $4.00; with quadruple¢white bristles, backs and black-and- —First Floor, ited my own individual, peculiar and|Lorimer’s even voice over the line, CONFESSIONS of a WAR BRIDE The truth of the matter ts: All wealth is produced by labor. When | | we quit work, all wealth, which is |tho product of labor, stops. When ixrer Rabbit we work eight hours we have the ht hours’ product to |divide, Six hours would give us| three-fourths the amount of wealth | to divide, | We live from hand to mouth ana | | must. Statisticans tell us we would | begin to starve in 10 days if no new | | wealth is created or transported. | but could rtation by not use without trans |Iabor. Fish, butter, eggs and most | things we use would be exhausted in | five days and semi-starvation begin. | | Nature's laws require work if we are to live, and nature's laws can | not be broken. They break us when | neglected Further, there can be no one em | ployed without an employer. The overhead expense iq as great In a factory working two hours per day | as for eight hours work. Taxes, re pairs and interest on investment work 24 hours per day and 365 days |per year. I think “J. A. M.” had | better go deeper Into the question of sustenance. What we need is a re adjustment of wealth produced, and | then produce more and not less. | WwW. A. 8. “J. A. UL" didn’t mean t the wheels of industry should turn only four or two hours a day. According to his plan they might operate eight, or 12, or even 24 hours, if necessary, Ho would create shifts enough to give all of the unemployed work In other words, one man would work less hours at a better wage scale, (Copyright, 1919, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) _ DETE! RMINATION TO. | D HUSBAND | S OVER ME—AND 1 MEET HIM. | ay The return of my soldier-husband opened a new volume in the history of my life. Certainly its first chap. ter was unique in romance, The bursting of a high-explosive shell had jarred the mechanism of my Rob's brain, and had shut me, Jane Lorimer, bride of a few months, out of his mind and out of his heart, perhaps forever! Once more, for him, I had become Jane Ames, the little girlfriend of his boyhood, the pal of college vaca, tions in the north woods and the platonic companion of literary adven. tures in prose and verse. But the memory of me as his wife had been destroyed! Our one short meeting in his father's house had proved this to all his family The war was won; nations were turning over new leaves in history; “reconstruction” had become every- body's problem; and 1, Jane Lorime * If you value your watch, let | Haynes repair it, Near Liberty | theatre,—Advertisement, Don’t Sacrifice Your Liberty Bonds Get their full market value from the National Hank of Commerce jecond and Madixon The Vogue of the Cape Follows Closely Upon Its Introduction for wraps so universally becom- ing are not usually lacking in especially when -there sveral versions of the mode, as there are in this instance. The new arrivals are of Poiret Twill Pom-pom Coating The Cape sketched is of navy Poiret twill, with 9-inch facing at bottom of beige self-material, and yoke and shoulder seams fin- ished with cord braid. Priced at Mercerized Lisle Union Suits in white and flesh-color, low neck and sleeve- less, with tight knee and band fac- ing, $2.50. Lisle Union Suits in low neck, sleeve- less style, with cuff or wide knee and scalloped edge, $1.50. Cotton Union Suits with reinforcement under arm and at thigh; in low neck, sleeveless style, with cuff or wide knees, $1.00. Crepe de Chine Envelope Chemises ‘A wide band of Filet - pat- tern lace inser- tion size, $2.25, with narrow | Brushes with quadruple black bristles, $2.00. ribbon-run lace tops Pink Crepe de Chine Envelope Che- mises— dainty, well-made gar- ments at $2.25. Serge Silvertone —Second Floor. ona. —First__Pieor, The Basement Store $2.25 edged —THE BASEMENT STORE, particular problem: I had to recon- struct my bridal happiness! —— here are you?” “Down town!” I answered, “and Some brides must weep for their I'm not coming home, Mother; at men, whose bodies are buried on the least, while Bob is there? field of honor, while the war had sent back my Bob, handsome to look world, but with only half his soul! “Oh, my child!” came back her quick remonstrance, “If you feel |upon and keen to do the work of the|that you must hide from Bob, why | not hide right here at home? Surely All that stood for the love of wom- \there are plenty of snug corners in an, as represented by me, was dead, | this big house for a little mouse like was dissipated in the smoke of battle | you?” over Flanders’ fields! A big wave of homesickness chok- I had fled from the humiliation|/ed me. I simpty wanted to throw and the hurt of ft, and had been| myself into Mother's arma. Before picked up in a railroad station like a|I could control my voice, Mother runaway girl by the dancer known | went on: as the “Queen of Smiles.” As I rest- “I understand perfectly, dear, Of ed in a small white bedroom of her | course, I will not insist.” flat, I reconsidered her advice, and| found it good: “Mother, dear! I simply couldn't |stand it to meet Bob again! But, “Win your husband over again! Or|after he has gone back to Washing- some other girl will get him away from you!” The thought was enough to arouse | |ton, IN call you up! Goodbye, | Mother!” I rang off at the risk of seeming a bride to action, whether she loved|ruda I knew Mother's next qnee- her husband or not. For the pres- ent, I couldn't face Bob, but I had a duty to his mother. I must phone her and assure her of my safety. ‘To poor payment for her many kind- nesses, I borrowed my hostess’ electric | coupe, and went down to phone from | the Cosmopolitan hotel. Calls from the residence of the “Queen of Smiles" might become clews for the detectives whom Daddy Lorimer would soon set to find me. far fo Fane, dear! came Mahe’ et her worry about me would be| tion would concern my new address. Then I walked slowly down the hotel mezzanine floor and dropped into a corner sofa. In the midst of the gay crowd, I felt deserted and desolate. My own words mocked me: “T simply couldn't stand it to meet Bob again!" My tears blurred the figure in olive drab which was about to pass me. I wiped them away and looked up-to meet my husband's friendly smile! ee be continued.) Safe Tbk u NERNTS wil ALO ASK FOR | The Original fi Horlick’s Nourishing Digestible Ne Cooking For Infants, InvalldssngGrowing Children. Rich Mitk, Matted Grain Extrect in The Original Food-Drink For All Ages. OTHERS ore IMITATIONS