The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 29, 1919, Page 9

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“aan, ORRIEN DIES Teenie Belle O'Brien, 16, daughter | Capt. and Mre C.J. onrien ‘Bird ave, died of heart failure night, Capt Of the steamship West Go. now at Newport News, Va on LEMMER ‘The Big Play of the Year! THE GREAT NAZIMOVA “THE R RED LANTERN” aun ‘OF’ {ts owN NOW PLAYING! Wett 2533 "i He Doesn't Look O'Brien is} 8a Like a Diplomat | rtenoes Latin LORD ROBERT CEC/L. Lord Robert Cecil has been an important figure at the peace con- ference and ix a member of the executive committee of the league of nations, He outline! the Brit- ish, draft for a league constitution which was used along with those of Wilson and Gen, Smuts In fram- ing the pact. This picture was taken at the first meeting of the executive committee of the league in Parts. Ceci! was British min- ister of blockade during the war. —~ THR DAY OF DAYS HISTORIC LOOT LEFT BY FLEEING GERMANS (Special to The Star by N. EB. A) BRUSSELS, M The pen with which the peace of 1870 was signed, a stone cannon ball dating back to the days of Joan of Are and hundreds of other objects of historic Interest have been found in a house in Brussels packed for | citizen | from shipment to Germany. The loot was taken from the abbey of the Brothers of Pasy at Froyennes, It was not discovered till a Belgian brought his family back England. It required two trains to carry all the historic ob jects the Germans had packed in Brussels, and abandoned in their hasty retreat. —-~ THE DAT OF DATS “The Day of Days,” & rapidaction story of adventure and romance, packed with humor, begins in The Star Monday a Sensations of an | again. THE ne. STAR— Artist’ s Model | | CHAPTER XVI MOTHERS'S LETTER saalan-borr ut he Manya KR ' ne Dall an a model quarter. In the ters ahe r expert ous wife. is dealing wit ences with an artist's BY MANYA RUDINA k Artist's Model) distress over the ending of my work with the seulp and felt not at all I! doing any thing. And then there came a letter from my mother writes me regularly which nearly took me back to Can ada again (Famous New Yo 1 was in deep every week |t study dancing, and that put the one of those he | thought of America into my head and drove me to try that adventure All young living things, 1 think ome to a Ume when they must li their own lives; # themselves id te like oxy i both its parents, and in some like all ancestors. Hut jehiid also haw an individuality of iu own, it differs in some respects f n ite parents, from ite brot * and sintere and from everyone else on the face of the earth. 1 had often thought when [ posed before the mirror, of studied a new dance step, of my body, and how, tho it was like the body of every other woman in the world, yet there was no other in thetr own way, Bvery chi degree its every |Wody exactly like it. It was springtime; she wrote to me | about the garden and the flowers at our home; she told me that my beau tiful room in the tower of the house was waiting for me just as I had left it, and she implored me to come back. She was afraid something would happen to me in New York She did not know whether I was making enough to live on, whether I was well, Bhe was afraid to believe all the good news I had written to her My Uttle Manya, she wrote, you wish to stay away from your mother who loves you hard in a strange city, while here at home awaits everything that you can ask for, Your father and | want Your sisters want Won't you come hon very near to going back I suppose mothers are alike | all over the world, And my mother understand why it was back I was could not that I shoul wish to leave my com-|! must do fortable home to come to New York In the past mothers have cried over sons who go away and leave the home nest to make thelr own way in| @Vver the call leads me; of that only the world, but up to this age they could always keep thelr daughters at home—until they were safely mar ried. But gtrie aa well ae boys want to live their own lives—want to do something that is in them to do. I think they have always wanted it but in the past they have not been able to break, down the traditions and customs that have tied them to the home until a man came to “take care of them.” I thought over my mother’s letter Rut I could not do what she asked. It was not pride, the I was proud. too, and it was not stubbornness. way the same force that drove me from Rovno to Kieff when I was a little girl of 14 to try to find a place ECONOMY and EFFICIENCY are points in favor of FISHER’S BLEND FLOUR = FISHER’S BLEND, in preference to ordinary flour, the Day Lum- eer, at Big Lake, Wash., effected er loaves of better bread were obtained. 'ASTE,” writes the Lumber Company’s Baker. _ MADE WAS EATEN BY THE MEN.” MORE LOAVES A very substantial saving. More “AND WE HAD NO “ALL THE BREAD I AND NO WASTE—REAL ECONOMY if reasonable care is exercised in the baking, housewives will find FISHER’S BLEND the most economical flour that it is possible to buy : Facoua SES Manufactured in “AMERICA’S FINEST FLOURING MILL FISHER FLOURING MILLS COMPANY i * by BELLINGHAM MT. VERNON wwhy | and work | | Iduatity, it is that which makes up indiv Something—some force of heredity—maybe from ages ago—had Implanted ip my mind and body the desire to express emotions in arti» Uc poses, 1 wanted to help create something beautiful 1 could not do that at home, But I could do it in New York. Some y, when the war would be over, | could go to Parin, | where I would have @ #ull better op- portunity, I knew all the ume that | | would have to g@ when the time/ came. Much as I loved my mother, hard ax was the separation from her, I could not go back home, If I did, } it would only be to lave again. you | } | times and put it | | holiday | their war heroes. Election of offi | cers, trustees, and adoption of by- '40,000,000 FED IN WAR | [tive restaurants in | dent of the Seattle Typographical | | Nobles of the Mystic bY | vention It is hard that this must bo we. Some day, if I should ever be a other myself, perhaps I would know how hard it is. But the law of lite is same for all; exch must live his or her own life, There were | | things in the world that I must fina out; there waa’ work to do that I felt| The pursuit of that Which my mind compelled took me from Revno to Canada, and thence | to New York; it will take me wher lam sure, I Kissed my mother’s letter many under my pillow 1 was sorry for her and for myself, but I could not go back | home. ——~ THE DAY OF DAYS —— ‘NAME OFFICERS FOR MEMORIAL ‘| Association Will Meet Again Friday Night Incorporatore of the Memorial Au d@itorium association will meet Fri | day evening at § o'clock in the Army jand Navy club, according to Frank W. Cottertli, one of the backers of the movement. At this meeting no idle speeches in praise of the men who fought and died in the great war will be made, | but concrete «tepe will be taken to insure the immortalization of thelr | deeds in a memorial, which will be | one of the most beautiful buildings in America, according to Cottert!! Memorial day was chosen for this | final organization in order that the | program might be launched on the | day when the attention of every per son in Seattle would be turned to- | wards the deeds of the loyal Amert- can boys of this war and thome that | have gone before, Particularly ap propriate to the purpose of the meet | ing will be the memorial spirit of the | At thelr fret meeting following the Victory Loan drive, during which memorial activities were subordi nated to the national need, only sign. ets of the articles of incorporation Will be eligible to vote, Final lawful | organization will be completed by this bedy of citizens, and then again the organization will be thrown open to public membership, in order that every man, woman and child in Se attle may have part in honoring | laws will be the order of business. — THE DAY OF DATS — ‘NEW RUSSIAN ARMY 1S GROWING EFFICIENT (Special to The Star by N. BE. A.) OMSK, May 24.—The new Rus- slan army under Gen, Gaida and Gen. Diedrichs ts rapidly becoming efficient and will be fully compe- tent to take the field alone when the allied forces are withdrawn. Diseipline ts good and equipment and supplies from French and British and to a smaller degree from Americans are rapidly being applied Shortage of food is de moralizing the Bolshevik army on the wentern front, tho ft outnum- bers Kolchak’s forces five to one. THE DAY OF DAYS | BY CO-OP RESTAURANTS | (@pecial to The Star by N. B. A.)| BRUSSELS, May 28,—Co-opera- Brussels during the war served more than 40,000,- 000 meals at prices as low as 9) and 10 cents, A system of sub-| widles for benefit of those reduced | the war permitted the carrying | home of meals at 7 cents. At the close of the war there were 67] such restaurants and they have served as high as 66,000 meals ina |day. With the gradual recovery of | th country the number of these! restauran being reduced. THE DAY OF DAYS PRINTERS ELECT GASSMAN A. J. Gaseman was elected presi Clift J, Campbell | union, Wednesday t, and H, C. | was chosen vice preside Ross was reelected secretary-treas- | urer. R. A, Benedict and J, G. ‘Thomas will represent the local at the State Federation.of Labor con: | to be held in Bellingham, | June 16 THE DAY OF DAYS TO INITIATE SHRINERS Capt. John Rex Thompson will leave for Manila Thursday, where he | will initiate a class into Nile temple, | Shrine. This ia Capt. Thompson's second trip to the Philippines to initiate Shriners THE DAY OF DAYS Cryptic Masons will hold their first | annual reunion when Adoniram coun | cll exemplifies de ‘Thursday night at the Masonic temple, Har vard ave. and BE. Pine st. Degrees | will be conferred on a large class of | candidates. |"It you | Haynes value your watch, let repair it, Near Liberty —Advertisement H IDAY, MAY 29, 1919. Compare the New andardized Net Prices of Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup 6,000 Mile Fabric and Cord Tires with prevailing schedules of ordinary 3,500 mile tires and those of any other make carrying equal mileage warranties. Price Schedule Effective May 12th: Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup Tires and “Ton Tested”, Tubes, under an economical and perfected zone selling system, are marketed by responsible dealers at “LAUGH CONTEST” | EDITOR SWAMPED “Help!” cries the “Laugh Con-| test” editor. Swamped by funny stories and anecdotes from renders of The Star, the editor ts unable to name the winner today, as he intended But he will struggle comscientious ly in an effort to winnow the! very best story which he thinks will be entitled to the first prize, $10, and he wil! publish the story and the of the winner inj Friday's issue of The Star the same time he will name th winner of the second prize, $5, and the next best three stories and thetr authors, who will receive a dollar each, By way of keeping the pot bot! ing, Mra, M. J. Carruthers, of Concord at., submite this Father: “Will you have more fish?” Son: “No.” Father (secking to correct son's table manners): “No what?" “No, fish.” name some K. T. K. says he thinks this te something better than Edmund Vance Cooke Little Albert fs far from being a sanctimonious lad. It takes much |old daughter for a kiss. Standardized Net Prices Uniform Throughout the United States Penn VACU UMC CUP | 6000 MILE TIRES PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER COMPANY, JEANNETTE, PA: Seattle Branch; 536 First Ave., South coaxing to get him to say his pray- ets. About @ month ago he shock ed the family with this unusu ending: “Bless Ma and Dad and Brother and—aw, Ma, can't you folks say your own prayers?” Charies W. Hall, of Granite Falls, was about to start to work one morning when he asked his 4-year- She came “Well, raise up to him and said | down! ~THE DAY OF DATS — Be on the lookout for your “Day of Days.” Liberty Bonds Bought and Sold at Market Rates The Seattle REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which ts the lightes@ and strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouthy you can bite corn off the cob; guaram teed 15 yearn EXAMINATION FREB $15.00 Bet of Teeth............810.00 Teeth. 1d See pies af Our ih ma early patients, whose work is still pationts who have tested our work. you are in the right place. e Bridge W: Most of our present patronage oe Le merge » our giving w th our ‘hen coming to ‘our office, be Bring this ad with you. Open Sundays From 9 te 12 for Werking People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS Ses UNIVERSITE OT, Oppeaite Vrases-Patersen Co TOKYO NOW PLANNING BIG $50,000,000 HARBOR TOKYO, March 28.—Harbor plans calling for an expenditure of $50, 000,000 are ready. Ten years ago | the work could have been done for $15,000,000. The government will be asked for one-third of the amount, reclaimed ground will pay |pay off the bonds for the remain- ing third. Adler-i-ka Helps Her! | “After using Adler-t-ka my wife |is able to do her own housework and did all housecleaning. The |soreness and pain in her side dis- |appeared.” (Signed) W. H. baker, Salina, Pa. Adler-i-ka expels ALL gas and sourness, stopping stomach distress INSTANTLY, Empties BOTH up- per and lower bowel, flushing EN- TIRE alimentary canal. Removes ALL foul matter which poisons jsystem. Often CURES constipa- jtion. Prevents appendicitis. We have sold Adler-i-ka many jit cara, glycerine and nine other sim- ple drugs. Swift Drug Co. leading druggists. —thie Is one of the algns that you will NOT find door, upon the ity of our toe re the “come again” desire, Navy YARD OPTICIAN Main Office 115-16 Seaboard Bide. at Pike, Seatth Wednesday and Sat- M., 319% Pacific 730 Phones Main 446 Renwood to Dr. Dickerson OPTOMETRIST OPTICIAN ae we a we ja third and receipts from ships en- | |tering the harbor are expected to| Bru- years. | is a mixture of buckthorn, cas- | and| If you like rapid action fiction, ~ |= for “The Day of Days. ‘AMUSEMENTS roe MOORE >= MARION MORGAN DANCERS Bailey and Cowen, Daisy Nelli, Bé@+ win George, Thomas Swift and Mary Kelley, Emile and John Nathane— Birds of a Feather, 10-25-50-750-$1 10-25-50 Orpheam Vendzville ‘(PALACE HIP Continuous Dail¥, 1 to 11 | Earl Williams Trump” VAUDEVILLE —In— “The Highest HIP |PANTAGES Mats, 2:20; Nights, 7 and 9 with AGNES MURR ‘and. JOSIE NAN Steever = Teale. a De Leag, Harris Four, ane win ‘eae General Admission, 25¢. AND This Week—Lew White in “FUN AT MONTE CARLO” Nights (Sunday), 38¢; Mata, (except Rondays), 250; Ladies’ Mats. ( Sundays), 10c, Mats, 2:30; Nighi 1:38 and 9:16, ‘This coun 2 bye sat Sat. Nommedy 14 1T Tavs. TO ADVERTISE” |] stock: GRA } Members Chicago Board of Tra@e MARGIN—CASH—PART PAYMENT Elliott 1324. 505 Lowman ' LIBERTY BONDS LOCAL

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