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} FRIDAY, JUNE 38, 1921. THE SEATT ' ( FIRST CHURCH SKYSCRAPER SECOND NEAR SENECA LAST TIMES TONIGHT | Marguerite Clark in ‘Scrambled Wives’ SATURDAY—A story of a man who is true to one wom- an, though arfother man steals her away! ‘Norman Kerry and Dorothy Bernard Vanity Comedy First National “HUBBY BEHAVE” Kinograms _ STRAND ORCHESTRA Under S. K. Wineland, Playing “Samson et Delilah”—Saint-Saens oy Sa Oe 16 17 18 19 in Today’s Star Here you will find opportunities galore to fill your market basket at substantial savings. Seattle’s public markets, which are among the finest in the country, are mak- ing very special bids for your business. UUUVOUUOTUUVRGEAUUEOGUUUOEUOOEOOUOAOUOAEUOAOOOUOOUOEOEOOEOUETAEAN AAU Also they use more space in The Star than any other Seat- tle paper. OULASUOGUAUOSIAUN AV AVAUALUARAULSREU AAU “) febE ? lg RARER E Chicago's to have the first church skyscraper in the world. Rev. John Thompson (inset), pastor of the First Methodist church, got the idea for a combined cathedral and office building to be built on the church's loop property. This draw- ing of a $4,000,000 structure shows what will result. Home of the Big Successes HAROLD LLOYD and DOUGLAS MacLEAN In Their Two Fine Feature Comedies Close Tonight STARTING SATURDAY i The story of a naughty little wife, who shocks not only her husband’s family, but even her husband himself! Good-Bad ‘Wite” —a sensational dancer from gay Paree who creates a riot when she reaches America with her French dances! Jensen and Von Herberg News $500,000 damage is done to farm crop when Co- lumbia River dike breaks at Woodland, flooding many thousand acres of land. Memorial Day in Seattle is celebrated by monster parade and G. A. R. ceremonies in Lakeview cemetery. Chinese of Seattle in beautiful street pageant. DAINTY DOROTHY WATERS In Song and Dance MALOTTE ON THE WURLITZER LE STAR AIRPLANE WILL CHANGE WORLD | | : |Martin Sees World Peace and Cheaper Living Inventor, Avi President of the Glenn L, Martin Airplane Company The brief but far-reaching history automobile and 1 nd and ¢ the fute ence, this world of ours wil er with a cocoonlike w aerial trade routes, just as our coun try is now interwoven with thou ands of miles of steel rails and coun: try roads. Unless the expertence of those who! have been in the airplane industry |from its inception is for naught, the airplane: transportation business of the future will involve not only mil lions but billions of dollars. It is beyond the imagination of the human mind to conceive to what definote extent and in what identical aerial navigation will affect fal and political order of the | etofore unvisited corners of are bound to become as our present popular The world will be exploited in giving treasures for the utilization and universal benefit of mankind. Will not a better and closer understanding among the peo: ples of the world result? Will not al |finer spirit of interdependence, operation and democracy be lished? When the aerial limited of the nations cruise over one nother’s territory, as the U. 8. jal mail planes now fly over a score or more | of the states each day, will there not an international leg lature | providl laws that will b tered b an international trib will t mutual P| based upon closer as rid the world of its most dreaded | plague—war? In the future the manufacturer Instead of establishing his center of produ jon at the dictation of the labor market and transportation cilities will very likely econ both in time and expense by unit his base of supply with his center of Production. Hig distribution, in all probability, will not be made thrul middlemen and jobbers, but direct to the retailer, regardless of dist ance. Just how this reorganization of labor, production and marketing will affect the economic situation cannot et be predicted, but surely a direct method of distribution jshould aid materially in reducing} jcosts and prices. si sec AC SEEKS TO FIND RIVER OF DOUBT U. S. Party Plans to Pick Up Lost Trail NEW YORK, June 3.—A group of venturesome Americans, including scientists, expert riflemen, photo. graphers and motion picture opera- rs, sailed from this port June 1 on the steamer Santa Elisa, bound for Antofagasta, Chile, the first station on an exploration trip to the head waters of the Amazon. The expedi- tion, which will be known as the Mulford Biological Expedition, to pick up the lost trail of Theodore Roosevelt's famed River of Doubt. Cat Takes Care watefing pl re-explored up its hi estab-| : | LINCOLNSHIRE, England, June 3.—A foxhound gave birth to pup-| pies at the kennels of the Southwold | Hunt. At the same time the kennel cat had kittens, The kittens were destroyed, but the maternal instinct of the cat was so strong that she is now mothering one of the puppies. Paris Paper Hats Will Shed Water LONDON, June 3,—For the river or for sports paper hats from Paris are the latest vogue. The paper is waxed so that it withstands the rain and the hats are trimmed with waxed ribbon: Women Will Urge Reforms in Dress MONTREAL, June 3.—At least 10,000 women of Quebec are going to do what they can to check what they believe to be a dangerous ten. dency toward indecency in dress. Cattle Reported Wilfully Maimed LONDON, June 3.—A cattle maim ing outrage is reported from Lea, six cows on a farm having been injured, one fatally. The maiming was done ¢0 as to leave no doubt of wilfulness. Burleson Goes to Berlin on New Job WASHINGTON, June 3.—Former Postmaster General Burleson has a inew job. He is in Berlin negotiat- ing cotton credits under a plan by which American cotton shall be shipped to any and payments made from profits derived from the sale of manufactured goods. ‘Pumpkin in Pumpkin Sprouts and Grows WAYNESBOR 3.— When M open a pumpkin was surprised to s on the inside had started to grow| and that a young pumpkin had | started to fill the entire inside of the! shell, Woman, 71, Excused From Duty on Jury! LONDON, Jun Is a jurywom- an too old 4 nO 6 shyly a cused, She confessed to “being very nervous” and based her objection to| serve upon her age, Sho was ex- cused, | June nty court, and voman thought |e istrar to be ex- a ce 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 OTTO F. KEGEL, President Open an Account at Grote-Rankin’s THE GROTE-RANKIN Go) Reasons y You Should Buy a Monarch Malleable Range Now It is the most economical range—you can cook breakfast, lunch and dinner with one hod of coal. It needs very little attention—fire is so easily controlled and cooking results are always assured. Oven and top heat quickly—a few minutes after the kindling of the fire the range is ready for cooking or baking. There is hot water for all household use a few minutes after the fire is started. The vitrifused walls of the Monarch protect the range against “rusting out.” Tops, and all other parts, of the Monarch are finished in a manner that reduces unnecessary kitchen work. The Price Is Now $95.00 That is considerably lower—and makes the Monarch a prof- itable invesment for any household. Sold on small weekly or monthly payments — you can trade your old stove as part payment on a Monarch. We prepay transportation charges to your nearest station in the state of Washington. Order Your Monarch Now Foxhound Puppy], Friends of the President and Mrs. Harding say this is the best photograph of them taken since the inauguration. They call particular attention to Harding’s characteristic smile, Snapped in New York. READY TO MAKE FRESH START Wife to Give Eloping Hus- band a Chance a pra k to my weon Gil -old Fairview husband who eloped with’ 17- d Mildred Bullis, of 24 Irving recently, and who has just re: turned from Laporte, Ind., where he and his soul- r route for Chicago, but k ‘The local police were unable to proceed against Clapp, because his wife refused to take o ces. sary for authorities, wo tion that it case, fell : 1 Cl all the way in a day co e was no evidence to sustain Mrs. Clapp, who had been waiting for her husband tearfully, and said his four days’ absence seemed like a | + year, declared that the Bullis girl has been continually hanging around her husband, and in fact was peeking over the back yard fence which sepa- rates the Bullis and Clapp homes, most of the time when Clapp was off duty as a Boston & Albany fireman. She said she was glad to give Leon another chance. She Weighed 500 Pounds, Now Dead CENTRALIA, Kan., June 3.—Mrs. David Duff, who died after a three- | day illness, was the largest woman in the county. She weighed 500 She was 87 and the mother Her parents are pounds, of three children, of normal] size. Will Preserve Flag of First President NEW YORK, June 3.—The only American flag used at the first in- uguration of George Washington is .|to be preserved between two 100- |pouna glass plates in the Metropoli- tan Museum of Art. The flag was carried by the Second Artillery regi- ment of the state at the inaugural on April 30, 178 F ONE ADDRESS GRANT'S TOMB Girl Arrested Also Lived at Electric Plant BOSTON, June 3.—Even the im: pressive fact that Madge Williams | had two addresses, one Grant's tomb, |New York, and the other the Gen- eral Electric plant, at Schenectady, in the same state, couldn't convine the police that she wasn't guilty, Miss Williams was up in the Cen- tral court, charged with purloining a trivial platinum-handled umbrella from a downtown department store. The police said the young woman she took it, and so she fell into the clutches of the law, Man, 86, Kicked to SHEFFIELD, England, June 3.— William Thompson, aged 86, was kicked to death by an infu d cow while he was milking last week, A 5 forgot to pay for the parasol when ~ Death by Milch Cow '