The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 6, 1911, Page 8

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THEY ALL FALL FOR IT = So _———— Wiehié , THs fia SEE WHeER You'kt Come or. NOT WHEN | CALL You YOUNG MAN Dantes al. Don't You ‘BRING WILLIE ANNO COME EVERY THING Wick DE coro — 1 yon Ste Bk TN Den eee | At the ‘Theatres | eaten tee er tough see Max Dill, who, with nits | clever chorus of singers and} dancers, ts taking the part of the Rich Mr. Hoggenhelmer in the} musical comedy of that name at th attic theatre this week. His impersonation of the “get-rich k wsenheimer™ ts above crit CATCH * AT THE THEATRES % Moore — Katle Putnam % “Mother.” % Metropolitan—Mizzi Hajos in * “The Spring Maid.” % Seattie—Max Dill. % Lois— “Thorns and % Blossome.” & Orpheum—Vaudeville. ‘% Empress—Vaudeville. ® Pantages— Vaudeville. % Grand—Vaudeville and motion ® = pietures. cs KARR in cninee SAN JOSE, #| character portrayal. Denton Vane,| 4. a. w, | who was the principal support of | identified he %|Max Firman last season, and Jack | of is *) Pollard are good. [to the Portian | Police Kidder EERE EERE MEH ENS wire from the jorth sta AT THE Lois ing for his extr | West was arr *“ rere ee eee eerie After a aI There are some American girls | care to break into RARER REE * “4 AT THE MOORE berg, daughter Honda farmer. ate offices in Bank building, flood the Ghd eawaneanrantn| A large audience had a fine time | “at the Moore theatre last night, weeping—and also laughing—at the poignant suffering and the kindly humor of “Mother.” Jules Eckert Goodman tells a story such as all of us who have ever felt the ten-| derness of mother love, know. It's| & story of the home, and K. Put- nam makes an adorable mother ‘And through it all, runs also the |don’t-cher-know, and so she had no lighter side of home life, the fresh-|seruple against him. It all turned ness of children’s play by Masters |out well, anyhow. Bertha M. Clay, Paul Kelly and Bert Perret, the| Who wrote the book, fixed that up brother and sister quarrels capably | al! right. rayed by Jewel Power and| — ssi N. Leary, and the puppy | [etn R nae RA ARTERY love affairs of these two. But it's the tugging at one’s heart strings|* GERMAN PLAY * when the selfishness of children AT ALHAMBRA 4 With its corollary of motherly un selfishness, when the devotion of |\F¥ ¥¥ FEE RRHRER EHH the older sister, splendidly acted| “Die Goldene Eva” was presente by Margot Merriam, are shown,)under the auspices of local Ger that leaves the deepest impress on| mans at the Alhambra theatre last | the audience. Memories long for-/night. The play is staged In the gotten of home and mother stir| 16th century, and is written by one’s emotion. “Mother” makes) Franz yon Schoenthan. Mrs. Selma you weep—and laugh—and above} Lindermann won much applause in ail, it makes you think, and remem. | the title role. ber. “Thorns and Orange Blow at the Lois theatre this Myrtle Vane, playing Violet Beaton, is the said American girl, as one example. Of course, It de | velops that she eventually becomes Lady Ryvers, but that's because Lord Ryvers doesn't tell her who he |is when he married her. He told her he was just a common chapple week Confronted b: the fager prin tem, that he land, he confes |Oregon. He a by the Portlan lalso that for Wm. J. Burns’ north for him | PICTUR Vietim of Cire First Mother. Grand—"The Barnacle, Diph Bride.” | date”; Forester's Plea. e and Fall Peril of t i Micielieiietiaiicieielaialietelel BR I \* lt AT THE GRAND * *% AT THE METROPOLITAN * * “A Burlesque Tars Ashore Mountains * ee * REREKHHERRHHEHER) Arora prothers show. feats of Playful, petite Mizzi Hajo# 18! strength at the Grand theatre this again romping away with the|week, The Sharp sisters are seen hearts of Seattle theatre folks this|jn monologue, song and dance week She was greeted by &|Moulino sings in deep basso and bumper crowd last night in her|high soprano. Photoplays make up opening | ot a week's return engage-| the rest of the biti echt ties THEY WOULD CAGKLE WESTLA the of the few plays, and Mizz Hajos, | the charming little eae prima donna, is pretty nearly the whole show in It, that have thu been able to make good in deattle | for two weeks. tok RTI tk tt tk! cents pound * AT THE SEATTLE . , * * ee ee ee _If you want a good old fashioned | Teeth at Cut-Prices | - for a Short Time et de 4 If you're after gee . them. That's wha man, 21, will advi county jail charged with geese, And it's all because foolish things didn't keep still, and began to cackle. Patrick Costello, an Orillia rancher, heard the afore said cackles, and discovered Sher: man on his land. Whereupon held bim until £ ney took him in c! ts ‘pound nts poun centa pound nis wh Full Set of Teeth, from ... Gold Crowns, $3.08 $3.00 .., ann UY up 10 cents centr pound | pound White Jeomb hone Gold Fillings, | Nov. 6— ample of a major. cities and towns of | » Vancouver is preparing | ¥ for an election to get the commis sion plan of government VANCOUVER, Wash., Following the Silyer ity of the | Fillings ‘ A written gua with all work. REGAL DENTAL OFFICES Dr. L. R. Clark, Manager 1405 Third Av., N. W. Cor. Union given cents ts pint Governor Hay Olympia last night. He went straight to the Washington hotel. Governor Hay will take part in the sembi-centennial celebration at the university. ghettl, cans milk 26 ¢ MAYBRAY (By United Press Leased Wire) Nov. Alt Goulding rivals Dill In bis |are being made here today to turn the notorious Maybray gang, over g that they are arrang he had married Miss Tillie Stein-| Rhode market tracts of imaginary lands in Mexico, claim the authorttie: was wanted in |with having violated his parole Dream—"A Painter's Divorce Case"; Circuit—"The "A Rural Conqueror’; | City—"Love's k ; “Madge nts pound lone a. , Cee FIRE PLACE MARKET. han pound; baco whole or half hams, new Norway f ap und DORM, cents pownts. 91.60 “with! “ito pureh THE SEATTLE STAR THE SATU. ¢); z EVENING POST The government still holds tite to about half the land west of the Rockies and to nearly all the laud in Alaska, Immense deposits of coal and other minerals underlie this public domain, What shall the Kove (do with them? In view of a Glminishing and partly mo coal supply, the importance of the question In obvious quention concerns the Hering coal field, tn of exeelle only 26 miles from tide remaine untouched, while the Pacific st is Importing Eastern coal at a cost of $7 to $9 a ton on the dock T navy uses, on the Pacific coast, about ry 000 tons of Eastern coal yearly—brought all the way round Squth America by an endless pro- cession of colliers and foreign tramp steamers, which might easily be intercepted tn case of war The Mining and Scientific government doesn't at once open a | Cleld, primarily to supply naval needs, | surpius product at a fair price, based on jgovernment might well do withoyt prejudicing: the ques f the ul mate disporal of the coal field, It owns the it has the money to develop & mine; and in the bureau of mines it has a corps of ex perts abundantly able to handle all the technical questions, — Th bureau's chief coal-mining engineer, Mr, Rice, has had much exper! Jen he has,” says the Pron, ened, equipped and run a number jof collieries ax large aw or larger than any needed in Alaska,” If the government ts finally to lease the Alaxkan coal fields, it |sbould know all about mining conditions there—cost of production and-travsportation, the state of the Pacific coal mar nd so on, By perating a mine of ite own could @ this knowles y much better br sd in any other way mile railroad to tid an part of the mine's equipment, why shouldn't th t? After Panama, the silly old talk that the ge consfully handle practical matters of this kind will tmpose on no one YOU'LL FIND IT HERE NEWS OF THE DAY CONDENSED FOR BUSY PEOPLE al bh | Alaska, Thin large body water at Controller bay, Press of Ban Francisco aske why the ilery of its own in the Bering but tnetde selling the This the stamp reductions it “here, nd many of them Id at reduced prices, the po ted, arresting five men | who are b to have come from 4 the Northwest. Strike up the band! | - horns toot, Although his fellow-workera de- clare Stanley Slater was killed tn @ | mine by falling rock, reports that he a of heart failure are being inver tigated by the Industrial insu’ commission, which will exhum body before paying the 18-yearold widow $4,000. Let the the drums rumble and the fiddies string along. Thin tn Jobn Philip Sou na's birthday The “greatest bandinan of them all” t# 56. Sousa has had a music al career extend ing back to the time when he wan a boy of 15, at which age he first branched out as a teach two years ja’ he was a full fledged conduc tor. Just think for nearly bait a century he has) been making the welkin ring with some of the best mulsc that glad-| dons & mortal’s soul, Boom—Boom Boomboomboom. The orchestra will now play “Home, Sweet Home wel BS a brn elidel pio baad & — E. Dickenson, 55, of 6601 La- # tona ay., was hit by a Green | Lake car at Ward and Weat # lake ay, Saturday night, and |@ died of bis injuries while be- | ® ing removed in an ambulance # to the hospital, The motor * * without charges | te dnd dada dnd died ininded +eebeeeseee “Alaska day,” an annual event, celebrated in the assembly afternoon, and the affair proved a Preparations big success. S a Richard Wineor and H. 8, Crosby SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., Nov. 6| ¥ere nominated by the local social Pecause of the order probibiting |'sts to run for school directors. A the artificial coloring of oranges, committee was chosen at the meet Chief of |the orange crop will be unusually | 'ng to draw up the platform. just received aliate in reaching the Eastern mar jutho in the | kets this year. ‘They will be allow led to ripen before being shipped Commercial Club, on a recent) trip to Tacoma, were the guests of Bros, there. The company | ‘ory building in the City | which the club will duplicated here. and positively a former member id police. hy 7 Steamer Robert Dollar came into | port yesterday, completing her maiden voyage from Gli and Antwerp adition, ested here a month seven-day courtship of a wealthy He the and LA} bas @ six pened elabor:| of Destiny iret National | proposed to with fraudulent] @ goed | be program has been ar- jranged for the semimonthly m ling of the Queen Anne Civic Cen-| by ence, through | ter club tonight at the school house | t and Bertilion sy® | at Fifth W. and Galer st. The pro Port-| posed civic center will be discussed. | He is charged | | 1h | PUYALLUP, Nov. 6—With three | mits he is wanted jes in the field, and the social a. pe and states |iste claiming the advantage in the six years Detective | municipal election set for Decem- | agency searched the | ber 4, many Puyallup women are) }Jotning in a suffragist party, and) will try to lind women in offiee) Idyll"; here. umstances"; “Th Somebody's I NEVER THousHT 1D GET To SMOKING "EM sed — ‘THE WEALTHY FARMER. GAT IN DEEP MEDITATION AND AT LENGTH SAID ALoud, i || Was. THE VieLeT THE Capt.| | | HOLLYHOcK HIS LAOYS suiPPERs| Gypsy | WE AGED Ano. Widower"; jomat”; “A | Candt- } The} Reform November 6, 1864, Gen. W. T. [ODD BITS O' NEWS| | the profession,” wired Gen, U, 8. Grant] he was! ready to ‘degin| his mareh for At lanta and the sea) in four days, and | would then have a Union base of | supplies on the Atlantic coast of! the Confedéracy Se from which to larae | operate against apiess and John 16/ aton tn fron Victory”; of Weary he Plains,” andfather’s Violin”; Bull Fight The | Sherman Willie”; | wy that KORRECT MILLINERY 301 Liberty Bidg Opposite Postoffice. All Hate going at actual half price Pattern Hats, Felts, Beavers, and all Retrimming, re making, designing, reblocking, Also a showing of the finest Tailored Suits in Seattle. My prices will of XE MARKET. wh mection market offe Hand Look them over. surprise you. Open Evenings Until 8 o’Clook ron | FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. STORE CLOSES DAILY AT 6:30 as The “Gem Oak” Coal and Wood Heater $4.75 —blued steel body, heavy cast- nickeled wali hame, 18 1 loins of jamb, 1, Jersey pound; bom prime ribs of 4; 9 sack 10 cont pound; head 16 cont coffer at baking pow $1.10 100-pound pound iron fire pot; urn, rim, foot-rails and screw draft AWith M-inch fire box, $4.7 13-inch, $5.5 Frederick & Nelson iInconronaTED nde pounds inte pound. ripe olives: herrtr NR eFC AS KENOSHA, Wis. Twenty six years after he mysteriously disap. peared from home, Albert Morgan today quietly came into the home of his daughter here and hung up hie | hat. He does not explain his disap. NEW YORK.—-Under the guiding pearance Genius of Joseph Vehiing, once ene himeecif, waiters are to abolish the tipping system, May be, “It lowers they assert NEWPORT, RA. I—Reginald © Vanderbiit did his own sleuthing when rare wines and silverware dis appeared. He suspected a butler, obtained a confession, then die charged the servant CHICAGO. what Mre ts her raw fruit land the Thirty cents a day ie Charle t ® it for too Nothing but and nu , m NEW YORK.—Patrotman high eost axon spied a man eat Flatbush and asked him what he was doing, “Playing pinochle.” re according to latest enti plied Henry Rice, Henry was taken | mates, It may be a trifle‘over that In for mental observation by a few million or wo. Thom k erase in| NEW for the 000,000. YORK coming y $189, The elty t will be Aget SIMPLE REMEDY FOR KIDNEYS NEW YORK.—Grace Fisher, opera singer, fell in love with Dr. Oscar C. Reeve when he d her voice after an attack of Now she is Mrs. Dr, Reeve. Howard MINNEAPOLIG.—A badly fright ened red fox mingled with startled | crowds today on a downtown street. “Bree” will adorn the window of a local furrier. PHILADELPHIA.—No ful business man can be these times, was the the Rey, Reginald of City ple ture he succens honest in assertion of CHICAGO.—Too nting of money in the subt ined Fred Lathrop temporarily to go in John Campbell,| sane, It was estimated that in the London, in a lec last five years has counted | should b | about $50,000,000. Sune Or te t and n KFA the kt } fryer FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Dry Goode Store Closes Daily at 5:30 Furniture | Furniture Dry Goods Special Values in Women’s and Misses’ Winter Coats In the Season’s Favorite Materials, Models and Colorings, for Street, Utility and Dress Wear SPECIAL $15.00—Women’s and Misses’ Coats of broad- cloth, double-faced materials and mixtures, some plain tailored, others with large square or round collar, and still others with lar. {CIAL $25.00—C. gray, tan and brown mixtures, cheviots and tweeds, the practical storm co! ats for street and motoring wear, in so a num- ber of SPECIAL $35.00——Street, ening Coats in velvet, velour, dcioth. The Street Coats are in semi-fitting style, some plain tailored and others in novelty effect; tvening Coats, some full-lined and others lined to waist. Afternoon and E fine tweeds, mixtures and broa those for evening wear are trimmed with fringes and velvet, the Broadcloth Coats with deep square collar, some showing embroidery trimming. BASEMENT SALESROOM Second Fleer. A Very Favorable Purchase of Women’s Trimmed and Untrimmed Hats Tomorrow at —an opportunity for economically-inclined women to supply their Millinery needs— whether for a smart Dress Hat, trim Tailored Hat or Untrimmed Shape—at almost nomi- nal cost. The Sale will include: 150 Trimmed Hats in a large variety of Fall styles and materials, including large Dress Hats in blocked velvet, handsomely trimmed with corded silks, bows and gold ornaments; Soft Stitched Velvet Hats, with trimming in self color or white; also Turbans in corded silk, velvet and shirred satin, black, white and colors, trimmed in fancy feathers, ribbon bows, ostrich stick-ups, bullion tassels and fringes ; special $1.65. 100 Untrimmed Hats including large Dress Shapes in black velvet, also close-fitting effects ; large Dress Hats of white beaver, and a large variety of popular effects in Black Velour Hats, in hood and sailor styles; special $1.65. On Sale Tomorrow Morning: Basement Salesroom Millinery Section. Women’s and Misses’ - Serge Dresses $8.75 carefully tailored from fine quality serge, in black, navy and brown, in tasteful, simply-designed models that are appropriate for street, business and at-home wear.. All are made with three-quarter sleeves, some show low neck finished with round face collar, otherg satin sailor collar and cuffs. Attractive value at $8.75. Basement Salesroom. (FREDERICK & NELSON INCORPORATED are trimmed with

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