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OOR., LEADING THEATER FOUR DAYS COMMENCING Tomorrow Night, Matinee Wednesday SHEEHAN AND ECK FFER The Captivating Parisian Musical Concoction THE GIRL FROM MUMMS Bubbling and Overflowing with M Sparkling Comedy and Tuneful Mel ——WITH-— MISS OLIVE VAIL Foremost of All Comediennes and Music A PERFECT CAST AND CHORUS -Gorgeously Costumed Every Gown a Handsome French Creat 16—Whistley Musical Hits—16 PRICES—Nights, $1.50, $1.00, Orchestra, $1.00; Matinee Wednesday, $1.00, 75 Five Days Commencing Tuesday, Nov. 4th DAY AND § The Greatest Play of the Day THE LURE |. Still Running to Crowded Houses at Maxine Elliott's While Also Presented Here Coming ATURDAY Coming Theatre, New York City, THE NOW FAMOUS Indorsed by the U “More daring than White Slave Commissioner ‘The Easiest Seat Sale Thursday, Oct. 30. Mail Orders Now PRICES—Evenings, $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c, 25c. ANTAGE “Unequaled Vaudeville Meane Pantages BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEE ENGLAND'S LOSS LAURIE OROWA / QUEEN OF Some ENGLISH MUSIC HALLS fe of Paris” LESS DRAMATIC PLAYLET, WITH BEWITCHING MINNI AMATO & CO. OTHER BIG FEATURES. The National City Bank OF SEATTLE, WASH. AMERICA’S GAIN “The A SENSATIONAL W' 10¢ and 20c The Report of Condition Made to Comptroller of the Currency at Close of Business October 21st, RESOURCES «$1,764,566.38 Loans and Discounts Agta S. Bonds to sec ure circulation “ omg on U. Real Estate Bonds and Warrants Furniture and Fixtures .. Cash and Exchange .... $2,897 ,630. 21 LIABILITIES on, Paid Undivided Profits Circulation Deposits .. The Compfroller of Currency makes FIVE for statements. Under fifth call last year our deposits were Under fifth call this year our deposits are .$1,779,274.84 2:194,756.84 Showing an increase of Our cash reserve of 36 per cent reflects the safe, con- servative policy of our Officers and Directors. FW. BAKER. W. MAXWELL, Vice President t Morris Construction Premtaent Bloedel-Donovan Lumber ALBERT DAUR, Carstens Packing Alaska Merchant F. 7. FISCHER, Fischer Bros wrhoteeaie Grocers. t Blakely Mill Co. D WHITCOME, lent Arcade Butiding Co ¥, 1 tirnonda Manufacturing Co “ay Presiddnt Clear Lake Lumber to eg Beattie Construction | WOK ‘& Dry Dock Co. % ite of Herr, Bailey & Wilson, Attorneys * NORTHWESTERN CREDIT ASSN. Establishea 1903 3012-15 Arcade Bidg. SEATTLE’S CREDIT BUREAU COLLECTIONS METROPOLITAN AND MOORE.T0 | GET THE LAUGHS Comedy will reign at the Moore and Metropolitan theatres during the coming week, while the Seattle will furnieh the sob stuff with a week's presentation of “Sapho." At the Moore, the comedy will be mingled with muslo, with Olive Vail heading a strong cast In “The Girl from Mumm’s,” whieh will run four nights and a matinee. “Stop Thief,” a hilarious comedy melo: drama, will be the attraction at the Motrepelltan all week. The Pan tages will feature a pantomime playlet, “The Apple of Paris,” which will introduce a new dance entitled “The Dance of the Rose.” METROPOLITAN Metropolitan next week will Cohan and Harris # das one of the funnte lays that ever breesed across the boards, “Stop Thief,” by Carlyle Moore. The engagement here will be for one week with Wednesda Saturday pes, beginning Thief” ts very nearly the ry as is carried out in The Conspira 1 Ar r Ca x att ‘oba and Harris a or of surrounds a bride and home to do away with the wedding Ax it happens, the bridegroom t ania. The thteve are about to be The result ts nlaw have € own pocket ° ° MOORE ¢ a A Parisian musical comedy, with row night. Olive Vail donna who was bh Miss Nobody,” } which ts said to be ly strong charac from Mumm's” Is 4 duce laughs, and ace press notices that hav it accomplishes t successfully hits of the play t® th son Barry and Miss entitled “Teach Me.” The Girl from Mumm’‘s” ts a lobd-| ster palace comedy in three acts | \o— ~-- @! SEATTLE | \° Commencing Monday Meht, Balley & Mitchell will present Ab} |phonse Daudet’s famous master |plece, “Sapho.” Seattle playcoers | will remember “Sapho,” the bad good woman of Daudet’s fine crea-| tion. The drama is full of human emotions In these days of insulated emo | the the first thought which comes to o sing a drama appealing fr to the handker. chief {s that {t is theatrical. Yet after all, truth is stranger than fic tion, and there are sadder and fun nk and more melodramatic and more tragic things in life than gen erally find thetr way to the atage eee oe of the big duet of Jack ‘ellie Watters, PANTAGES a4 bead of the new bill at| next week, opening with the matinee Monday, will be Mile Minn! Amato in A. Coccia’s sensa tlonal wordless dramatic playlet, The Apple of Paris.” The act which is said to be one of the most | pretentious this house has ever d, will introduce the latest! creation in Paris, “The Dance} of the Rose. The extra added at-| traction will be supplied in Laurle Ordway, the merry Engitsh singing comedienne, who made a tremen dous hit at this house earlier in the season Other acts are Marion Munson in the protean hit, “Th Kidnaping of Bianca,” Belzaz and| Baker, instrumentalists, and Frances Le Maire fancy and trick roller skater. 2. ° “THE LURE” T Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch, ihe famous suffrage leader and cham pion of women’s rights, who has a national reputation as a fighter for all that is best for her sex, has come forth In a sign statement in which she declar “The Lure, George Scarborough's white slave drama, to be “One of the cleanest | plays I have seen on the New York stage for a long time." fresh from its Los Ange Francisco triumphs, will seen in this city at the Moore November 4 to 8. eee o- o| ORPHEUM Next week's headliner at the OF pheum {fs a singing and dancing act, featuring Harry Fox and Yancsi Dolly. Dave Genaro and Ray Bailey will furnish another song and dance number. George Roland and com pany will present a farce entitled | Fixing the Furnace." — Several| other acts fill In a well balanced program, which is to be concluded with local motion pictures | eee | ° EMPRESS re The new show at the Empress beginning Monday, is headlined by 4 comedy sketch entitled ‘Rehind the Footlights.” Miss Aug will pre sent “Folks is Folks,” Leo Beers will sing, and several thrills in aerial gymnastics and motorcycling are promised NAME PARK FOR PIONEER In honor of Louisa Boren-Denny { th only surviving member of the original settlers who landed at Aiki| point In 1851, the park board Fri THE hbaraarraai sed boii OCTOBER 25, GOOD ATTRACTIONS AT THEATRES BAILEY « MITCHELL MGR: 1” at the Metropolitan; (2) Mise Olive Vall, In “The Girl From Mumm's,” (4) Miss Auda Due, at the Seattle A Scene From “Stop, Thief! at the Moore; (3) Laura Crdway, at the Pantages; MILITANTS’ LEADER GIVES s#0T ie GUIDE bones of his forearm sh er Wolf, » guide | hompitel at Kalispel, serious condition, Jcarried 65 18 inches of snow MESSAGE TO THE STAR © By W. H. Alburn (Copyrighted, 1913, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) | arm had to be amputated. Wolf was acting as guide for al nkhuret, head and front of the world’s femt-| wnt, and fighting leader of the militant suffragets,| party of Eastern elk hunters when the headquarters of the Women's | 4 Belmont reigns B American leewre tour. ike Michael Angelo’s famous} Mra. Emmeline P » me, acrona @ big table tr where Mrs, O. H ut to start on her 4 National Cash Regis | » of Dayton, O., "| Polities She wae just at Pankhurst did no! | stat | delicate figure, elegantly clothed tn | board of control has finished count with a black bow at her pink throat, and bodice and cuffs|!ng the stat in cash and $ nearly hid the ltt! system. of filmy white lace Beneath her |Mayor Cotterill {n his examination clustered Nght | edged with gold braid, black velvet ha sttorney xh years of storm and stre times at the path from “hunger | and preventive of the numerous A mile played around her ailments caused by defectiv irregular action of the or-| gans of digestion—is found 1 feel honored. But no,|jn the safe, speedy, r entered the Promised Land.| 514 time-tested home remedy | Peas Bold everywhere. le beses, 10c., 28. » eyes were mild and kindly Her hands we: the big, burly part she has played in the world. heard in Portland shortly There was nothing to suggegt Hoth Cotterill and Former Mayor certain | twe ystems was ke much b ‘otterill testified that the Inde: ( endent Co, was welcomed into Se- METROPOLITAN onus Sere lates sot aes The Chocolate Soldier O THEY call me the ‘Woman Mos lam no Moses I will enter and possess the land » going to win, that the cause for which I f For Moses ne . surer to me than all other certain will prevail ing the rates down have always felt.” he said, | In “THE RAINKOW,” your own Julia Ward Howe, ‘mine eyes have seen the glory | sing of the Lord a change of government Asquith, who is our ty- was the tyrant of your own American forefath- with bis blind and heartless satellites ° It is to hasten its coming that I am| appeal to America as frankly as you Americans ap- pealed in your early dark days The! nothing oratorical under a moral, if not a legal, 62.00 Me. obligation to sell to the city in-| “STOP, THIEF Tomorrow Night. stead of allowing itself to be gob ine ai Rese: is up by a competitor.” Asked if he would have favored SHE'S FREE NOW Pankhurst’s manner. musical tones that thrill a single auditor or) of thousands Our enemies have nearly | seizing our papers and supplies, King to destroy our constitutional | we are far more interested than In| al outbreaks for the sake of publicity , More than mor That's the rate we have paid on savings for Twelve Years security to pay this rate, Some t expenditure, and organiz nt the moral support of America.’ Apso jof court, Mrs. Elvora Drummond is Jdivorced from John N. Drummond, son of the late tobacco magnate of Louls. Mrs. Drummond also was given Virginia, her baby daugh “Ye tt the men’s support you want, ‘How have you n able to pay this interest n others allow one may ask, The women’s, If the women are with us, we can do anything. You don't seem to think much of men,” always call us il men themselves may be logical and con seldom shown it in my experience.” was a suffragist one of the first first suffrage bill, And will you draft the last?” st's bill is as good today as ever.” »me a suffraget?” she answered. began with hearing Miss Lydia Becke: » was England's Susan B. » worked for suffrage answer is simple We are a mutual savings s0- after several telegrams and , purported to be signed by |women, and the testimony of pri j vate detectives, had been intro-| THAT ENGINEER! On the suggestion orc ounetiman | logical and changeal , less expenses, ‘are. cred suffragist before I knew bim. our customers every No high salaries are paid expenses are Hmited by state “When did you always was a suffraget, ‘The men whose names appear Ww pass upon all loans ma by the association and person ally supervise the handling of Hight years ago, when | » decided to follow Balfour's hint seemed dead, cular to make people think militant movement was born, We are winning, but, oh!—the cost of it. “One of our women has died, thousands have suffered, hun- dreds have wrecked thelr health for life, and yet there Is no wav- My daughter Christobel is an exile In Paris, editing a My daughter Syivia is in @ ! only know that she Is doing her the movernent become spect st in committee of the whole to s the employment of a consult ng engineer for the cons the canal bridges. No definite date t for the meeting here are a number of applicants | for the position, but there is opposi a) the appointment of any con- | sulting engineer, it being maintain ed that the city's engineering force is fully competent to take care of this work, STEFFENS TALKS Lincoln Steffens, the social re and martyrdom begun, Officers and Directors Lumber Mills, Vice-President National City Bank, suffraget newspaper or in hiding—! do not know. work and will die, If need be, as | will. not to urge violence, but to appeal to the women f of millions of suffering English women and which it is women’s work “And I am here, lp Denny & Ewing. of America on beh: to which women give birth, gETS NO RELIEF GAVE HIMSELF UP ington industrial insura sion has received a memorandum de Judge Dareh of Klick CAMPBELL, Cashier National SODERBERG, , President Tithe Trust stricken, sph ‘ameron Munford of Spokane has, according to Detective | Captain Wiley today, he passed forged chocks amounting |to $75 In that city. Munford entered the! police sta tion and gave himself up to Capt. free i Seattle. ANDERSON, noon he spoke to the Mu-| Seatnant that Lumberman Club rooms, Sunday afternoon he | Will speak at thesY. M. C. A.; night at Plymouth Congrega waiting for his dinner at his em boarding house that time in the course of his em- dent and Tr DUN, Attorney. . CAMPBELL, Secretary, The Puget Sound Savings & Loan Association Savings Society” Establishad 1901, high school, and Tuesday at |the University of Washington CLASS IN CONFIRMATION At St. Anthony's church, at Ren tomorrow morning at 11 was denied com NO SCHOOL CADETS of education ts op imitations of day voted to name the park tract Jin the Interlaken district “Boren park,” An order was tssued prohibiting the organization of a corps of public school cadets, the sacrament of confirma |xion to a large class of childyen and | 86 West Stewart (near Pike Public oof PIKE OTAEEY Advertisement, | Metropolitan)... SUNDAY) Fe Best Seats I Nights! $c to $150) 370 ALL WEEK Sey Srna ‘Success BEGING © SUN. NOV. 2 2,7 SAT DRAMATIZATION OF ROBT. W. CHAMBERS’ NOVEL THE COMMON LAW SEATS THURSDAY—MAIL ORDERS NOW TS PHONE MAIN ~~ 43 — Tonight, Tomorrow Matinee and Night The Virginian Week Commencing Monday, October 27 BAILEY & MITCHELL Present R. E. Remmington’s Version of Daudet’s “SAPHO” |: SAYS CITY WANTED | TO PURCHASE PHONE A Drama of Parisian Life ing Prices, except Monday 50c, 30 and 20¢ Saturday and Sunday ‘ t Monda the Independent Telephone | taking « over the system if it were ‘o. had offered to sell out to the losing money on its investment of am over | $2°200,000, Mayor~ Cotterill replied city it would have been taken over (1 "tne arfirmative. @\for a fair value as a municipal His cross examination was re- sumed this morning a de b rE wearre statement was made by Cured ta @ to 14 Gaye — | Fri afternoon before C. J. | wes ginny ue tee Smythe, the government's specia ruding ¥ it applica- , who is obtaining testi . y in connection with the sult Siteer una, tee ee be MS hs pact d an 7" ath for the dissolution of the Bell tele- ner Today—! testified that before the ‘ind service now. nest, th tter than it TONIGHT by A. E. Thomas. the Independent company |Matinee Today, 50¢ to £1.50; Tonight, MILLER -FRUNK.CO Seattle Laborers: Many laborers of | other days are now | AN Wit n| tlement effected out Drummond recetved her de | | occupying positions of responsibility and profit, because they had the foresight and wisdom to save money and qualify | themselves for bet- | ter things. The Seattle of the future holds as many opportunities —even more—and | there will be no | lack of opportuni- | ties for those who | prepare themselves now. A savings account at the Dex- ter Horton Trust and Savings Bank will be a success builder for you. . the council decided Friday uction of and well known zine will deliver five addre SCS | league at the Commercial chureh; Monday at Broad’ DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS | BANK | SECOND AND CHERRY Hishop O'Dea will admin