The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 4, 1914, Page 3

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You must hurry if you lucky ones. you a present of the first D. W. THOMAS use every one tle production tional Piano ne oF player plano. One Have You Used The manufacturers are now making the prices to the lowest notch ever known. CUT OUT THIS COUPON TODAY great who has used the cc plano and player plano value that in all probability the r its a sure a tern manufacturers they be caught with thousands of pianos and player pianos as an over CUT OUT THIS COUPON TODAY and bring it to our cut-price salesrooms, 823 the corner of Marion St. one block below Madison St -4 When this coupon {s clipped out of this paper and pres with Manufacturer: you credit for ELEVEN pe upon al the Coupon Yet? want to be one of the PHOTO PLAYS| Vitagraph Feature Mr. Barnes of New York a olx payment, besides cutting f Par! Vitueraph feature at tho Mel ello ts starred, bad very ccens. il nin New Y City, where it opened in the Vitagraph theatre. shot th Third Ave, near | THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE WOMEN LOVE A CAVE MAN CHAPTER CLXx!I! (Copright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) I had a letter from Kitty this morning that was most interesting. It began: “You are not going to disappotut me, Margie dear, about coming w my wedding, the firm Wednesday in June; and then Herbert and [ are going on a little honeymoon journey. Think of it, Margie! We are going to take two whole weeks to ourselves before we again begin Our work among the poor aud V the boy and wife, It {s surprising what ak aekene Be bien eas Amateur Night at Grand and Player Pianos wh Tonight Ie amateur night at the are offered a genuine Grand Opera House, in addition to in prt as well as othe the regular program, “Tennessee,” Offers as our manufactu ure | a story of the mountains of that die now doing trict, ia the feature photoplay today. All last week and every day this § With this is a Keystone comedy and week the ( y T nafer Company the world’s news in pletures. from early ning to late Mary Pickford in England night — delive our player sey Diokdhed in nowte Melina pianos and straight pianos to ff ¢ : ae oat ae Seattle homes who have pur rgb ir reaget ll prety chased during this big cut priced fh ac k Pt all ty toons and first payment SALK. It isa M wil bo fi ploy ynd wonderful success for us because MH countries {t gives us room to easily band ae See Earerne Deen ean oeinding 4 Clemmer has K. & E. Om to us here, and it has been a “The Fatal Wedding,” a three-part Kiaw & Erlanger feature at the Ciemmer today, is the story of mis erable love that interferes with true happiness, and, of course, wins ite own penalty, It was produced by the Blograph company Class A Has Irene Hunt Courtenay Foote is at his best as an artist and Irene Hunt a r best asa siren in “Golden Dros: a two. part Reliance drama on the Class A Program until Saturday night. This is a dramatic photoplay. “The Fatal Mallet,” a funny Keystone comedy featuring Mabel Norman and “The Souse,” and “The Legend of Snow White," a two-part Thanhouser drama containing some beautiful old-fashioned snow and home scenes, Kerrigan as Sheep Herder Warren Kerrigan Is starred in “The Sheep Herder,” a two-part drama of the cattie and sheep ranges of the Southwest, at the Alhambra, starting today. The woman from the city cannot stand the solitude of the great plains, and taking her little son with her, back to the city After an unavailing search her hus band, a big cattle rancher, gives up although their memory is always with him. Years later a dashing young man makes his way to the ranch of this de- od man, and In time becomes the favorite of the owner. It is his son, but neither knows the other, Un- usual circumstances bring the father, mother and son together again. Poe te music betw the impassioned | ys . . tones of Will's. voles; aesin ns, Victoria Is Accomplished nerves grew tense; my breath|Feature and then, as I broke th Victoria Forde, the pretty 17-year began to read the let [old leading woman of the Nestor I grew perfectly calm again. Mar|Comedy Company, can swim, ride, sie! Margie! I don't believe you! shoot, play billiards, drive an auto- can understand how happy I was| mobile, paint pictures and operate when all at once I realized that!, telegrapher’s key, She ts prac anything Will Tenney might write/ticing ventriloquism, and soon ex- or anything he might say can | pects to be an adept at that also, . never again affect me; and, e strange as it may seom. I was &| Mmi$$ ALICE JOYCE, THE KA- little worried, for I realized that,| tem star, was married to Tom however much I may regard and fespect my ‘preacher man,’ he will THE STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1914. | Anna Little | Anna Little ts one of the most daring girls in the photoplay bust ness. She ts not so very large, and she is not #0 many summers old But she ts well supplied with the dramat .. And when you put dare the r Anna has b playing leads! with the Kay Bee company, at San-| }ta Monica, Cal, for some time But now she has gone with the Universal company, and 1s statio g and a in the novies ed at the Western studios, in Holly- | wood, Cal. “Monte lo," scente; “When Dreams Come True,” Trick picture Mugey's Sweetheart,” Mary Pick ford drama er ie Clase A Until Saturday Night G Dros,” two-part Rell ance drama; “The Legend of Snow | White,” Thanhouser drama Fatal Mallet,” Keystone co eee The edy Colonial Until Saturday Night “The King's Will,” two-part Selig drama; “Broncho Billie's Cunning,” Eesanay drama ' Country Girl,” Labin Music Hath Charms . drama, Not and comed . | Melbourne Until Saturday Night | Mr. Barnes of New York,” six- part Vitagraph feature; “Mutual | Girl,” No, 20. eee Grand Until Saturday Night “Tennessee,” Kay Bee drama tn two parts; futual Weekly,” world’s news, and a Keystone com- edy. Tivoli Until Saturday Night “The House of Bondage,” drama. cee Mission Until Saturday Night never be able to awake tn me the wful. Pane, he ek SBE: Scere tumult of emotion that would clog “I want you to know my ‘preach- er man,” as I cali him. I think be fs the very BEST man I have evor known, and, Margie, I'm trying aw. fully hard to live up to his ideals. “You may be surprised to know that I had a letter from Will Ten ney yesterday, enclosing a newspa- per clipping which contained t news that his wife had sued for divorce. “Margie, when I saw that well- remembered handwriting on the envelope—I might as well tell you —my heart went pitapat and I felt myself grow hot and cold. For a minute all those exciting times of the last winter came up before me. I saw the lights; I caught the fra- grance of the flowers; I beard the DANCING HJPPODROME 10-plece Union Orchestra. Dancing Taught by Competent ‘Teachers. DR. EDWIN J. BROWN Seattle’s Leading ., Dentist and . Optician Entrance 708 ana 718 First In the Union Block Washington Bldg. Phone Main 3640 THE LARGEST DENTAL OFFICES IN| THE WORLD to my painless meth- tly what your work ‘examination; paving | ir work; guaranteeing My success is du 24s; telling you by tres to do ¥ and working for prices that you can afford to pay for the best ntistry and Optical Work. 8 ie, Wo about your TEETH and BYES | DR. EDWIN J. BROWN is QO008e Cheap Dental Work Expensive }until I told him about Will. | what you like, I know—and so do jn m vast Aifference between i no Dental work and getting a work cheap. We do not the pate with cheap Dentists, nor do we fecognize Dental grafters who claim to put in teeth without plates or bridge- | Pork and then sell you cheap junk for bridgework under another name | THE BEST 18 THE CHKAPEST | We make the best Gold Crowns for $4; the best Porcelain Crowns In the world $4.60 to $4; the best Set of Teeth fo $s and $12; Bliver fille, 600; the Bynthetic or Gold fillings, $1.00 up. A quack ts who elaime to do that which ts jo. To repince teeth | Zhhout crowns, piates or bridgework ts Jnknown to the Dental science, and tn therefore, tmpc Our work Is We rake thorough sxamination free ALBANY CUT RATE DENTISTS 4 floor People’s Hank Building vaste ‘hecond and Pike Take Bievator or Walk Up bewt my speech at times when across the table I would look tnto Will|‘Tom played the part Tenney’s eyes and wonder if he really was telling me the truth/ when he told me he loved me. 0,| Margie! do you remember that tence from Browning? “‘How bad, how sad, how mad it “Music Hath Charms—Not,” ts M| the name of a comedy at the Colon fal today, in which a boarding house is the scene of a merry melee. oe was, . But, oh! how it was sweet.’ Alhambra Until Sunday Night Margie, I owe all this to you,| «the Sheep Herder,” two-part Vic- for I was going straight to the/tor drama; “The Close Rex devil when you persuaded me tolgrama, “When They Grew Jealous come here and I found this dear, good man, who @ perfect haven of “The other night I told him about Will, and all be said to me was "My dear girl, dq you love me now?| Do you feel that you would rather| that I should be your husband than he?’ “*A thousand times,’ I answered. “That is all I want to know,’ said my dear ‘preacher man.’ “He was silent for quite a while, as he sometimes is, but at last he spoke. ‘Dear, I was trying to de cide if I loved you well enough to Powers comedy; “From Interlaken |to Brienze, Switzerland,” scenic. | “ene Clemmer Until Saturday Night “The Fatal Wedding,” drama; “The Joking Bricklayers,” comedy; DANCE AT DREAMLAND TONIGHT 25c Admission, including 5 Dance T * LADIVS FREE give you to that man you have just told me about, and I am afraid Ifo not! "Then his face shoe! a | STEWART HOUSE |depth of passion I had never mee Pantie Modern single r Large modern outside rooms, rt BOG | SEATTLE BUSINESS DIRECTORY Select from the Goods of the Fol- lowing Merchants—They Are Thoroughly Reliable and Solicit Your Patronage. FLAGS thought he possessed, and he gath ered me up in his arms and crushed me to him as he sald: ‘Kate’ (he calle me Kate), ‘I think I should have killed him had you told me you loved him still.’ “So you see, my preacher lover has some of the cave man in him still, although I did not find it out “T'm glad of it, Margie; for, say you-—-we women always like a man who is willing and ready to fight for his own,” (To Be Continued Tomorrow) Linquist & Lund, Inc. Phone Elliott 5340. 1104 Third Avenue. - - jManufacture to order Flags, Pen NORTH YAKIMA, June 4.—Upon|nants, Sleeping Porches, Awnings giving his word that he would go,|and Tents. Dan Hart, a half-breed Indian, un-| " der sentence of from one to ten RESTAURANTS years for assault, went to Walla Walla unattended yesterday. GIVES H!S WORD ‘ee Sh A Conscientious . Druggist 913 THIRD AVE. aha CAFES Here Is One Man Who Renders a} Valuable Service to the mV. ADAMS a Community. Primarily siness| without « some thin in| 610 Firat Avenue nation gint I . in| FUNERAL DIRECTORS “:i€.vrwe-| SACREDNESS Me Doct ato of! We shall not mar the sacredness, '"e-|humiliate you or belittle onr pro- ‘drug |fession by bidding for the burtal or jeremation of your loved ones, He has as Hshment a G fered at patron of y need of a ct rong kind rugs when what in| ‘| Let us know your wishes and they hel will be complied with || BUTTERWORTH | & SONS take ances | the ‘old way.| MORTICIANS ° ang the} 1921 FIRST AVENUE ¢ number, Moore on their trip to Jacksonville, The Hrute,” Famous Players Fila. One of the plays produced | drama. there, in which they starred jointly, nap oes was “The Dance of Death,” a story At the Mission of the South Sea islands, in which} “The Brute,” Famous Players of Alice's | drama. | Sweetheart, and did it wel! alah German Delicatessen|: RESIDENCE THEATRES At the Home Until Friday “Lucile Love, No. 6," two-reel drama; “Our Daughter,” drama “The Transformation of Prudence,” drama; “Love and a Lottery Tic et.” comedy; “The Newlyweds’ Di lemma,” comedy. | eee At the Pleasant Hour Until Friday “Zingo and the White Eelephant,” three-reel feature, and a one-ree! comedy. VALUE IS FIXED OLYMPIA, June 4.—The estimate of the valuation of the Gray's Har |bor Raflroad & Light Co., just filed by Chief Engineer F. 8. Burroughs of the public service commission, j will be used as evidence in the rate | case soon to be heard. The cost of |reproduction of the ratlroad prop- erty is put at $725.0 and of the power system $52 | AGENT IS DEAD TAC! MA, June 4.—John L. Hop kins, 77, for the past quarter cen tury agent of the Northern Pacific Express Co. here, died yesterday of pneumonia. Complete Report of Market Today Prices Paid Producers for Vegetables and Frat @ ® per th @ y, now, Cane strained on @ @ @ 250 @ le @: neal berrion @1 I} Vrices Patd tor, v r ultry, Veul and Porm Dacke 4 » cood wine, dn 120-1b, a @ oo @ 0 block hogs °* oe « ted dally by the Bradner Go, Butter Native Washington Washington hee Fresh ranch Cheers wis HINBLON ..eeeeee “ON THE LEVEL, ARE YOU SELLING CHEAP?” AND THE SALESMAN AT SINGERMAN’S REPLIED “Why, We’re Sel ling Hats Like Yours for a Dime!” One of the startling incidents in a very great sale in which Singer- man offers $12 and $15 Suits for young men at four and a half. Cuts the 50c Sox to 20c. dollar. finest Suits for men at less than they cost the maker. Men's dollar Ties to go at three fora : Sells loads of Underwear at half price, and prices the - An aiarm- ing condition in Seattle’s oldest store, which is very fully ex- plained to the readers of this paper. MAN asked yesterday: “On the level, are you selling things cheap?” “Sell you a hat as good as the one you're wearing for a dime,” said the salesman. “Show me!” The salesman showed him. He looked a long time, and then he said: “Well, I'll be ——!” And the sale is “showing” hundreds every day. Why, here are Men’s Suits which were bought to sell at $12.50 and $15.00, now marked five-fifteen. And another lot that were $15.00, $18.00 and $20.00 apiece are seven sixty-five. Mrs. Howard, who comes from Alaska (stopping at a nearby hotel) bought FIVE suits at a clip yesterday. Alaskans are getting ready for good times! ASKED the Neckwear man how he fared. “Oh, about five hundred dollars on our cash register yesterday!” (We have put cash registers all over the store in order to give quick service.) “Everything selling?” asked the boss. “Everything except those dollar ties for 55c!” “All right,” says the boss, “put ’em in with the rest. Sell ’em tomorrow at three for a dollar!” Mr. Binder, the Hat man, protesting in eloquent English against the weather. Straw Hats when it’s cold enough to snow! “Gimme some sunshine and some public- ity and I'll sell five hundred dollars’ worth a day!” Binder doesn’t know it, but he came very near doing it without the sunshine Tuesday. But look at what’s been done to the hat prices. LL the finest straws, that were bought to sell for $3.00, are $2.15. This season’s crop, too! All the finest Panamas, that were $5.00 and $7.50, have been put in one lot for $4.35. Men’s Caps that were 50c and 75c are 20c apiece. And Caps that were two dollars and one- fifty are 75c. . Soft Felt Hats, “Crushers” they’re called (as fine as the inside of a kitten’s ear) are 55c in- stead of $2.50. And soft hats that were $2.00 to $3.00 are $1.15 apiece. OOK at the Suits for young fellows! Four dollars and fifty cents for wool suits that were $12.50 apiece. Six dollars and a half for young fellows’ suits that were fifteen dollars. And a third group at $8.50 includes suits for young fellows that were as high as eighteen dollars! Maybe you think this is a bit overdrawn, eh? I made one mistake this week. Advertised young men’s suits for a single dollar, and every- | body thought it was a mistake. ‘ Except a few peddlers. F They’ve been buying ’em up, and either ped- * dling ’em, or pawning ’em, we don’t know which! . Which shows it doesn’t do to tell things that — are hard to believe, even if you have a reputa- “ tion for telling the cold, blunt truth! HE Shirt man is kicking because all the fel- ? lows who buy insist on the cufturn shirt 3 at $1.10, when he has an overstock of the 85¢ ones. Maybe that’s because the cufturn shirt is reduced from $1.50, while the 85c one has always = been a dollar (sold “close” in order to have the best coat shirt in town for that price). We shall be obliged if gentlemen buying shirts tomorrow will please bear in mind that we'd rather sell the 85c shirt. Jamison, the Underwear man, will be pleased to meet gentlemen who can wear large under- wear. He will sell dollar and dollar and a half * sorts for 55c a garment. Also he has plenty of “B. V. D.’s” at and Porosknit at 35c. And big lots of odds aa ends at ’way less than half price. S% are selling well, thank you; $1.00 Silk Hose for 55c; 50c Silk Lisle for twenty cents, and loads of plain colored 25c Hose for 15¢ a pair. Not little handfuls of “bait,” but all you want to buy. The bars are down at Singerman’s. This advertisement will have to be “con- tinued in our next,” as the novelists say. But before I wind up my line, I want to say one thing for Singerman’s—not that the store needs it, but by way of, well—conversation.” Singerman’s is a fine old concern. Been in busi- ness in Seattle for forty years. All the old-timers know it, and it’s good for another forty years unless I misread the second generation. S O don’t think that a concern with forty years’ reputation behind it is going to do any “fak- ing.” It isn’t. The man who faked a price ticket in this store would get a can tied onto him, and quick! That I know. And further, the store is going right ahead. When this sale is over, and stocks are adjusted, business will go along at the old stand a little bit better and bigger and livelier than before. And if you buy anything during this sale that you don’t like, or can’t use, or aren’t satisfied with— Bring it back and get your money. You should worry! Hours of sale, 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Saturdays till 10 p. m. Written at Singerman & Sons, Second Ave, at Seneca St. By GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE, Advertising and Selling Agents, /A PAUPER GIRL MAY BECOME AN | OPERATIC STAR BOSTON, June 4 to her sunny nature, little Mabel Clarke burst into song the other day at the West Ham poorhouse, she never imagined her voice would raise her from the uninspiring vo- cation of household drudge, branded with the stigma of the pauper, to future comfort and probably fame in the operatic world, Mabel is just 14. Mer parents died recently, leaving her homeless and class) per penniless. She was taken charge of Gold Fillings. by the West Ham board of guard ; 4 fans. As usual with girls of her f class, she was put on housework, with a view to training her as a servant Shortly afterward some of the guardians, while visiting the infirm: | ary, heard her singing, The guard- ns immediately sent for her, They | | were not expert Judges of music, but | they realized she possessed a phe- nomenal voice. After consultation, it was decided to send her to the Royal College of | Music, It was found she has a com. pass of three octaves and a note, BOSTON PAINLESS 1420 Second Ave. True-to-Nature Teeth The Finest Production of Dental Art Examination and Advice Free Gold Crowns (22-k, and extra heavy) 5.00 first $5.00 (strictly Bridgework rooth (Finest All Work Guaranteed 15 Years. Endorsed by leading busi. ness men and the dental pro fession generally ONDENTAL PARLOR 422) SECOND: AVE? OPP. BON MARCHE ‘n When, owing | |day testified that her husband fre and has the making of an unusual! contralto voice. | | CARL GETS HIS PORTLAND, June 4.—Earl Carl, who, with his wife Harrlet, he Portland merchants for $700, am Ina suit for/@te known as the “taxi forgers,* was sentenced yesterday to one te fifteen years in the penitentiary, Sentence of the wife was withheld, ASKS FOR SHARE, SPOKANE, June 4 divorce from Volney D. Williamson and a share of his property, which, she says, amounts to more than $1,000,000, Mrs. Williamson yester. Bishopric Wall Board is warmer, cleaner and cheaper than plaster at less money. —CARRINGTON WALL their) PAPER CO., 215 Spring St Main | 5542,—Advertisement. $2.50 quently struck her, and attempted to drown her shortly after marriage. OF THE BEST GLASSES ON EARTH NSES DUPLICATED POR LESS post modern electric lens grinding machinery, aif the usual time required, lenses at fon of about half the regular applies t war prescription work. MARCUM OPTICAL CO. 917 MANUFACTURING OPTICLAN FIRST AV, BROKEN 1 es in about one a reduct price, ‘This reduction als atl 917 FIRST AY.

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