The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1914, Page 8

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THIRD AVE. 1422 ‘sve. ( Arrow Co 1422 Special facilities for the liquidation of Bankrupt Stores, Surplus Stocks, Manufacturing plants and property of all kinds. Merchandise sold at less than cost of production. Consumers as well as Dealers will find large stocks to choose from, as there are many Bankrupt and Surplus Stocks being sent to us for quick liquidation. Men’s $1 Good-|Ladies’ Storm|Children’s Storm|Men’s $15 Crav- Glove Storm] Rubbers, all sizes|Rubbers, all sizes|enette Raincoats 2,500 Pieces of Men's New Underwear at a Quarter to Half Off Wholesale Prices. Men's 35c Light Blue Balbriggan 15¢ Underwear, Shirts and Drawers.... Men's 75c Swiss Ribbed Underwear, white, natural and lavender, 29c Shirts and Drawers .... 400 Pieces Men's Underwear, values up to $2.00, mainly Shirts, a few Drawers, 69c ee eT Sale of the ARROW Clothes Shop of Tacoma New Fall Garments at one- fourth to one-half off whole- Men’s $1.50 Spring Needle Silk Mercerized | gale cost. This concern Underwear, 4 shades, Shirts 75¢ bought from. Stein-Bloch, and Drawers ..........+.:> Se vekek House of Kuppenheimer, Alco and other high-grade makers. The new Fall Suits, Over- coats, Raincoats are made of high-grade, all-wool worst- ed, tweeds and cheviots, in latest effects, made in the Men’s Heavy Buckskin, Wool Ribbed and Heavy Silk Mercerized Underwear, regular $4.00 and $5.00 per suit, all $1 29 ‘ . sizes, Shirts and Drawers........ Men’s Fine, Heavy All-wool, full-fashioned Underwear, $6.00 value a suit; 9 all sizes, Shirts and Drawers. .... a' Union Suits at Less Than Half Price Stas mone oa "05 ora style. er d Brown, Navy Se Se c a bi) gal sale gp ew Bor’ $2.00 Junbs Kait Sweaters QI | $15, $20, $25, $30 and up to a et Meee ee Here 3 Meet Hee 4c/99-95 $10.95 Men's Com Hows in esd end = 1$'7.95 $14.50 ARROW Former! 1422 Stam-MacPherson Co. Store AVE., NEAR PIKE | GEORGE ADE’S FUNNY FABLE, crouched in the far corner of his “Lutie, the False Alarm,” {s now | cage, every muscle tente, whenever being shown at the Colonial thea | a human was in sight, and the light | tre, together with an unasually tn- | of battle in his eyes. Kindness, the |teresting program. When Lutle | ————-— Saueeneennenenenened Lark, near-soprano, reads the press | notices covering her first appear. |ance In concert, she never warbles | afterwards. A Lubin comedy, “The | Green Alarm,” ts a burlesque. The Present chapter in “The Million Dollar Mystery” ts called * Be jeret Agent From Russia,” with Ir. | ving Cummings Ip the part. In | teresting current events are seen \in the Hearst-Selig News Pictorial. | fre | “LOLA, THE EUGENIC GIRL,” \fe at the Class A theatre this |week. She appears in a Selig comedy, in which five suitors pay her attention. She likes Billy, a newspaper reporter, best, but Is de- termined to marry the best man} physically, so she arranges a pro- | gram of boxing for her five suitors. Billy is no athlete, and this makes | him disconsolate. He reports a prize fight, however, which gives jbim an idea. He hires Patsy, a pu- j gilist, and tells Lola he ts going to | appear as an, unknown. Patay ap-| pears in disguise and wins every contest The disguise is then transferred to Billy, and he appears | a8 victor to claim the hand of Lola. eee THE WONDERFULLY RARE| black leopard now housed at the famous Selig jungle-zoo, Los An- | geles, steadfastly and sullenly re- fuses to be reconciled to cement walls and bars of chilled steel. Dur-| ing the past two months this costly} linhabitant of Indian jungles has I’m Brady The Original inal $20 Tailor From my etock of high-grade Wool including Blues, Blacks, Grays, Browns, Tartan Checks, Fancy Mixtures, etc., you have an opportunity to buy a Fall People never seem to get tired) of seeing “skinny” Victor Potel. This is no slur on Potel, for he ‘very glibly tells any one, who ts interested, that he considers his | expressive face and long, willowy figure his fortune. Potel is a star comedian. And that means he has a lot of ability as well as a face and figure to sult. With no dramatic experience to her credit, Vera Sisson started with the movies working “extra.” However, she soon developed won- derful conception of her work which, coupled with her unusual beauty, classed her among the stars long before the year was | ended She is now leading woman with L. Warren Kerrigan in Universal pictures. She is a nice little girl, with absence of affectation, which is truly charming. STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. at the Children’s home, in Jena. it } pact in @ few yeare? | passengercarrying service will | One year ago there was only on | in competition With t | money | Councilman Erickson, oppose | Ing the deai to purchase the Renton interurban line for $1,600,000, has suggested auto bus competition by the city. impracticable idea, | ie an think you? In London there are no electric) #treet cars in the downtown seo tion. The motor buses are doing all the business. In the outlying districts the electric cars are still operating. But they, apparently,; are doomed, judging by the statin. tien for the last six months tn 1912, } In that period the electric tram- ways carried 612,662,652 passengers, | while the London General Omnibus) Co, carried 492,858,934 The number of passengers car ried is almost the same, but the capital invested in the electric rail- ways is four times as much as that Invested in bus lines Predict Great Future Here is what the Engineering Nows, a technical magazine, pub- ished in New York, says about) “The Future of the Motor Omnt- bus’ Tp both England and the United/ States, the last two years have seen | an enormous increase in the use of the automobile omnibuses and coaches for pm transport | Enough success has certainly been lachteved, both here and abroad, so [that the motor omnibus must now be recognized as a method of pas senger transportation destined to find a large field of usefulness Whole Street Available “There is something to be said in favor of the motor omnibus for city streets, as compared with the eleo | trie ratiway, in that the obstruction of the street by rails In the ve) 4 ment {s avoided, and the full width| of the street ts lable for traffic, “The most attractive feature of| the motor omntbus, however, ts the comparatively small investment re- quired to establish it in operation “This enormously reduces the risk in connection with the investment in a motor omnibus line. If the ven- ture proves disappointing and the) expected traffic does not material-| ize, the omnibuses can be put in use somewhere else or sold. “The flexibility of routes is an- the motor omnfbus.” comedy; “This the Life,” two- part American drama; “The Min- ers Baby,” Reliance drama. Clreult Until Saturday Night “The Silent Valley,” two-part King Baggot drama; “The Perils) of Pauline,” No. 7, in two parte; “A/ Daughter of the Plains,” Nestor) Sult or Overcoat made to order right most select tithits and association |@rama; “Jam and Jealousy,” Joker | here on the premises for ... $20.00 have failed to move this creature. bec an Clemente Valley,”) Sternly refusing to recognize kind. | “°¢"!® ate e ness or favor, he stands or lies with his back against the rear wall of his prison house, defying man and clvil- ization. Animal experts at the | Jungle-z0o declare that the black | leopard will remain defiant and un: conquered throughout the years | His is the kind which neither sur- renders nor arbitrates 920) ene ‘ . Mission All Week The Suit or Overcoat that you pick out de | nan ag eer Spangled) «tost Paradise,” with W. B. would cost you $30 to $35 elsewhere. Loves,” © Mary Pickford drama; | W&?ner. t possible minimum of. oper- “A Summer Resort Idyll,” comedy, sit a enables me to make you |and “Pathe’s Daily News.” fe Alaskan All Week this remarkable offering. Every Suit ee “The Odyssey of the North,” a or Overcoat tried on in the basting, Class A Until Saturday Night |J8° London picture story thus guaranteeing you a perfect fit. “The Mystery of the Sleeping ape Death,” “twopart "Kalem “arunse| GOING TO FAIR? action Guaranteed on with Alice Joyce; “The Eugenie] with Wednesday, Sept. 24, set as| § or Money Refunded Girl,” Selig comedy; “The Man|“geattie day,” transportation ar- From the Past,” . —Remember Brady— raph drama, The Original $20 Tailor Brady fs. “THE FASHIONABLE TAILOR” THIRD AND UNIVERSITY—1301 Third Ave—EILERS BUILDING. Colonial Until Saturday Night "The Secret Agent Fi ‘ two-part chapter of “ Dollar _ Mystery"; News Pictorial’; Million Ade comedy; “Never and “The Green comedies. Too Late” Alarm,” Lubin Grand Until Saturday Night “Her Last Chance,” "| fair next week. Through efforts of “Hearst-Selig “The Fable of Cutie, the False Alarm,” a George Keystone! claims, Alhambra Until Sunday Night “Helping Mother,” three-reel Rex drama; “For the Hand of Jane,” Joker comedy; ‘The Vatley of Ver- dun,” scente; ‘Her Bounty,” drama, | ee Melbourne All Week “Dope,” six-part drama oe. | rangements are being made for carrying several hundred Seattle folks to the North Yakima state the Chamber of Commerce the rail road fare has been reduced to $6.60 round trip. HACKENSACK, N, J., Sept. 18. H, O, Havemeyer, millionaire resi dent of Hohokous township, de- manded $769 for three high-class fowls, killed by wild dogs, he His bill was refused, that the war lord is not all war lord, Northern Bank buliding, by his mother, Street Cars Soon | Will Give Way to ihe Auto Bus Line } le the electric street railway going le It going out | If the success of the motor bus for passenger transportation in London and Paris, and, nearer home, In Tacoma, Wash, is any criterion, it will not be more than five to ten years until the lectric interurban. nice, comfortable cars, operating on a splendid schedule, and making | | muttered | chagrin at the flagrant unjustness | ment, received today from the An. Dugdale's park. 18, 1914. PAGE 8. The photograph shows Emperor Willlam playing with the children | is not a new picture, but it shows in Jena, Germany. to be a thing of the business altogether? undergo a compl: 6 bus on the Taco revolution. a-Puyallap line Today there are six buses MRS. FRAZIER HASROASTFOR PRIMARY PLAN Editor The Star: The writer, an election official st the primary, could not help w ing that the farmers and yers -——- the static among the bunch usually sent to Olympia and It was sent to Dr, G. L. Tanzer,, | | | | | | other capitals to make law might have generously distributed them selves over the precincts and heard the groans and even muffled curs at the skulduggery tn politics that maintaing that twin antiquity with the “ward system,” PARTISAN PRIMARIES!! Had they felt the pulse at the pri mary, the first bill in the next legis- lature would be a unanimous bill for janket ballot and NON-PARTISA ELECTIONS everywhere in the state Fully nine-temths of those voting or voiced openly their to the candidate: the people at large. in that added Insult to modern Intelligence—PAR- TISAN PRIMARIES!! They frank- their desire to support and their utter indiffer. | ence to party lines. And the count of the ballots did not reveal a half. dozen full or straight party votes In the precinct, PARTISAN PRIMARIES, hear my toast to you! Wrong tn ethics, crumbling in foundation, vicious in design, hideous in structy And. gentlemen of the legislatures Judges of the supreme court, this may be the stone age in ment, but the SILENT CON OF MORE THAN 50 PER CE THE REGISTERED VOTERS SEATTLE 18 THE BLAST THAT HAS SOUNDED AGAINST THE other most important advantage of} WALLS OF THE MODERN JERI- CHO!! Sincerely, MINNIP B. FRAZIPR, 8804 10th Av. N. E. MACHINE GUNS CHECK GERMANS LONDON, Sept. 18.—Belgian ma chine guns drove the Germans from Termonde in disorder Wednesday night, according to offictal nouncement of the Belgian govern twerp correspondent of Reuter's, The message bays the Germans marched against Termonde Wedner: ady and started a heavy cannonad ing, to which the Belgians replied, | and an artillery duel resulted. When/| the Germans attempted to cross the |river where the Belgians had blown| up the bridge they were driven back | with a murderous fire, and retired |In disorder, ALASKAN WEDS ity of Washington, Thomas Cole ‘of Juneau, Alaska, and Miss Jennie E, Rogers, daughter of A. I. Rogers, pioneer merchant here, were married yesterday They will leave immediately for thelr future home In Juneau TO PLAY JAP U. The Meiji baseball team of | Japan, host of the varsity nine on! its tour of Japan in 1918, will meet a pleked team from the university at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon at themselves and) and! IN} an-| | = is 25 PIANOS 25 STILL FURTHER ||: REDUCED IN PRICE}; At the beginning of this sale, three weeks ago, we had on hand a large number of Pianos, and player-pianos, new and slightly used, which were cither purchased from other manufacturers, or taken in trade by the Bush & Lane Piano Co.; most of these instruments, and especially the less expensive ones, have been sold, but we find on our floors Twenty- Five of the most expensive ones. These have been further ‘reduced to such a great extent as to make them by far the greatest bargains offered during this sale, which has never been equaled for High Quality and low prices, and of which not only the individual purchaser, but the dealers, have taken advantage. Most of the Following Pianos Can Be Had in Either Mahogany, Oak or At From $145 to $235] This sale was prompted by the decision of the officers of the Bush & Lane Piano Co., of Chicago, to buy no more Pianos or Players from other manufacturers, but to supply their dealers and retail stores with goods manufactured at the Bush & Lane and Victor factories and their recently purchased Farrand Cecilian Piano and Player-Piano factories. TO PIANO DEALERS 5 per cent discount from the above prices will be allowed to Piano * Dealers if settled for in Four, Eight and Twelve Months. Or 10 per cent discount will be allowed if settled for by Cash or Certified Check with order. Prices F. O. B., Seattle, Wash. \ We Neither Buy Nor Manufacture Stencil Pianoe—We Manufacture and Deal Only in Standard Makes. This Statement Is Backed by $1,000 Cash _prsholane Piame Gh SEATTLE STORE 1519 THIRD AVENUE |patch in the United States. It is RAISES GARDEN. | IN OLD BARREL) ALBURTIS, Pa, Sept. George ©. probably the most novel are bearing a good crop of b The watermelon vines will be si ported on a trellis, & sugar barrel filled with soil. Fifty strawberry plants grow from the sides and three watermelon 18. | vines from the top. Borts, councilman, has ‘The strawberry plants were stuck truck ‘through bored holes, and the Editor of German paper in couver reports frequent ou! nts ‘against Germans. | Two New-Style Entertainers Now Being Shown in Our TALKING MACHINE PARLORS In these two new types of machines are embodied all of the very latest improvements. The tone quality of these new COLUMBIA VICTOR ‘he. styles is full, rich and true to life. w Mie? ~=9 Come in and Mahogany or Satin Walnut. Hear Them Other Styles from $15 to $500. There are no stairs to climb. Our Talking Machine Parlors are on the Ground Floor. TERMS TO SUIT YOU. Fok cle Firm 1519 THIRD AVE. Mahogany or Fumed or Weathered Oak. le me doe eB

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