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‘An Economical, Delightful Place to Trade Thanksgiving Footwear at Great Savings ‘This Sale of the Bankrupt Stock of the well-known Shoe Manufacturers, the P. J. Harney Shoe Co., gives you a cholce ‘of Finely Made Shoes for Men and Women, sold regularly at .° $6.00 a pair.Now being sold out at our Money-Saving A Popular English Last This style comes in all » feathers, in black or tan, | and has proved very pop ular. Goodyear welt sole “$2.95 Among the many other styles there is one to suit “every posible taste and idea, A splendid showing “ot $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00 Values at $2.5 O ana $2.95 Two New Styles in Gipsy Boots In Bronze Kid or Battleship Gray, the “Gipsy” styles de Luxe, $3 95 button or lace, only . Very fine Mat Kid, also in Black Velvet, piped with White Calf $5.00 Values for $2.95 Dainty Evening Shoes for ° Eve every 1 36 values A whole host of Dainty gasion and to match every sty for $2.50 and $2 « frock Free Delivery om Mail Orders 0 is SATURDAY OSTONNHOE( 0. [si SAMPLE,JHOP NINC| °° ° LITFL Second Ave at Piko St. BUILDING (OND 0oR fO EXCI NOMEN CUT AND BURN THEMSELVES TRYING TE SYMPATHY STAR—FRIDAY, ACTOR AFRIEND RUSSIA'S BEST OF INDIAN CHIEF ALLY. 1S WINTER J. Morrill Morrison, of “Twin| Just 103 Years Ago, Napoleon Beds,” Has Medicine Bag | Lost Army in Snow- | \ of Geronimo's Bound Country. /USES IT FOR MAKEUP] WILL HISTORY REPEAT®* ” | J, Morrill Morrison, who plays! _ 18121915, the lead in “Twin Reds," coming to} 1" the Eastern war sone Rupaia's ! most powerful ally t# being mar |the Moore Sunday, has for a make|shaled in battle array, A news dis up box a “medicine bag” Kiven tolpatch says him by the famous Indian chief)" “Ajready the nip of coming win peronimo, ter in in the air, and the specter of Years ago, as a young chap, hel siz leers behind every German sol — «(eae eoaey. When @ groep of Gen man prisoners Was met on the road marching eastward, the first que tlons asked, as they gazed appre: hensively at the landscape, gray and desolate beneath the leaden jaky, were of the Russian winter when it It would fall and bow long it would endure Army Meets Disaster In 1812, Napoleon, flushed with vietory upon victory, threw his mag nificent army of veterans across the Russian border, with the declared intention of taking St. Peteraburg, For some reason he altered his plans and marched on Moscow, 400 miles southeast of St tersburg. The Ruslan armies retreated be fore the French, laying waste the country as they went Nothing could stay Napoleon's peerless le and they reached Moscow in triumph and took possession of the Hut the inhabitants of Mos cow had deserted and set it on fire The greater part of the city w |destroyed, forcing Napoleon Hleave it in October |ter Russian winter was setting in ‘Retreating thru a destitute coun |try, the deep snows making it im possible to get supply to them, ond at the same time im one, elty J. Morrill Morrison jretreat was most disastrous. | hundred and fifty visited Fort Sill, Okla, where Gen,|finest troops, th |Hugh L. Scott, present chief of/world soldiery, left Intaff of the U. 8. army, was captain! Rus#ian snows The Ghost of 1812 of L troop of the Seventh cavalry.| In those daye—this was fn Janu-| Napoleon's prestige was ended; flower of th coast to the p to prevent their power of Europe had fatled to do. extinction by tuberculosis | No wonder, then, that the Ger They were in charge of the then|man soldier of today * appre jLieut. Bellew of the 16th infantry,/henatvely at the landmeape” and vis fand lived Wickiups while the/fons “the specter of 1912 government cottages were being! lerected for their occupation | The music halls of Paris | Young Morrison used to alt on the|not all been closed, but they lgrans on the par ground and|been sobered by the war and tone has immensely ltalk halting Comanche and Apache,|™oral together with faltering sign, to the proved The Indian, who will go down in and Increase Weight history as the most blood-thirsty cruel and fiendish of bis race, took a liking to Morrison, who tn turn _.|was fascinated with the old medi cine man’s medicine bag. lp The receptacle in which Geronimo f. ca his medicine was a plece of beantifully tanned deerskin, fringed, beaded and stained with various ve dyes 4 every da weight her were human teeth, human |{ hair, bears’ claws, rattlesnake fangs nd other charms embroidered inte |the skin or ted to its strings ‘ Morrison won the oid man's heart/fuistein ‘life and a semblance of women who inflicted mf-, To inflict the wounds, 14 usedcar-/with gifts of tobacco, cigarette health and strength Stuffing won't » wounds to escape disagreeable bolic acid, four probably used car papers, a convex shaving mirror and ety then. A 4 a day : jbo ° erbury won't make Saris Of distasteful surroundings, to bolic acid, one croton oil, one lye..a Waterbury watch. eter . there Ail. the fat . one sand paper, one tobacco, one th The Indian had often noticed Mor- producing elements of their food paympathy, interest or pity. OF electric needle and unknown sub-rison gazing ¢ovetously at his med-|just stay there in the intestines ur notoriety, are discussed |stances, and sx entirely unknown icine bag. When the young man|{!) [hey pase from the body as Dr. Oliver S. Ormsby of Chicago | substances left the post Geronimo thrust the! sc will prepare these the current issue of the Journal! pr pavnpraneninrerns old medicine bag into his friend’s|fatty food ents so that thelr : hands with a guttural “How.” [blood can absorb them and depo the American Medical associa: SUE MAKES TRAMP | : cs jthem all ahout the body—some | thing too, thet wf! Dr. Ormsby mentions a patient FEEL REAL CHEAP thelr blood’s carrying power burned her arm a little every For such a condition it is well to for weeks to “escape practicing | komen with every neal. Margel 1s ne oxen | WAUBUY, 8. D. Nov. 19.--Ex leome beliews, a patented drug ot two months burned her-|citement ran high here when Mrs @ caretyl combination of ax effective an om powerful ‘STREET; TRIES: with antiseptic for three weeks Ida Mead was seen with a cocked vilative and flesh building ele i she regarded her husband revolver pointed at the head of a nta known to chemistry. ft In Reglectful and hoped to attract|hobo marching ahead of her with abaotute harmless, yet has been meme attention hands elevated. She paraded bim T0 FL E IN A Ravtee eaten With Gent taal ber married woman, 35 years|thru the town and turned him ove Rabiet Sasen ice Sora met! Otten, inge, gloried in the fact she wasito the marshal at the jail. The |the effec of Increasing the weight 0 in the community as “the!tramp was robbing Mrs. Mead’s gar m joe a thin an or woman from three eal puzzle.” A telephone girl/den, and when she ordered him| MERLIN, Ore. Nov. 19—The au-| by bortetl Drag Ce Seitte @ leg with carbolic acid on ay he threatened her. thorities were trying today to es-|Pharmacy and other food druggists in point so she would not have to tablish whether the maa who shot leverywhe pomitive guarantee Paraffin-wax models are made of| Leonard Goul, a blacksmith, tn his [ee weight or money back F 20 patients Dr. Orms-levery new British battleship laid|8%0D here late yesterday is insane . seit G Akl Pe Dy describes were less than 22 years|down, and these models are ceniad or ming, AM U SE M E N I S age. ‘in a tank The man claims he does not know bis name. He is believed to| FAMOUS SAYINGS OF GREAT BIRDS, rr bd Ld be James Makem, or Maquem, ef “ CC i liable Laxative Weiner fate WHY BOYCOTT ME? | He shot Goul thru the heart with MR. STORK a rifle, walked three blocks to| Until Mother Tried Simple Remedy Tn spite of every care and atten m to diet, children are very apt become constipated, a cond sible for many fills in Wife unless promptly relieved | Mrs. C. W. Wilson, of Shelby- Yille, Tenn., had trouble with her Baby boy, Woodrow, until eh Beard of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Per #in. She writes, “I can safely say , Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is tne it remedy of its kind on earth Ht acts so gently and yet #0 surely tle Woodrow was badly nstipated and we find could , Come Here Men’s Shoe Store 814 First Ave. Relieved This Baby Ej mothing that gave r until we Pi fied your Syrup Pepsin, which gave imme‘iste relief. aienes 4 Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a WOODROW WILSON | Gpmpound of simple laxative herbs,| cents a bottle in any well-stocke: Beet from opiates or narcotic dr drug store A trial bottle of Mild in action, positi in effect | Caldwell's Syru ein car @pd pleasant to the taste It has | obtained, free of char by Been prescribed by Dr. Caldwell|ing to Dr B. Caldwell fer more than a quarter of a cen-| Washington St Monticello, ary and can now be had for fifty | nols |where an automobile was «tanding, | and compelled Wm. Buct the driver, to start the machine | Refore it was under way another | car bearing Deputy Sheriff Nel-| Y son arrived. After a strong re-| sistance the man was overpowered Ld The man was employed by Goul j last spring a (RN | | | FURNACE TIPS | By CAROLINE COE SELWYN & CO'S Keep the coal in the furnace high lin the center and lower at the sides If the coal banks up on the side Hleaving hole at the heart of tne LAUGH FESTIVAL ire ually coc d tive K. gradually cools and soon M 0 0 R THEATRE Sprinkle all coal with water be Next Week |fore using, {t will burn longer and Commencing y Niahe make a hotter fire Mats, Wed, Thurs, § Rent Sen ed| Use as small size coal as the s Dr.|grate of the furnace will admit; it Ntmmts, 260, $1.00, Firat 12 be|will give the most satisfactory rx 454) When removing ashes from the Hl-/farnace sprinkle them with water, using a sprinkler ca or cover them with a layer of wet sawdust this will prevent dust Never shake the furnace fire un lews it needs it;, twice each day should be sufficient In most severe re a eel axates » ‘ Hawking Fiyt ern An old engineer once told me that Travel Weekly. i“ bie hips, much heat wa lost in a furnace a Me from covering the red hot coals — —— with new coal He sald Allow the fie ted wil te oor ele Me ee Se to have a color, theg fill the JOLLY ACTS—7 fur very Show Who is Betty Brown? \ to just an the bit- trains thru |peding the march of the army, the Two thousand of the their bodies tn ary, 1895-—-Geronimo and his band'his star wos waning. The rigors of jot Apaches were prisoners of war,(the Russian climate had accom lhaving been from the enast|plished what the combined military! y hands at work on the fur hace prove most disastrous, If the Hoyas of the family run the furnace have each do certain parte of the vork; one fill and shake the fur-| Soo nace and the other clean ashes and | Seba ea Mg a NEW PANTAGES \—_——_———— ~ Mats, 2:90, Nights, 7 and 0 Canuh at . o12/THE GINLS FF nT pilainch at the Hollywood, 212 son “aa , NOV. 19, 1915. PAGE 8 Clothes Help to Make the Man If you look prosperous you will invite prosperity. To wear good clothes isa big asset to any man. We are making a big reduction on every Suit in our store to prove this. No makeshift fitting here — every Suit a work of art. Our tailors There's another reason, too—that’s the main one. the most must be kept on. Take advantage of this offer—it’s honest sale in Seattle. SUITS 1” $45 —$25.00— All $50 and $60 Suitings at Thirty Dollars Patterns include every conceivable mixture and weave. We tailor to particular men and cut Suits to correct all irregularities—bow-legs, knock-knees, low-shoulders, round- oF aes? ts Overcoats Also Priced Low Established 1890 ~s . Louis Gross Custom Tailor 919 First Ave. Rainier-Grand Hotel Blk. t UNITED STATES ARE AT THE R, DECLARES HERBERT QUICK quered territory. 1 am in favor of taking no chances of any such things happening. GREAT COAST CITIES OF THE MERCY OF ANY ARMED INVADE With Our Present Equipment It Is Not a| Question of “Could an Invading Nation|" © bape, as things now aro. It minst not b6, Ho for jong ie Before our possible enemies are free from the load of this Land on Either Coast?” But Only Of war, let us 00 prepare ourselves that each of them will know “Where Would an Invader Land? De-| that they would be welcomed at our shores “with bloody hands to hospitable grav THEN THEY WILL NOT COME! clares Editor and Philosopher By Herbert Quick Sie Melbourne Theatre ports and the navy—could either of them land 200,000 men on our Pa ciffe const in four weeks after the expedition should start! | | | The best trained armies of today, equipped as the European and Japanese armies are equipped, could seize any one of the porte of San Di San Francisco, Portland, Seattie or Tacoma. Our Coast artillery could not stop such seizure, for it only commands the harbor entrances. Any of these fortifications could be taken from the rear by an army landed somewhere | else in an unprotected place. F | All such an expedition would have to do would be to defeat we , |navy—and one of these nations has now 4 navy which would have ® By least an even chance to do this, These cor ries are now allies, Their could sink ours, or bottle It up N united navie tan even chance that our | So in cane of war there would be at leas e that our larmy would be the sole protection for these cities, AND THE PACIFIC OCEAN I8 A ROAD BY WHICH MEN CAN BE TRANSPORTED WITH e ouse i ALL THEIR ARTILLERY AND SUPPLIES FASTER THAN WE COULD MOBILIZE AND TRANSPORT THEM BY RAIL OR SEA. | oat Having landed the first 200,000, the matter of getting a FEATURING ‘ million here would be a mere matter of going back and forth, — | There is no fighting force which we could put on that ground in our ] present state of defenselessness which could prevent such an army JUI | Ss TEG R from taking possession of the whole Pacific coast, clear back to the | ountains, seizing the passes, and holding them until we could cafry The Distinguished Dramatic Star, Well Known In Seattle, i bur rescuing forces across deserts and plains and mountains, #torm Heads the Opening Bil! a these passes, carry a series of strong, entrenched lines and either anni i late their armies or drive them back into their ships. i hi This would mean defeating a million or more of the best soldiers The University of ing tn the world, with all the advantages in thelr favor ot abandoning the i a Pacific coast atates to worse than slavery, and taking~a blow to the W. h: gt Tri is nation from which it could never recover. | as. n on Ce) mo THIS MIGHT MEAN A DECADE OR HALF A CENTURY | Ale /Aptiaie--1.g’Aiiss Mabel late: can hace aasiine Ba oF wen | Regular Melbourne Program ma On the other hand, if the Invaders s'jould come from Europe, they would probably attack New York and Philadel- phia. These points, or Washington, would ibe as easily taken ae the Pacific ports, or could be reached by a two weeks’ trip of the expeditionary force. 3 An invading army which had once mast(red the city of New York would at once levy on the great financial any industrial communities ot | that city, Philadeiphia, and the nearby cities, a money indemnity large) | The Melbourne policy of first-run, high-class film, with excellent musical numbers, will be continued, The recent closing of the house for ten days for repairs has been taken advantage of, and everything is now in first-class condition. | | Melbourne Sunday Coming Features enough to pay the expenses of the expeditjon—AND IT, TOO : Be a5 wisi ‘Within. 180 miles they would fing the greatest industrial Morning Health the Heart of t of arms Kt Talks health Swick eutis Novembe 1:15 will Mind for district, the greatest coal mines, the greatest factor and munitions in America. The coal mines are the great an The greatest navy yard is in Brooklyn Ne | | M wel 2 [ive district of Pennsylvania, | Warwick ter Woman" Lenore Ulrich Divorced Hilda Sprong talks Sug- A by series of br BT tive The greatest depot of smokeloss | powder | | powder in the Unitéd States is in The greatest ee will Our gree test cartridge work# are in Con-| firearms ‘works are in Connecticut, Massa | chusetts and Eastern New York. A day to Western Pennsylvania would give that great tron region into Yanda of the enemy | 1 read in a newspaper this morning of an order issued in Belgium) iby the German conquerors, imposing ‘severe punishment on all Belgians | who refuse to work at their callings (jy any labor which {t would be for} the Interests of Germany to have pelrformed This sort of slavery is Whint the residents might expect of any part of the United States (occupied by an invading army, They would have to work to ke upplied an army grinding them under its military heel, and }thus ald in extending the con SNAKE LODGES IN - HOUSE CEILING w Jersey |factories are in Delaware Y necticut, and the greatest His . ™. Heal of ture by Mel to those in Egested Power of ry is a © wit bourne ‘The ttle interested In 1 who © first as Thomas \. Wise Price Ware | aclence Helen that peat attend t thus get v | re ll benefit Dr. Swick Wheel ook Blinn Regular Theatrical Program Begins ICE SKATING a, rhree Sessions Dally (except | SALEM, N. J, Nov. 19—A black | aie es Sundays at 1 P. M. lsnake found its way to the ceiling | 10:90 ym. between the plaster and roof at the Jhome of Clifford Pilteraft, near|’ Daretown, and had made its home rion wt ns ts one TMT PAINT co, Ml LOC— The Melboumne—10c lhe heard peculiar noises, but} G18 Pike St. |thought they were made by rats or| mice, While repairs were being WALLPAPER Ron Second at University made to the ceiling a hole was cut and the snake poked its head thru. ’ MAIN 5601