The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 27, 1916, Page 3

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+1 STARTLING '| SENSATION Will Take Place at the Palace Clothing Co. ’ Tomorrow NEWS he closing out of the Balance of | the stock left from the Chelan Clothing Co. of Chelan, Wash. It| must be sold at once in wholesale| ‘or retail quantities. t a It is high time that you were thinking of your Fall and} Winter Suit. Why not come'and get one of our $6.85! Suits now on sale, that you can’t buy elsewhere for less than $15.00? You should see our Suits and Overcoats at $9.65 —they are wonders. These clothes embody every feature that you could possibly desire. They are made well and a absolutely standard dye, guaranteed fast colors. Seven cases 4 fof Men's Clothing just unpacked; they are from the best| makers in the country. Fall and Winter weights in blue| : and black serges; Worsteds in eray, brown, fine pencil stripes | 5 amongst them; regular price $25.00; and they go with all the rest of stock at $11.65. Come and see this particular ne. | Open your purse; look in it; see how much you can| spend, then kindly come to the Palace Overcoat Department, pick out any Overcoat from $5.85 up | f We have Raincoats, Mackintoshes, also Mackinaws, that! ‘we are selling far below the regular price 3 Other goods on sale tomorrow such as Woolen Socks) » at 9 cents, Cotton Gloves 3 cents, Men's Dress Shirts, worth $$1.50, go at 48 cents. Any $2.50 Hat in the house goes! i for $1.39. ¢ Tomorrow we sell Men’s $3.00 Dress and Work Shoes ‘for $1.89. All the $5.00 ones will go at $2.48. Pay a » visit to this Department. Crowded all the time. ' Thinking of buying your winter underwear soon? _ tomorrow; we've got your kind on sale z $2.00 Flannel Shirts on sale for 9Se. ‘ Heavy Big Z Washington Logger Shoes and high cuts Mission. PROGRAMS TODAY Come! oo DOINGS IN FILMD PODOOOOO ARRAS IOOOOOOA -NOTES GOSSIP Maclaren ¥ . all at sale prices. «ee i Tomorrow you can buy Men's Trousers worth $2.50, for ~ ' $9 cents; Men’s $4.00 Trousers for $2.38. the Terrible” The above are just a few of the hundreds of leaders and Liperty great values that we can’t mention, not being able to get) “The Vagabond Prince,” the fiye {spac in thi ©, but put spurs on your heels and come as ?'T' ure that will be seen at shag gph as we is ed y ; . i rty theatre for two more “fast as you can, you will not regret your fast running to this | jy iy two of the best known *Setore. «tars in filmland today, Dorothy n and H. B. Warner It will pay you well to attend.. Doors open sharp at 9 ay m. tomorrow morning, and we close at 10 p. m. Saturdays. |, Prinee Toalo y Do not confuse us with any other store. We are at { .-' 1022 First Avenue ' CORNER SPRING, AND NOWHERE ELSE H The Palace Clothing Co., of Course aren 3 Store for the People, the Store that Sells Right. COME!/‘h* !*ush provoker | : COLISEUM | Vivian Martin, in | Pothalia—disgruntied becat Bis “earroundings optimistic adventurer the jot the p ments seem spectators RESTAURANT er has the title role He te seen firet jas the young heir to the throne of | of} 4 then as the} who arrives in San Franciseo and fails in love | i dance-halls a Keystone, is ase lay made the to fairly fly for The host of Southern | Ife Chapl the other me th darkies, with their dances pastimes, gave rise to many 25c Lunch and Dinner fash, and-the t that | Her Father's Son.” at the Coliseum Thursday, 4 q well set forth the era of romance 4 Ss A N in the alluring South. The charm and | story is thrill. lin ing enough in ite lov acroas Lak Jand prac seur home Show COLONIAL ite : at the ¢ screen wrote directing it whom the Smal acreen-star the leading figure tn the story es lies fn what the really fs at it# best STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, Upper—Theodore Roberts and Anita King In “Anton the Terrible,” Lower—Mary Mac Laren In “Wanted—A Home,” Colonial. and cally Bay folks w Tharsday to again. The w will be an Vanted—A Hor ental, the triamphe, »wieard success to husband, Mary oye four CLEMMER , According to Young, the popular film star who paring at the mpany at the adaptat! : famous REX After a day's arduous toll, Char anianine | har lement t Miss Washington for all of the bold Interest Meyden added will add anoth: | ep for Lois directi rio Phillips Smatiey Jas « months Law,” the at fault most producers of motion ple misconception of photo-drama ne8 ont employes, one of Ben Turpin, aj for a night's frolic in the new Chap ieture at the Rex Served Daily 11 A.M. to 7 P. M. Inetalied a A we We latest use muale, at out most exquisite Chinese and American Eating Palace. have just Wonderphone, a nothing but up-to-date 4 try a meal Come Prices Paid Producers tor 106 Second Ave. So. Near Yesier Way on r orn. B ne i ~Half Bik. So. of Smith Bidg. ~ Selling Prices to Ketailer Batter, Eggs and Cheese Hutter Boys’, Girls’ and Children's KAVANAGH'’S Firet and 6 Fires Select Freeh & Aprit Tomorrow i =. Mary ~ Mac Laren —in— Veartables and Fruit HERP oR BAe toas SS daily by J. W, Godwi doz Clara Kimball Young In the 7-Act_ Super-Ken “THE COMMO The 5-Act Problem Play WANTED | it Wie | HOME ine A PICTURE YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS! Hy Mendel “Canzonetia,* CLEMMER Ie et, Wenatchee and Diss Peppers, 0-1b, erate ish A Comedy and a 2-Act Seattie’s Best tigen teas Drama Photeplay Neuse box 59 Adults, 10c—Children, 5¢ at: pe COLONIAL § v2 stan wax Poultry, Veat and Pork — While you are enjoyiog your wr meal we will play some of $ your favorite musi The ss finest Chop Suey and Nood Hens. 3 . in the city ae ae quads, good size, dow o@ for Union. | . | ue ne “” ‘4 Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers for ° Onions a Walle Votatore Bweet potatoes “Today ‘and Tomorrow—Last Days of the Big Double Program 1916. PAGE 3 PEASANTS HAVE GOLD IN SOCK BY GEORGE United Press Staff NEW YORK, Oct, 27.—Near ly half a biilion dollars in gold Is still tucked away In the French peasant’s woolen sock bank today, despite the hun dreds of millions he already has poured out of It to help his government win the war, MARTIN LOGGERS PUNCTURE j Loggers, wearing calked | boots, punched several thou sand neat little holes in the roofing material which covers | pier No. 2, when they were em ployed to shovel snow off iast winter. “The idea, mow that the rains are about to start, is to find a roof dentist,” says Chief Clerk J. C, Harris. Fashio misadventures he’ wee about | bimaeif his comp: would turn the fourest misanth into enough ela sunny-tempered optimist Chaplin finally {* soused in a Hive athe athtub of ice-cold water a ate husband, which cools his * red pulses and sends bin Ht »y | dreamland card | STRAND Theda Bara, who is a firm ¢ genist, has a new theory about the character of Ji According t th tifal actress who portra exhib: | the appy heroine of Shake s masterpiece, at the Strand of her parents were Illy mated. Juliet’s fat ised by Lady ¢ wt TO AID FRANCE Correspondent Maurice Trembley told it proud ly. Just arrived in America as |the representative of a group of French bankers to help French |merchants buy American suppl |the big, smiling Frenchman re ed in the #tory ho folks’ r day f big share of the big enough to give the flying start in business when peace No matter how humble the vome aid Tremble vou may know, tho you could not find it in a day's search, that ewhere in {t a woolen sock containing gold ts buried, It is the French peasant's pride, that rock | The remaining 100,000,000 franes gold) will stay buried unle the worst comes to the Worst. If the old men and women thought was needed to win the war, they would dig it up in a minute ROOF WITH SPIKES er ds 60 years old or more when the play begins,” say« Miss Bara, “while her mother ts 2s. They must have been married 15 years previous to this, The un i@) was evidently worldly, arrang rents much as her husband later to ar {range & marriage bet Juliet gaed Paris” ral Friday Night 10 Pretty Girls in The Fashion Show Friday and Saturday f “Her Father’s Son” 15c Children 5c WORLD SERIES AND CHAPLIN We couldn't all go East to see the World’s Series « Baseball but anyone can see the plays just as they were made, here at this theatre O! Charlie’s Stormy Romance O! Late Picture Ch Ch li BEN TURPIN LEO WHITE as. ap N— 5°, PURVIANCE Who Will Win the 1917 Model Ford? Watch Screen for Standing of Contestants Children 5c REX 10c Gately Clothes Will Appeal to Men Who Appreciate Good, Honest Values and | Thoughtful No Charges for Fittings or Alterations | Dear Miss Grey: Those support- of Initiative Measure No. 24 bob up ‘most anywhe 1 found one lin “your letters” of October 11. But lt don’t intend to let him get by [with it. | For argument’s sake, | will ad- mit his contentions: That “there ‘are 1,000 permits issued a day for Seattle alone”; that “there is an of $2,000,000 export ‘his home is worth one- half its value (in money) that it was two years ago,” and that “you would tand in jail or pay a $1,000 fine if you bought a bottle every five minutes,” under the proposed law. All this admitted, | will ask you and your readers to look at it from another point of view. You have seen how the supporters of this measure look at it. They can only see from the money side of it. They have either lost their sense of right and wrong, or have become degenerates, who, willfully and knowingly, let their greed for mon ley influence their better judgment What kind of men are men who |put temptation before their chil dren that it may add to the value of their property? Does not a home become more valuable to a man when it becomes a better place for |his family to live? Can any one |truthfully say Washington is not better morally since prohibition? | Would not total prohibition be bet ter still? Certainly it would, and for that reason adoption of this measure is a step in the wrong di rection. | If prohibition hurts you financial lly, “grin and bear it"; it can't hurt you physically. Be a martyr. Vote NO. G. ALM Dear Miss Grey: in answer to “Would-Be Mother,” are adopted babies a success? |! can an swer for one, at least, yes. More than twenty years ago, when my husband and | knew that there would be no tittle ones in our home, and at the same time discovering that a home is not a home without children, the good Lord sent us a baby 2 years old, the child of a de serted mother. She took possession of our hearts long ago. Her beauti ful babyhood was the greatest bless. ing of our lives, and, as she grew older, each day made her dearer She is married now, and has a dar ling of her own, but she is still the loving, comforting daughter. Yes, it pays a thousandfold if the child is given the proper training and abundant love.—Satisfied Father and Mother. Dear Miss Grey: | have been a reader of your letters for many months, and have marveled at your broad understanding of other peo ple's troubles, and also your per sonal advice to each individual, |whether their troubles were real or imaginary. In yesterday's letters, you said ‘you would like to hear from those |who had adopted children. Would you consider an answer from one who is an adoptee? in the first place, is “Would-be Mather” sure that some day in the Gi Between Seneca and Spring Sts. 9, To Cx Service y necessar ons to fit you be This store is now ready to help every man into his new fall clothes—no matter what his desire may be or what price he wishes to pay Suits $15 to $35 “et are all repre deln f ‘ & man the con- t ion and desired by well- Ke 5, $18, $20, $22.50, 50, $30 and $35 Overcoats $15 to $30 nd with large co! the new no vaterial and $30. Women and Misses You Are Cordially Invited to Use Our Credit Service A revelat i re in Suits, Coats, enne nd Skirt Never h style, euch qual t diversity at the price. Dozens of distinctive mod- efined elegance an oderately priced so that you cam n © ye favorite style at a price within your grasp. $17.50, $22.50, $27.50 up to $45 : * pore ‘aioe "Bu , COATS other favored fabrics in all $17.50, $22.50, $24.50 $29.50 up to $49.50 DRESSES, WAISTS, SKIRTS and FUR at Popular Prices Opea Saturday Evenings Until 10 o'clock 1119-1121 ‘Third: Avene |. om future she won't be a real mother?) world-wide search for your own If that day should come, would she mother? imagine going down the be able to give to the poor little street and looking into each and adopted one, who had no say as to every face, unconsciously, of wom- whether she should be his or her/en old enough to be your mother, mother, the same love that she will |and saying to yourself, “Are you give to her own, without partial-/my mother?” if the woman is ity? Do you, Miss Grey, think this Shabbily dressed and kind of face, possible? | assure you it is im-|continuing with, “If you were my possible. In the little childish mother I'd work myself to death to give you the luxuries that you | haven't got.” Can you buy a love like that with board and room or a name? And on the search. goes from New York to San Francisco. What will you do with them, Miss Grey? Why, simply let all the “Would-be Mothers” and mis- guided philanthropists donate about one-half of what they would spend quarrels could she impartially de cide for the outsider? Indeed not! She would in all probability say, “He must give way to the little one because he is older,” but in reality in her mother-heart she would enforce it because one is a part of her, and the other an out- sider, even tho he bears her name Very few people adopt children with the idea of loving them all|each month on the one they wou! thru life. As a rule, it is the same 2dopt to an educational scho as “Would-be Mother"—simply a where all little “Wouldn’t-be crse of takingha child to fill the Adoptees” will be taken care of, place of the one that has passed and then, when they are old away, or else thru a misguided | enough, let them choos rade or sense of philanthropy. If “Would. profession, and then teach it to be Mother” will let time cure her them and turn out to the world aching heart, | assure you in all/men and women who are able to sincerity she will spare a great cope with the world and its prob- many aches from poor little lems, free from petty grievances “Wouldn’t-be Adoptee,” should he | and self-reliant. or she be capable of choosing Some day the fact will come to the ears of the girl or boy, and all the little injustices will crop up be fore his mind, and then a great un-! derstanding will come of the why and wherefore of many unbrushed- away tears, and the lavish love to| the other one. Then, “if she had been my mother she would have understood.” Can you, in your great understanding, picture the AN ADOPTEE, You Working People 627 FIRST AV Directly foot of Cherry Over Pioneer Drug Store. What Is It? Man or Devil! HIELDING —HADOW More baffling than the laughing mask in the “Iron Claw.” See Episode No. 5—“Through Bolted Doors’’—all this week— olonial Theatre The

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