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STAR CUR TOPARDON SHOE PRICE UP? N EXILES SENTTO FRIEND WIFE IS. CRUEL SIBERIA NOT BLAMELESS RU T You By MARY BOYLE O'REILLY BY BASIL M. MANLY We’ Lu i] 3 LONDON, Noy, 16.—\ first Noted Economist for The Seattle OUR creait system has been eatantished for your conventence to fil {ruil ot the wat be 1 1 and n Star t you to fu y home along your own. tndtvidua Siberian exile — 16 Sean Get Sebave are « \ our prices are lower than will be . has banished vodka, promised| WASHINGTON, D, C, N 6 found anywhere. Ne extra ¢ 4 Shoo price ¢ skyrocketing | i rp YOUR We ibe » or rule |* pri ar r ting : | > the uring | grades are up from $1 to $1.50 a }® ar a! pri | pair, and me varietles of calf age ¢ cetbink RA cd peman.|OUe OW held for their | Anglo-Russian who has, in one | ¥eleht in gold | done for t exiles of} You rned this when you ¥ more than European g0V-| swapped your pay envelope for a J ernmen have accomplished in om ieshis , | cde WASP pair of winter shoes for self and | Mrs. Sonia Howe fs the daughter | ¥!f Jot Russian bur bred to al What you want to know now is horror of nih ed to| WHAT THE MATTER? AND }a conservative Irishman. con WHERE IS IT GOING TO STOP sented to speak about ret ; making trip to Petrogra: | Here is the dope | I have the best to lleve Ye have to blame the war for that the czar soon will e athe high shoo prices, and friend neral pardon,” began M Howe, | Wife for the high shoe prices, and Russia antious to do the right the cattlioman and th beef trust [thing for political prisoners, Even|™ d and the leather jreactionary bureaucrats are now |J°> shoe manufacture | keen to consider the exile quest and bber, and the re fo not say, ‘We will try taller r t tn your town We WILL'; and prompt on thoir/ EVERYONE OF THESE has played romise, one-fifth of the adminis-/" Part In shooting shoe prices at ative exiles already have been |e #ky | erated to return home fr Friend wife is the only one you surt prosecution or pollic can get at, #0 you had better start st on her. When all th Better still, the minister of the |Desinaing to foe rior {s prepared to do muc ather, and more th t NEW Russia » that !n& demanded fo y ow is no more the t for ba ies and autor e uph ing Intellectual men for the nybody had dreamed pinions, The old system has be.|Mre. Wife and ber daughters # scandal and a barr ver the d decided to cut a f we real Russ mo. | ¢ ng like that right off ratic nations whose friendship | tom of thet irts. Then o Russia seeks. and daughter had to have shoes Hope le Brighter right up to th nees! “A sun of hope is now rising Now th knee-high shoes | over Siberia, Hundreds of aging| ‘@ke about twice as much | ticals whisper poss ty ot | leather the good old style edom after dragging years in| and what is more they take the feaptivity, Thousands of young ex-| BEST hides on the market mer 7 r ara tu. An a shoe Ever Offered to Those Who Have Use for a workmen and university att: ,,.. ba P Sweeper “ And |" Saying ¢ no matter what hap oxi |pened y POSSIBLY get 66 ” res more than $3.00 a pair for women sentenced except f © speadthrift Eight dollars, p as Olymplan nec ona The world, long scanda ized by CARPET SWEEPERS }the punishment of suc people tori? as amooth Worth $3.00 each, will be placed on Special Sale [fare temitte! Nor wil & word : : A : for a great amnesty Friday Morning at 5 “| WANT SUZZALLO AND | Cracked eggs can n be boiled sately| by placing a little vinegar in th water HILL ON COMMITTEE ercial Clu merce r east referendum the consolid bers of the Com ber of Cor 98C splendid, durable carpet sweepe ce. The “Hygeno” Sweeper is ma very strong—a sanitary sweeper which “Hygeno” Sweepers are handsome, having aked enamel! finish and nicke) trimming. It's a mighty good sweeper tter than the old-fashioned kind sanitary, light weight, easy-ru ng and handsomely finished big HYGENO factory could not have furnished th cheaply except for the fact that the output is several thous: per day, thus bringing the cost of production way down emphasize the fact that this is an advertising—not a ma proposition ONLY ONE TO A CUSTOMER None Sent C. O. D. sucha of steel uk oO ying a at-| of both organizations again yone Chamber of Commerce requested the offi stees to submit t ridiculously low j light in weight h rs no germs beautiful mahog have No Phone Orders Taken. None Delivered |BUSHNELL NEW HEAD | OF THE ROTARY CLUB) : le | Lurni @.- ine ee is the new { nt of the Seattle Rotary club 4167 424 + Dike S‘tréet: the reatit of the anntal_ election esda night, In the Was Annex F. L MeNalt . 1 vice president CA e es - r cOs k was chosen treasurer _ Star of “Fair and Warmer” Bars Films © Die-| RM. Calki anager of ae ——— icles turned from a Or! Lotus Robb, who comes to the Oh, the legitimate for mine every YM ALIN and Li aa : 4 Mae con Metropolitan theatre next week, in time,” says Miss Robb ; her guest, spoke on etate educa comedy, “Fair and Warmer,” is and alarming! are cou “cw” ARGENTINA WANTS thusiastic over all that youth loves) you can keep your hair TS ee very best by washing it with wnet seis GAMBLING TAXED! simple, inexpensive shampoo.|ance for the free tre which cleanses the hair and scalt t n nd thoroughly of all the dandruff and|C,,"0, PAUSS. fo84 M aa RIO DE JANEIRO, Nov. 16.—| dirt and leaves a cl wholesome par. | That »,000 contos, or reis, or feeling: Just use a teaspoonful of gen prepaid about 0,000,000 chan hands| canthrox dissolved in a ¢ of hot annual r the game of water, afterwards rin icho, a ga game similar to with cle ! As played in the the hair ¢ tat the startling more t nd greas contemplating a 5 per cent soft ging it © gove € tax on the bicho me pleasure. All scaip irritation w If the Coehlo bill becomes a a disappear and the hair will be eems probable, the dicho game brighter than ever before. il be legalized and will be play eat cis a Aa ed openly, instead of under police present ban, as at ASK SEC. DANIELS; FROM SORENESS Splendid for i Jnere at Atlantic City. I'd go the Bad Coughs, Colds, § HE SHOULD KNOW. F WIFE length of the boardwalk every day y ¥ F A —of course, you will have to go in Boys on the Border Relieved Bronchitis ¥ vials Whaat Gaitate eae CON ESSIONS fe] a chair now, but as soon as pf Their Pains and Aches with : Pop nainral secre tae toe aa ble I'd try walking. I'd dance and Sloan's Liniment ved tars. Matha determine’ 09 tha ble ~1 “No, dear, 1 admire bim more,erything she had to live for died | smile ag In fact, I'd get back binnduas rection she is running, seafaring) MOLLIE BEGINS TO SUSPECT] | (han I did when we were first mar|with him, On the contrary, dad | into the game again and I would | se e upon a time Norman Jone Saeststiittesstiiiss men are launched on an argument WHY MARGIE HAS LOST ried? During the long year while I| did not completely fill mother’s life | 2Ot worry about Dick at all. If he | serving in the National Guard a va that bids fair to run up and down HER LOVE FOR DICK! | | was lying lik log, he was working | and so she has found happiness in|¢an Win you back, all well and lr Paso, returned to camp after a " the entire coast %| very hard and trying to get that|Mr. Trent, and I honestly believe good. If he can’t’—Mollie stopped strenuous 15-mile | foot-sore i , The kveuwent is the outarowth of It's all wrong, Margte, . ‘ook business in shape so Mrs, Sel-|makes him happier than she did | Suddenly and whispered, Margie, and leg we He had not been Poe os a collision, Wednesday, between the| ¥702S said Mollie thru her tears.) vi) anda 1 would be perfectly com-|poor old dad there isn't any one else, is there? liong in active service and hi ode way it take" fireboat Duwamish and. the ferry.{When | had finished my Mttle con) corapte, even if anything should| “I early found out, Margie, that (To be continued) Lotus Robb houlders, back and limbs felt the f ar atinate ash, « boat, when the Duwamish is said to| fe#sion of the wreck of my married | haps yen to him,” woman can love a man devotedly : after-effects of marching arate. fellas Tea Te haters. (ha red the other vessel off| Uf Yes,” answered Mollie, “Dick) and make him perfectly miserable horses and dogs and akating and) Remembering Sloan's Liniment,|f ae at rT the Grand Trunk och That sounds like a caption of @/ 14, goitied down into ar ular |and then I said to myself: ‘Mollie, | E R IN dancing Jones applied it the sore spo t 1 Phe unethical saith sramort- remeron. Mall and thereat We) )iviness man in the last year you've got to make a success of b Robb has beer , and went to be He writ tarred © damaged point an he-| 20th laughed ; That's it, Mollie,” 1 said ear-| this business of marriage.’ My first ! ‘ arose the mor fee located t the wheet| ‘Not #o bad as at first reported,” | qt It may sound very foolish | idea, of course, was children, and eno. 1| fine; in fact I had entirely for aft, on the wth wide of the| 4% Mollie's hopeful comment. “No) 1, vou, put one of the things that|my great disappointment is that 1 ¢ a ear| ten e e and went i eamer hich has put ‘federal; Woman is completely at the tragle| jit me most is that in all Dick’s|/have none. But I have stopped i ‘ ole for r drill in the sur ain x Ateatboat inspectors and others en-| 28d Of all things if she still retains | iif, there has always been some-| worrying about it or making Chad| Don’t wait for the drink habit to ise my a « t tirely at 400. er sense of humor. You don't hate) ning that he has put before me.| miserable by speculating upon rea-}set too strong a hold upon your ou're to Private Jones passed the experi-| i Mant oe at effective re Dick, do you, Margie | When it was not another woman it| sons jhusband, son, or father, for it can you have to the audie ence along, and many a c 1 ‘ ————~ | was a convivial time with the boys I have interested myself in oth-|be broken up quickly if Orrine is to find out if you've made good,| the ia eh dae en a We ouah wyrur will MER OTHER HUBBY | Seattle Astonished and now that he has become inter-|er things, I have started writing [given him, This actentific treat, --— in strains, bruises, insect | “it “prompt }ested in the game of business, | am|a book, Margie, and I think I am/ment can be given in the hom , cramped muscles, rheumatic 22 nasmbtanen "toat ALIVE; HE UITS | By Simple Mixture his next best amusement |happier since I began, even if it is{eretly and without loss of time STROLL COST $190. twinges, etc., by the use of Sloan's nd alr passages 4 Q pe Are ast ed at| For a moment Mollie was silent; | never published. Some days Chad | from work, LAniment sopena thi . a oon the ANT action of stinple buck-| then she said, “Margie, we women|hardly says a word to me, but 1| You have nothing to risk and ev ly applied without rubbing. f atop f Joseph Goldsmith wants a di-|thorn bark cerine, et ss mixed| make too much of a fetish of love| know now that sometimes he wants |erything to gain, as Orrine is sold J. B. Potter ent t ¢, 50e and $1.00 ay “be vorce Adler-\-ka. ONE SPOONFUL and marriage, 1 don’t think so|to get away from everybody, even |under this guarantee, If, after @ out for a e . He thinks his demands are not nu rprising much is Wrong with marriage as|me, and I stay awe n him trial you fail to get any benefit, his # ‘ € 1 ' unreasonable re ANY CA with us and the remnants of our; much as possible until he wants m its use, your money will be || and ¢ ‘ $ ne ° Goldsmith, in his divorce action,| stipat « Re-| mid-Vietorian education, De you | agait nded alte t a ; . Wednesd his wife, An we Al ' ‘know, dear, that mother and bea Of course, I can’t tell you just! Orrine is prepared in two forms: f Ricardo and Ge M 1 1 t na, has a ) the name of| iow 1 uppe Aunt Mary are good illustrations of /how you should solve your prob-|No, 1, secret treatment; Orrine No. the Yukon hotel, with whom Potte | noe OE nt accept anything |Frank HH, Turner, residing some ' my theory? Aunt Maty never had | lem Margie, but if I were you, 1 |2, the voluntary treatment, Coste visited for a spell, are held the A guaran solute satis-| where in Michigan. {A short « real ideal or a real thought that | believe | would cease to think of it.) only $1.00 & box. Ask us for book- police, pending further investig ction of money promptly refunded! “He is very much alive, I found) {)0in4 a in a did not cluster around Uncle John,| I'd just give myself up to the beau: | let R then. eee ee ar Wesee tad "lout recently,” Goldsmith sald. N. Broadway 4 land so when Uncle John died ev-!tiful sea and sun and summer sky! Swift's Pharmacy, 2nd and Pike, f es -THURSDAY, NOV. 16, 1916. PAGE § up» HIGH COST } EOF CLOTHING % " We've Kicked the Ladder From Under the High Cost of Clothing We’ve smashed the marble columns, the glittering chandeliers and the plate glass fixtures. We have cut out special clearance sale and credit losses, and reduced rent and overhead expense by doing business upstairs instead of down. We are actually saving our thousands of customers $10.00 on every suit and overcoat they buy. wwe @ Regular $25 Suits AND Overcoats "BRPAQDOOSPOOOOOOO WOOD Several years ago we began to eliminate expense. We figured that a $25.00 street-level Suit or Over- coat could be sold for $15, provided useless ex- penses were cut out. We have turned the trick. Our store is not a fancy-looking business place— just plain iron gas pipe fixtures—but there are thousands of regular $25.00 garments on those fixtures and you can buy them at $10.00 less than under the old method of doing business. | Our customers appreciate that $10.00 saving. They tell their friends, and then we have more customers. Today we are outfitting many of the most substantial business men in Seattle, Portland and other cities—men who know values and owe their success to that knowledge. We have a Suit and Overcoat for you in this— “Seattle’s Original Upstairs Clothes Shop.” Allow us to assist you in kicking the ladder from under the high cost of living. | ALTERATIONS FREE « TAKE THE ELEVATOR AND SAVE #102 Fahey-Brockman UP-STAIRS. LL ES: SHOP WASHINGTON ano SIXTH