The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 1, 1917, Page 4

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BOUGHT YOU GET THE BENEFIT ** Last week one of the biggest casholen houses in the country said to m “If you take this entire lot of itings you can name your own I took them up. steel-cove 5 the classiest lot of superb ms I ever had in my shop. These patterns in Worsteds, Serges Cheviots were made to sell for 00 to $40.00—a few Suits are in $50.00 clas Starting Tomorrow You Can Have Your Unre- stricted Choice of These Superb Fabrics, Made to Order for While they last they go at this remarkably low price. Come early for best choice. Overcoats Made to Order— Fine Line of Me- dium and Heavy | THE OLD GUARANTEE STANDS You are guaranteed satisfaction with Woolens \ every Suit or Coat, or “Your Money Back With a Smile” IMPERIAL | TAILORING | COMPANY LOUIS SIDELSKY, PROPRIETOR 801 THIRD AVE. Corner Columbia Nearly 25 Years in Same Business In Seattle Cynthia Gre 'y’s LETTERS agoear Mies Grey: in answer to Ruth”: It Ie the old story—pov erty in at the door, love out at the window, Poverty cannot make you dislike your husband and the father of your child Wf you are willing to share your lot in lite as you agreed to with one another at the time of marriage, An honest and loving | husband, ae you state, is the grand est thing a woman can possess, To | idolize you, and Give you all he can earn and go without himself, is true love and respect, even tho It be a few pennies. c.wWw.M Dear Miss Grey: in anawer to the woman who signs herself "Ruth": | think you are altogether selfish; for my part, | think you flon't appreciate a good husband \ Does he complain of his poverty? © idolizes you and gives you all » car what more can he do? Wt he doing all in his power? fter all, what Is finery and en |tePinment without the love of one YOWook for better or for worse! Lets keep my husband's love and devotn, the babies we idolize and |! shalye happy Ev@fcioud has a silver lining Take ® advice, turn the cloud around by you will find its bright side LAURA Q.—Can soy Rhapsodiat > kindly, tell me Thank what # you very ELDRED The Rinsodists were war ninth} among the WhO tug the px er and the of ot for Bong t UAK ithe poe ° Write and medium of " t Each ballator re was termed a rha t Was applied to the Marate ot the “Iliad” and "Odiyey © Q—Would you pleat tei) me whether or not a bee ditarter ne stings? Ww. A.—If the ating is imbedes inte the flesh so deep that will die, because of the vital tains Nears organg | Q@—! am very young, but alkady divorced because of the crueh of my husband. | have to supper myself and baby. | have made\, acquaintance of a young man We loves me and who, | know, will tay | good care of me if | marry ma is itn ry to tell him | am @& vorced KK else how will A.—Certainly account for the fact Do ving up your baby not marry the man unless ng to care for your child must never be built on on of any kin have a longer acq with this | marry him bab: © to t ntance | Q.—My little girl is always wink ing with her eyes and it worrle jme. 1 do not know whether it | | habit or a weakne: me what to do A.-Have her eyes exam ja first some trouble with irritation she by the « class oculist natant Dear Miss Grey: | would like to say a few words to W. C., the bachelor who wrote regard to the letter signed “Ruth.” He says many a man and his wife have lived on $1.25 a day. Well, | show me the one who can do it these days. Why, it costs more than that for a sack of flour, let alone anything else Then talk about saving anything on a mali salary When poverty comes in the win dow, love goes out the door oO. 8, Q.—I have been married years. | am now 23 dren are dead, and | have turned my time to writing stories. Be cause of my early marriage, | have never had the opportunity to meet and know young people; to be real ly one of them Last fall | made a trip to Florida, eight My two chil where, at the home uf a respectable woman, who kept my secret posed as a single girl. During the two months | lived there, | was showered with attentions by young people, such as a young gir! usuaily receives My husband knew why | was making this visit, and he trusted me, knowing my only object was to gain experience for my work but, upon my return, my relatives made my life miserable. My brothers-in-law look upon me as a bad woman, untrue to my husband, because | mingled with young men| and women, posing as unmarried | shall never see these people again, and the experience has only sufficed to make me more satisfied with my husband and marriage. Because youth really never came to me, | had a secret yearning for it; but now | know that it is only froth compared to the real mean ing that marriage has. My hus band still thinks 1 did nothing wrong, and is glad to give me the opportunity to see all sides of life, knowing that | shall be happier for it, but my relatives cannot forget. Do you think it was wrong of me to do this? MRS. E.V.A A.—It is not for The Almighty Maker within our keeping @ soul, and gave 1 conscience with whieh me to judge. placed to guard ire Not respon to me. 8 ible to your or to but anyone else for your to your Creator. If yc initted no ¢ against your that I live people wrong, of however, who elf could erience con clence you did wrong © more consider a according to their minds. 1 that only a sure of her accomplish such an ex and not harm If your demn you that right or I realize thing the broadness will woman as very othe 4 not con r relatives lave not the righ It pays to Classified Ad read The Page. Star's man before deciding to STAR—MONDAY, should be t > DOOOO0OK DOSOSOOOOOOK you You would | C at nn eee anne wo GROTE-RANKIN CO. IS LORD NORTHCLIFFE THE MAN OF LONDON, Eng. Jan. 1.—le there a MAN OF DESTINY, predicted by the great Count Tolstoy, who is to end the war in 1917? And ie the man of LORD NORTHCLIFFE? All Britain is wondering, and many in Britain are beginning to look on the mighty owner of the London Times and scores of other newspapers with awe And Northcliffe? He says nothing, but goes on overturn- ing cabinets and forcing the British government to be ready to FIGHT Here is what Tolstoy said MORE THAN SIX YEARS AGO. that he did not name exactly ears “The great conflagration will start about 1912; it will develop into a destruction and calamity in 1913; but about 1915 the strange figure from the North—a new Napoleon— enters the stage of the bloody drama. He is a man of little military training, a writer or a journalist, but in his grip most of Europe will remain until 19251" Is Lord Northeliffe the man in hose grip most of Europe will re ain until 1925? Is the young “Na poleon of FI who 25 year igo was a $ reporter, PORCE the fight their destiny note a-week Iles to eat and overturn the military am-; bitions of the kaiser? Wrecks Overconfidence Consides these facts Britain went into the dent yared were war What few send t confi and soldiers unpr there to PREDICTED WOULD END WAR? the JAN, 1, 191 PAGE 5% THe less money you can afford to spend on Furniture, the more particular you o spend it where you can get the most value for it. GROTE-RANKIN ©. OTTO F. KEGEL, General Manager. JANUARY FURNITURE SALE BEGINS TUESDAY, JAN. 2 PRICE REDUCTIONS ARE 20% TO 50% With this event we are going to open still another chapter of helpfulness to homefurnishers. It is everybody's sale, with sound economies, and brings Furniture into your home at real saving é t It is a Furniture sale for the most unpretentious little home, just as it is a sale from which a palace might be furnished. The Furniture Sale That Serves Best Is Bound to Be the Greatest That the January Furniture Sale will be the greatest this store ever held is assured, because the stocks are large and well selected. The usual Grote-Rankin guarantee goes with every piece of Furniture offered in the sale, and the opportunities for saving are extraordinary. 50% off Dressers, 20% to 50% off. Dressing Tables, to 60% off. Bedroom Rockers, 20% to 50% off. Ladies’ Writing Desks, 231-2% off. Velour or Tapestry Upholstered Davenports, to 231-3% off, Cheval Mirrors, 50% off. - Matched Bedroom Suites, 20% to 50¢% off. Matched Dining-room Suites, + to 10% off. Floor and Reading Lamps, 20% to 331.3% off. Library Tables, 20% to Upholstered Rockers Red Davenports, 20 Fiber Rockers, 20 Mning Tables, to 50% 20% Dining Chatre, 2 20% Huffets, 20% to 50 China Cabinets, 20 Brass and Metal Beds, Chiffonters, 20 to & to 331/3% \ at 20% to / 50% Off y Pan eo wv ‘PIKE ST. AT FIFTH AVE. GROTE-RANKIN CO. | Northcliffe And Northcliffe then (for years] Ten years later he owned more his paper had been predicting war|separate magazines and newspa+ with G nany) eet about wrecking | pers than any other man in the British overconfidence and expos-|world—tho, to be sure, his papers ing British inefficienc weren't read in St. James palace Attacked Shortcomings tor were his editorials quoted im He se reporters to France to | transatlantic cables. vrite the TRUTH, which the cen-| “Answers” was his first paper, ors concealed, about British lack|%nd it made its Initial hit with @ hells. He printed the truth | bic ture puzzle. hout consulting the censor, risk English newspapers then were suspension or suppression of |dry-as-dust affairs, with great, long, lis papers, and he attacked Kitch-|¥>roken columns of court hap. ener, the English idol, who wasn’'t|Penings, board of trade ftems, sending the troops munitions. cricket scores and parliamentary ‘ cebate British wrath rose high; Northcliffe filled his columns Northcliffe was damned in priv | ith news that people Hike to road vate and public; his papers joyce were stamped on in the street. | Burning the Times and the Mail, mailing the ashes to He started paper after paper- Northcliffe, became a popular | eeklies for women, for bicyclists, Brisigit’ epert. jfor balloonists, for sporting men; jenny dailies, two-penny daille |three-penny dailies—“about 45, | forget exactly how many,” he told jan interviewer in 1908, And then he amazed the world by purchasing a con- trolling interest in the London Times, the “British daily Bl- ble,” the most conservative paper on earth! He changed the Times from a | 6-cent to a 2 t daily, and used it over her self-centered attitude of] ty talk to the upper classes, the | “business as usual.” | peers and nobility, just as he talk- Asquith must go!” Northcliffe) oq to the common people of Eng: cecided. Lloyd George gets the /iing thru his other sheets. rlory—but ASQUITH WENT Now he uses the aristocratia That's the kind of a guy North: |pimes and the popular Daily Mail, cliffe Is. An American interviewer | which prints a million copies a day, summed it uy Hritain doesn’t | ang all his other newspapers, t0 ke the Northcliffe papers, but | tance to all Great Britain at once, Northeliffe crams them dowa her; ing hammer at British Mefficiency 4 throat! until he gets things done 1 f And now, thru Lloyd Gearce a8} This, then, is the man of Whom . jan instrument ertheliffe is vole all Burope is asking the demanés of British democ:|" «7g HR TOLSTOY'S ‘MAN OF . acy—and GETTING ACTION ON WHO WILL END THB ; - it 'THES# DEMANDS. y 7 c Look at this remarkable journal: | } tat DESTINY TOLSTOY Goes After Aristocrats Northcliffe kept on printing the truth. “Circulation’s going up,” he taid. “I suppose they're buy- ing them to burn!” Kitchener was shelved, and Lloyd George became minister of | munitions. The troops then got their shells. Deposes Asquith But still Britain wasn't entirely 6 at Bottom When he came to London at 20, | just out of Oxford, he got a job as [reporter, at $15 a week, He was} said Britain lain Alfred Harmsworth then, and job,” said they called bin “Alf” This was Lord Northeliffe Just Printers 1013 THIRD MAIN Franve, lacked millions were and Bagdad short job three-year shells, Lives sacrificed to take and ;nople in wildy I's a Constantia It's a schemes j vm A Raat.

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