The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 6, 1917, Page 7

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- : Yhen you've seen “Bab’s Burglar” you've seen a most entertaining com- edy—Mary Roberts Rinehart wrote m™ it—and you've seen four feet, two ) inches of bewitching cuteness, Mar- guerite Clark! Fifth at Pike—Continocas 11 to 11, Admission 20e—Children 10c. NOW PLAYING FLORENCE If you want a drema secial conditions, w rushing action, and -DLONIA L4 Th BEL PK es PINE | TODAY One of the Famous 0. HENRY STORIES Blind Man’s Holiday (First fun) Admission Chiidren 10c 5c Includes War Tax alight Powerful Dramatic Thunderbolt IN 7 ACTS Story Relates to Two Mothers— Two Daughters— A Man— And the World’s COME EARLY MATINEES STAR—TUESDAY, NOV, 6, 1917. PAGE 7 Virginia | Pearson Gives Few ‘Hints to Fair Sex. on How to Wear Clothes to Best Advantage beautiful There tion of that Mut the ters of Hive should ‘watoh step” in the fashion world This in the ee of some whole fgome advice which Virginia Pearson the statuesque William Fox star, in mur mut the im of yesterday today and tomorn Mise Pearson ts “A smart, beco ve hat and at tractive gloves make up for the Most inexpensive frock in the world Good grooming and the faculty of weartng clothes py portly are the ow sential qualities for in woman's appearance “Many women who income on jewelry | uries, blindly follow into perilous paths, ing down good, o¢ to be guided by. Compromise Fashion; meet her half way. They Show Double Chin Don't follow with short hoop-skirt drease wing fat an kles; don't we aby bonnete, which set off the 1 advantage >» beara a VERY woman wants to REA ic dangh their aking pend « large and other lux Dame Fashion oad of tay mmon-sense rules with chin to such sple I know a woman w markable re semblance to a motive puffing into a railroad station. She has a fat face and a double chin, but she saw beautiful, slender Mrs. Smith wearing a It baby hat, which set off her ant face and added charm to her prettiness plu friend always did like r she set out to n e the name of the mil love of a later my liner who created such a bonnet few days plump. ming “4 friend may be seen parading P ook alley, to the consternation of her real friends, unting her charms in a hat which requires youth and beauty to make it plausible. | “Instead of emulating the pea cock, she would emyilate the ostrich | if whe could only see herself. So I may, not listen to the Voice of the temptress, Dame Fash | ten, for she will lead you astray if | you do. Be as well groomed as you can afford, but be circumspect.” Mins Pearson herself has won an enviable reputation for the splendid good taste of her fowns and frocks, and is universally consider ed one of the best dressed women on the screen. Her next picture will be “When False Tongues Speak.” FIVE YEARS AGO Five years aga Bronche Billy Pa derson’s name was a housshold word, Down in Niles, Cal, he was turning out “Westerners” at the rate of one per fortnight. which earned for him the title, “the world’s most popular picture s#tar.”| Now he's in New York, fumntrg | around with stage productions, and no longer identified with Basanay. BABS BURGLAR “Bab’s Burgiar,” the second pic- | ture in the sertes of “SubDeb” stories, which appeared tn the Sat-| ordag Evening Post, and which | Mary Roberts Rinehart made s0| popular all over the country, ts at} the Coliseum tonight and Wednes-| day. Dainty Marguerite Clark han/ bean a particularty happy choice for | the capricious and wholly delight | ful “Rab,” and every one who hasn't already fallen head over heels tn leve with her will tumble most wil) ingty when they see her in this charming story. SOME HISTORICAL FACTS | Geraldine Fafrar’s new picture, “The Woman God Forgot,” at the| | Liberty, ts both gorgeous in stag-| |ing and tense in situations In ad-| dition to being a gigantic spectacie, | produced upon a scale of magnifl cence, “The Woman God Forgot” contains many elements of extraor- | d@inary interest and presents a num historical and scientific NEILAN AT LAKE Marshall Nellan. formerty leading man and later director for Mary| | Pickford, is in training at American Lake STORY FOR WOMEN Married wornen who are not satis. | fed with their home life, but want for better clothes and things than their husbands can afford to give |them should see and learn a great leason from “Today,” at the Clem mer. Florence Keed is the star | SHE MOVES WEST Miss Carol Holloway, who ts the wife in “Dead Shot Haker,” at the Strand, has resumed her musical ed neation, deapite the demands on her time and strength as heroine '= Vi tagraph’s pictures of oe4venture Having recently signed a contract with Vitagraph for two years, she | has sent to New York for her house [hold effects and is looking for a bungalow sulted to her needs and near the Hollywood studio. “ENLIGHTEN THY DAL ighten Thy Daughter, Abramson's powerful screen drama, is the attraction at the Rex. A RIVAL FOR THEDA Sonia Markova, a young Russian | actress, is the latest star announced |by William Fox. This young Rus siancypsy is 21 years old and a na | ve of Libau. She is a revolution lat, who came to the United States during the first turmoil at Petro-} «rad, Fox says that Madame Mar. | kova has beauty of unusual type, | wonderful grace in her movements and large jet eyes. Sounds fike a rival for Theda Bara in the Fox household. WALLACE REID STAR Wallace Reid in held as “The flostage” in the play by that name playing Wednend Ivo Kemper, gon of the general of the Lowlander armies, Reid ia captured and held as hostage for the good behavior of the Lowlanders in their retreat from the Highlanders’ territory MOLLIE 18 CLOAK MODEL “Moat models are really models of | everything that nice young girls should be,” says Mollie King, the| charming little star who is at the Class A in “The On-the-Sq Girk” In “The Onthe-Square Girl,” Miss King plays the part of a Hifth ave nue ¢loak $nodel in one of the most} fashionable shops in New York. PROGRAMS TODAY ERTY—eraidine Worrar he Woman God Forgot.” KUM. rguerite Clark ) thy im Duncan in “Dead in “Enlighten | jo TM MII iorence Heed in “To- | | j minsic Wallace Held in =| ‘i 4. Hert tn “ue. | CLASS A~ Mollie King in “The On- Pon ead Girl. |ance to F |TREAT Te attractivenens | | ‘ Florence Reed in “Today,” Clemmer li. and William 8. Mart in Silent Haskins,” Colontal PARENT-TEACHERS’ MEETIN ar meeting of the B. F tTeachers’ Will be held in the community room of the school, Thursday, Nov pm W. W physical training tn the wheal ansociation | Davis wt STONE- WEBSTER eagea CITY FOR London's Wha these daya BASHFUL lj BEAUX! [AWKWARD MAIDS! LEARN TO DANCE The epg Steps HIPPODROME FIFTH and UNIVERSITY GRACEFUL HAPPY. This Finest Dancing Floor in America is presided by PROF. and MES WALD, PREMIER IN- STRUCTORS. Thirty as aw stants. MATINEE GLASS TUESDAY 2:30 Membership limited to insure Individual instruc. tion. Call Eliott 3187 Instruction All Day Long DR, J. R. BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.50 GLASSES On Earth We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really grind lenses from start to finish, find we are the only one in SEATTLE, ON FIRST AVENUE Examination free, by graduate op- tometriat. Glasses not presert unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 111¢ WIRST AV’ ENUP ry PRocTor ess FIRST AVE. a PIKE 8ST Phone Main 4965 $|4F 1 HURT YOU, DON’T PAY ME.” is my message of deliver. ‘ou from the fear that ac- companies Dental operations 1 EXTRACT, FILL, CROWN and eth absolutely without pain in all cases but scessed conditions. Lowest prices in your city for high-class guaranteed shea tin DENTISTRY This s an extremely gone vit | of fiction in the outlying disthicts | acute’ ab-| ose Caldwell, corporation coun probably will be sent back to| wuiomton D.C, to protect the | city’s application for power rights) in Diablo canyon, on the apper Ska eit river. Caldwell received a telegram from | the secretary of agriculture, stating that the Stone Weteter Interests will make an effort to prevent the ality | from acquiring the and have | been granted a heartng at an early date. | “Lwant Caldwell there,” said Mixy | or Gill, “to see that nothing i slip ped over.” The council was asked by Mayor OM Monday to make any necessary | appropriations, and « perate with + the mayor in any steps to acquire the site. WATSON REPLACES GOVERNOR ON RUN Announcement was made Monday by the Pacific Msamahip Co. that the steamer Admiral Watson will replace the steamer the run to San Francisco and San Pedro, She ts scheduled to sail from Seattle Friday morning The governor will go into dry @ock at San Francisco, Reonnse the Admiral Watson cannot take all the freight, the steamer Nor woot has been chartered for a trip Governor on Red Cross Service two or more hours- ings for our army and navy. Branch Workroom on Third Floor, tent supervision. Instruction and materials 9 to 5 daily, except Saturday. Basement. Salesroom Cloth Hats for Women $1.95 to $4.25 | dgereede for all kinds of weather, yet smart withal, are these Cloth Hats, so trig and tailored in appearance. There are Trench stytes, as pictured, with buckled band folding the crown, in khaki-color and mixtures, $4.25. Others with plain stitched crown and brim and fancy ribbon band, $2.95, and Plaid Cloth Hats, at $1.95. —Basement Salesroem. 52-inch Chiffon Broadcloth $2.00 Yard Gain novqgco catia firm-bodied Chiffon Broad- cloth with short-napped, lustrous finish. Appro- priate for tailored suits and the ample, soft-draping coats of the current vogue. Featured in Purple, Mulberry, Russian-green, Myrtle, Brown, Seal, Dark-wine, Marine-blue, Navy- blue, Midnight-blue and Black. —fifty-two inches wide, $2.00 yard. Basement Salesroom Silk-flounced Petticoats $1.95 ITH a deep taffeta flounce on a serviceable percaline to Ban Francisco with same af the cargo. ‘BUSINESS 6 CLUB TO PROTEST GAS RATES Resotutions setting down proteats of the Mutual Fustness club against the poblic service commission’: or |der granting a gas rate increase, | were being drafted Tuestay by A M. Fritz and Harry Bull. The or | ganization met Monday night in the | Henry building, and will pass on the gas resolution next Monday night. A protest against the incon venience caused the public by the telephone strike will also be con aidered. JAPANESE BUSINESS AND NAVY MEN HERE A party of leading business mer of Japan and a number of Jay naval officers arrived in Seattle Monday on the N. Y. K. steamship Fushimi Maru from the Orient Included in the list are a number of Japanese mining men, who will inspect «melting and mining meth oda in Alaska and Montana Other of the visitors are munition maz. facturern. This is the first trip of the Fushimi Maru to this country. It was formerly on the Buropean run. MAN HURT AS AUTO HITS PHONE POLE G. FB. Barr, 4534 Bagley ave. is in Seattle General hospital with a« fractured skull sustained when a machine he was driving & telephone pole on the Bothell road, Lake City Tuesday ing. Ball has car and was Pacific Telephone to transport strikebreakers from work by automobi Miss Ada Skirles, 5522 27th ave N. W., was riding with Barr at the time of the accident, but escaped injury. crashed into to and |MAY SOON LAY KEELS FOR TEN SHIPS HERE The keels of five or ten big steel steamships will be laid in the | near future by the Erickson Ship building Co. on the Duwamish waterway. The new company se-| cured a contract several months ago to build ten big steel freight ern. It is understood that the ves sels are being constructed for the | government thru the United States | shipping board JAPANESE DIES Japanese, was found m, Tuesday, in hi y 124 Righth ave It 1 that he was stricken wit! failure. He was found in a position, with a pen and had started to |to a friend, The body was to the morgue To Referee Disputes between pr | the future will receive the atten | tion of the Chamber of Commerce | deve pment bureau, itting hand letter in his write a removed county Debates ducer or sateen top, these Petticoats combine good looks with practi- cability. Edged with double ruffle and finished with elastic in waistline. Choice of emerald, penhagen, dark-green, black, navy and changeable effect lengths 36 and 88 inches. P: $1.95. SILK PETTICOATS, $2.95— Fifteen colorings to choose from in these new Taffeta Petticoats—including Emerald, Rose, Copenhagen, Navy, Black, Chartrease, Dark-green and change- able effects. Lengths 36 and 38 inches. Price 2.95. —Basement Salesroom. rose, Co- Boys’ Gauntlets 75c and 85c Pair OYS’ Leather Gaunt- lets with strong cuff, 75¢; also Gauntlets of buckskin and unfinished leather, with star on cuff, S5¢ pair. —Basement Fleecy Cotton Blankets OVEN from excel- W lent quality cotton, these Blankets have ample warmth with soft finish. In tan, gray and plaid patterns, priced from .00 to $5.75 pair. —Basanent Salesroom. Salesroom. | INELY-WOVEN Cot- ton Stockings in black and white, sizes 81g to 10, the pair, 25¢. —Basement Setesroom. Women’s Hosiery, 25c Pair @)dener is tending hér.’ || “And that was absolutety all ne| | thought about the episode and the! woman he never mentioned her and I am quite sure he of her again Mrs. Waverly, if men marry the right kind of wives, they will be the right kim of men I when you write any one would woman readers that a mi does not like a self-reliant woman. If a wife asks much of her husband she gets mrach. If she asks little she gets little. I believe that tod: as much if he did the day I married him. should I not believe that? He ed all the friends he that woman knew me to go out of his I know sho life. He is always at my beck and making all, He give me everything I want that he possibly can. I am ¢ that no woman has ever found ¢ | THE SUCCESSFUL WIFE ° “Ah-hat” was Dick's exclamation when the beauty rose was mention ed in the wife's letter. “I wonder nt what friend wife had to say In an ewer to her husband's term of ad miration.” “She has told us her comment, so you need not wonder,” I said p letter continued “Pull blown,’ was my and the conversation for : ged after that. In a few Mra, Waverly, we left the tabi went out to the corridor, where my utter ast ment woman waiting for t wer > You see, wish, else's story, you i your remark, my husband than Why has made be was th loves me not more introduced your life saw “Of course we and you never in all such a dead made for my husband. thought that she was great impression on him, for there was that adorable smile on my hus-| sure band’s lips which he deals out to| a moment in his thoughts, let alone every one—in fact, it seems that ting place in his heart he just can’t keep it to himself. This, my dear Mrs. Wav We stayed on story of a suc ful wife but, when w that Ause some of the things you said u was for m band ies made me think and so marked wa impression omewhat skeptical about that my friend said, ‘Jim-| marriage as a business for A conquest T have written you my ign myself just a HAPPY rl be a r set as ‘ore he a few moments, | the and, woman's | bec in the Paula sto you are e gave wor my, you have made story a our beauty rose WIt ejaculated not my rose,’ he believe you introduced her so you see some other gar-! Dick. ‘She is answer ed, ‘I as Mrs. Well, under official, free. ~ FREDERICKENELSON | Your Help Is Needed as much time daily, will be well spent if used in making surgical dress- as you can spare compe- Hours from Third Voor. Voile and Marquisette Curtains at $1.50 Pair HE displays at this price have been many new arrivals, and contain Plain hemstitched styles, hemstitched Curtains with cotton and linen lace edges, Curtains with wide or narrow insertions and edges. The voiles and mar quisettes are of firm, broadened by good - laundering quality, in white, cream and ecru color. Priced at $1.50 Pall. —Rasement Salesroom, Two-piece Breakfast Set $1.25 A well ~ made and convenient morning dress, as sketched, of good quality biue and white striped per- cal, with belt and cuffs of piain lightbine or dark- blue material and High-cut Boots $6.50 Pair As pictured, Lace Boots in 9-inch model, with brown. calf- skin vamp and _ brown cravenette cloth top; leather Louis heels fitted with aluminum plates. Sizes 3 to 7; widths A to D. Price $6.50 pair. Brown Calfskin | Boots, $6.95 Pair Mace over new low-heel Inst, with Goodyear welt brown Tex tan soles and rubber heets Sizes 3 to 7; wkiths A to D, Price $6.95 pair Basement Salesroom, Margie?" “Yes, dear, I have many women like their eyes bands do, own sex.” her, who and blame “It looks to me,” woman f the his side really chap of the story. poor there . I pity her “1 wonder” up, Dick selfish, self-contained women much the best of it. She is so tistical that blance of love for the surely truth, I cape it will wake she does she telling what wife she was nster he if she she real thing old chap,” said has got his, and, Dick up some a true and turned out to be.” Well, he is a monster, r of her making,” I said. (To be continued) In many I am almost sure that wom? day, and if will go bawling about, faithful to that man, and what seen many, shot to everything their hus- it all on their said Dick, “as were the who wrote she is, surely is something coming to when she wakes up.” he will ever Ww Sometimes I think these have 0- accepts the sem- that man gives her “He to tell the don't think many of us es- Dick—a Seattle restaurants the patron who orders coffee receives two lumpy fee is serv the most of sugar when the cof- This is killing one of popular indoor sports— “Do you think she is real,l sugar bowling. 4

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