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Starting Sunday DOUBLE nm BILL HART In “The Devil's Double” —and— MAY MURRAY Tn “The Bride's Awakening” LM) iuares 20° /MPERIAL DOROTHY DALTON In “Tryout Fear” —and— ROY STEWART “The Fly God” m 10e—Children Se nday—Two Days DOUBLE 8 BILL HART Im “Over the Great Divide” —and BELLE BENNETT in “The Last Rebel” LATEST WAR Admission 10c—Children 5c iy y—-Two Days DOUBLE BILL DOUG FAIRBANKS Im “The Lamb” MABEL NORMAND onl Bestanacn te wrinuous 10%" f= MUNICIPAL AND CORPORATION BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD SOHN E. PRICE & C0. Ninth Floor Hoge Building 416 PIKE THE LITTLE THEATRE JOS. DANZ, Mgr. FOUR DAYS STARTING SUNDAY NORMA TALMADG ———= —— DOUBLE BILL THE MOTH A Gripping, Soul-Stirring Drama —and— FATTY ARBUCKLE FATTY’S SWEETHEART A Pow-wow in the Wigwam WAR NEWS WEEKLY Se puns Plus War Tax ADMIS- BION 10c M. Continuous From 10 A TALMADGE: FAIR RENTALS COMMISSION ae THE SEATTLE STAR-—SATURDAY, SEPT. 28, 1918 At the Local Playhouses WINS HIS CASE — IS HELD BANK EXAMINER SUFFRAGE BILL BACK | <r | Superior Judge Boyd Tallman has| WASHINGTON, Set. 28.—Another BEG. SUNDAY NIGHT FOR 4 DAYS | P : day of filibustering was in. pros . MAT. WEDNESDAY | allowed State Bank — Examiner : ; pect when t enate today tool F | Moore $3,800 judgment in his sult) iy the suffrage amendment which SELWYN & CO. PRESENT The government's fair rentals} ; i * ; " * 4 is now open for busi against the American Savings Bank jt has been d bating dell (IN ASSOCIATION WITH KROL COOPER MEGRUE) Securitios building & Trust Co, Moore brought suit | da Suffragists filibustered toda completed at a meeting Friday the German-American Mercantile | °C, the! ie eee vening, when the following mem pen the I rty Loan campaign. ank, which went to the wall two anater Martin, democratic bers pledged support to the cause PAP ogee 9393 crushing the rent profite ye ago. eader, has n suffragia Howard Cosgrove, chairman; E The German-American bank, not|'!timatum, There will be no ia ] Goodwin; 8 1, Boddy, Metal . being a member of the clearing| before Monday, Martin has salt, By JESSIE LYNCH WILLIAMS council: A. HL Albertson; Mra, Ida) house association, cleared thru. the — ral rca tha’ ane have NEW YORK’S SMARTEST AND BIGGEST COMEDY HIT OF YEAR M Waitresses’ union. | American vings bank, and de-|* . iia saneas ani ‘ ne tar and production th ed unprecedented The commission has issued a posited money and uritie with record-breakt patronage at t A he oe, N. ¥. statement containing the following the latter bank to meet checks|*ffrage, one lene than necessary Pulitzer prize aa best play produced in New York during 1917. points cleared for them. War industries and shipbuilding | The day betore the German. Eagles Add $5,000 NAT Cc. G' ODWIN st proceed at full speed American bank went bankrupt the . . thout war workers and ship American Savings bank gave nc Bond Subscription 7 SE ERNEST LAWPOR orkers the army and navy could tice to the clearing house that) The order of Eagles voted @* it ers ANNE MORRISON not be supported they would no longer clear for the| Friday evening meeting t ent ¥ » ta € e men must have places to GO win-American bank but the an additional $5,000 of the organiz . CRS: Nights, 50c-$2.00, Wed. Mat., 1$1.50, Prius and the United States ov rule of the clearing house wa funds in the Fourth Liberty ernment proposes to see that they that all checks held by other bank This makes a total of $40,100 4 DAYS 2 Shows | Mat. 2.15 are housed. on the German-American, at time Liberty) bonds held by — the ’ COM. THURS. Daily | Night 8:15 | » man shall retard the efforts of notice, had to be met by the Eagle this country by charging war American Savings banh Judge work extortionate rentals for) Taliman upheld this ruling The Milwaukee, or Western track MATIN DAILY R LA ONLY living quarters | The $3,800 judgment was for a| Will be abandoned on Railroad ave HEAR , ADDRESS ON “WAR BABIES" AT The commission has no desire to depository certificate held by the| between Jackson and Washington J LY LADIES’ MATIN prevent pny one making a reason defendant, : streets, to make way f ay able profit Scincsatommginiinitbtiniiiicenicicnaliicns | COVRCO Line THE MUCH-DISCUSSED PLAY—NOT A MOTION PICTURE War and shipyard workers who} and the delicacy of the subject touch ; Ouse 5 rd do . tn s biiceant . may obtain a questionnaire from test from various quarters, mainly | company, part of t , Leo cies the commission and their case will by folks who remembered the unsav- Wile, is to be in Liberty jbe dealt with on its merits ory publicity attendant on the fade ee es ae | - ——— ganda as taught by various lecturer - mere ‘ s who have come amongst u: It is) The Borrowed T elu |30,000 Shipbuilders Waren tedee Sietice Taiko connec | daskt WrMADeeeer Bi-A pfs ia Mh Again Desert Yards | pre scnted ty Mdce iattdred Jonn:| ave. Nei Discussion at newt meet Seattle shipbuilders, 30,000 eon. ” in Who Started This War strong, quit work at the expira- 212s sae —aaitien —_ ~ tion of four hours morning shift] | work Saturdey, as instructed by | the Metal Tra council, which de- | clares the responsibility rests on | the Macy board, which has failed —Anne Morrison, with Nat Goodwin, In “Why Marry?” at the Met. Ito report on the new wage scale. Tumarried Mother,” coming to the Met soon. 3 W FOUR ACTS J According to Metal Trades councit| —W y," at the Pantages. 4—Miss Wilson, at the Pal- officials, a report should have been| ace Hip, 5—Erman Seavey, with the Wilkes players, 6 — Bajouwne q announced September 2 Whipple, at the Moore. 7—Lew White, at the Oak. | attle shipbuilders want over- time for Saturday afternoons and| MOORE | tler. | THEAT Ja permanent 44-hour week. ‘The| Eight acts; instead of the usual| Dressler and Wilson are novelty jfirst walkout resultant of the fait ure of the shipyards to concur, oc- 4 last Saturday. curr: 'Need 7,000,000 Feet West Coast Lumber Lumber from the West ¢oast territory will in all probability play a big part in the building up of sections of Europe destroyed by war, according to Dwight H. | Davis, representative of the Wash- ington Coast Lumbermen's associa- |tion at its monthly meeting at the New Washington Friday night A |survey of devastated Europe re- | sulted in an estimate that 7,000,000 feet of lumber would be needed. Trial of P. H. Gourley, head of Holy Rollers, charged with using se dit%us language, begins Tuesday at Bellingham. BUILDING UP OUR WOMANHOOD | Given Up to Die by Her Friends, a Young Lady Recovers Her Health and _ Increases Weight—45 Pounds. A Powerful Nation Needs Strong Healthy Women. nation is no than its Hence, it is of every whether middie ge. advanced life, to preserve her |health. If you are sick and suffering don't wait until to morrow but seek re- A stronger women. the duty | woman young, or in lief at once—today. Tomorrow your ill ness may take a chronic turn. There is a remedy for almost every ill Thousands have found Peruna to be that remedy as did Miss Clara Lohr of 21 N. Gold St. Grand Rapids, Michigan. She writes a friend: “I don't need Peruna any too may be strong and well and vigorous, Peruna may be had in either liquid or tablet form. Ask your r. If you value health, do not ot a substitute, Dr. Hartman's World Famous Peruna ‘Tonic is what you want. The Peruna Com- ny, Dept. 79, publish Dr. The book Your d Alma: AMUSEMENTS Columbus, Ohio. Hartman's Health Book. is free. Write for it jer will give you a Peruna also AST TIME METROPOLITAN #2, ALEXANDER THE MAN WHO KNOWS Prices: Nizhts, 25¢-600-750; Gen. Mat. Today, 50c, | rwice MOORE a0» Mme, Doree's Cetebrities; Imhoff, Conn & Coreene; Brendel & Bert: |] Yvette & Saronoff; Nate Leiprix; | Losova & Gilmore; Emerson & Bald- win, Twice datly——10 $1. Mats,, 100 to 60¢ Main Orpheum Vaudeville THEATRE PLAYERS WILKE Elliott 2525, PALACE HIP icicawa exeaxcan” 5 OW ‘ine ip Acts Featare Photos Ethel C1 “A Soul Without Windows Weekday Mats, 10c; Eves, & Sun, 200 Twenty-Eight Million!! | more. I am all well after taking six bottles. I weighed ninety pounds before I started and was poor and weakly. I had such a cough and spitting all the time that I n r expected to recover. My friends gave me up. I could eat nothing Now I can eat and weigh 135 pounds, I most thankfully recom. mend Peruna to my friends.” Miss Lohr’s letter is an inspira-| tion, a message of hope to suffer ing women. It tells you that you | eccentric dancers, Simpson and Moore, Nonsense,” have a song, dancing offering seven, make up the new program of | Orpheum cireuit vaudeville that be- |gins a week's engagement at the with “Nifty talk and | Moore Sunday J. Morte on | who humorously announces each act, The Lare with “Fun in a | will be the elghth feature Tank Town,” provide hobo fun and | Miss Albertina Rasch, premiere | Comedy acrobatic nd contortion a Pe, Janseuse etoile, assisted by a corps of dancing girls, is the headline num ber Whipple and Huston, in “ another featured number. | capital sketch The Lightner Girls and Alexander, | Jolly trio, have a song and dance | number, | Rev. Frank W. Gorman, the sing ing parson, will offer his repertoire of high-class songs. | Pistel and Cushing, in “The Strand jed Minstrels,” will offer a breath of old-time minstrelsy James Watts, assisted by Rex Storey, will present “A Treat in Trav. sty The Australian Creightons have an eccentrir acrobatic number. The Travel Weekly will show inti mate scenes of Washington, D. C., our nation’s capital | " : War Review | METROPOLITAN Wi ¥, | Hobart's farce in thi acts, “What's Your Husband Doing will be the offering of the Wilkes players for the week starting with a matinee Sunday. The plot of the farce revolves around the situations and confusions that arise from the activities of two divoree lawyers, their wives and their clients. Each of the characters ix innocent of the suspicion of infidel ity that has arisen in all the camps but the complications put each man in a compromising situation from the point of view of his wife. Grace Huff and Ivan Miller will be seen in the leading roles Besides the regular matinee Sun- day, there will be matinees on Wed. nesday and Saturday . THIS WAR Has Got to Be WON! Nothing else matters so much. The price of your Liberty Bond will help to win it! You are not forced to give—nor are you invited to contribute— You are asked to loan—at a higher rate of interest than what your own bank probably pays To preserve Your Liberty and Your Justice—-BUY a BOND! BOSTON | The Official Allied _ ” has scenes taken among the armies! “The Unmarried Mother,” which gg thereat {will open an engagement at the for four days, Metropolitan theatre t The orchestra has the usual bill of | starting Thursday, October 3, with a | music | oe! matinee for ladies only and no one | METROPOLITAN | Under 16 admitted, is a drama in four mi x J acts, which-dares to treat in an ine SAMPLE SHOE SHOP } Why Marry?” by Jesse Lynch | teresting and frank way the sub s d Ploor Eitel Bldg. Second 4D: St | Williams, will be presented by Sel-| ject of children born out of wedlock ahah ere g» Second 6 Pike St wyn & Co. in association with When origi sugges, catty | ropolitan, for four days, starting Sun- day, September 29. | The play comes here following one of the most successful engagements enjoyed by any play produced on Broadway in re it was presented, cords for itself dur Why which are likely for years to c The original New York company, Put This Flag in Your Window— HONOR EMBLEM with Nat C. Goodwin, Edmund reese, Ernest Lawford, Leonard | Mudie, Otis Robb, Louise Randolph, /Anne Morrison and others will be slwyn & Co, are sending “Why Marry?” on a two-year tour of the United States, and the original | comp: is to remain intact for th record-breaking trip. | | PANTAGES | | seen here. Bouquet,” a happy mirth, melody and that includes Revue }combination of rast dancing, with a Joe and Evelyn Alvia, May Jeniese |and the contra tenor, Lloyd rett, will be the headline attraction of the new bill at Pantages, opening Mon day afternoon. | | For the added feature of the week Manager Pantages will introduce Thomas Potter Dunn, in a series of | vocal dialect impersonations. Dunn lis one of the best-known funmakers lin vaudeville, and is said to he | great laughing act this year. | Other acts: William Flemen and | company, in Champion"; |Holmes and Le ¥ | Whittier's “Barefo: | whistler, and the |foot jugglers. Ruth Roland, in the new episode of | -rfands t athe serial, will be or Boy,” a clever | Worden Brothers, OF THE shown on the screen. ak iar OAK | Monte Carter's musical comedy npany will disport itsIf in a de Make It 100% Strong Employes of every business house and commercial institution in Seattle are privileged to form a Bond Club and subscribe jointly to the Fourth Liberty Loan. ‘ | partment store for the week begin. ning tomorrow afternoon at the Oak The new musical play is entitled “The Floorwalker.” Lew White is d Oscar the boss of the Emporium jerard, Blanche Gilznore sie Hill, Del Estes, George White and Lou | Davis will make things hot for him, |The new show has a plot tha | a lot of leeway for fun and musical | numbers, of which there are a lot Miss Blanche Hall has her usual | and the Oak Trio have three songs dancing chicks will be much Make every Bond club 100% strong; let everybody in the institution join hands in the response to Uncle Sam’s call for money. solo, The price of Victory is Blood and Dollars; our part here at home is the Dollars!) To subscribe quickly is to make your dollars do full duty. An added attraction will be “With Pershing in France," a motion pic ture of our boys “over there, PALACE HIP | k Levy and his Four Symphony Sisters, known as yaudeville's classi- | est musicians, will be the feature of | the new show which opens Sunday at | the Palace Hip. These five musi: | cians offer selections on flute, cello, violin, piccol nd plano, while one | of the number is an ac complished | singer The All-Star Four are novelty sing ers and dancers, Besides their songs | and harmony numbers, they inclu comedy, clever dancing and whis tling. Adolpho, “The Accordionist Who's Different,” is a musician and whis- Literature covering all the Bond Club details is in your office. Subscribe to the limit for America and Freedom! Payroll Bond Club Committee F. K. Struve, Chairman R. G. Taylor, Manager Liberty Loan Headquarters, Second Avenue at Cherry This space has been paid for by the patriotic citizens who subscribed funds for the Fourth Liberty Loan publicity OUR BOND CLUB 4" LIBERTY LOAN ae aa ya erate WILKES Sane PLAYERS | ELLIOT? 2525 STH AT PINE STARRING THE BIG LAUGHING GRACE HUFF HIT OF THE SEASON AND PRICES IVAN MILLER HTS — 25-50e. SUN. SUPPORTED THE ) & SAT. MATINEES, BY WILKES PLAYE! PLUS WAR TAX, NEW PANTAGES Matinees, 2:30—Nights, 7 and 9 e GY pe = BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOON Merry Melange of Melodies and Dance “THE REVUE BOUQUET” With Joe and Evelyn Alvia, May Jeniese, the contra- tenor; Lloyd Garrett, and Eight Joy Belles ‘from Old Broadway THOMAS POTTER DUNN Vocal Dialect Impersonations Other Big Features General Admission 25c STOCKS BONDS LIBERTY BONDS ANY AMOUNT—ANY ISSUE BOUGHT—SOLD—QUOTED MACFARLANE & HALL Elliott 1324 605 Lowman Bldg. GRAIN COTTON LIBERTY LOAN SONG — Everybody must know it. The following is the chorus. If you can’t remember it, cut out this ad, save it and have it handy. CHORUS Kha-ki lads and blue-clad Jack-ies We are with you in this fight With our all, we send this message, “Carry on,” for your cause is the right; Over here we will keep the Home Fires. Burning bright for our sons so true, Kha-ki lads and blue-clad Jack-ies, Here at home we're backing you. SECON AVENUE AND