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PAGE 10 THEATRE BALTIMORE, Dee, 10 -The beat hunting grounds” for after-the war DROP EVERYTHING! Come Down to the Strand and See Arbuckle in the Biggest Laugh He Ever Hed! trade w be Central and South America ker Champ Clark told whieh opened its ce Nay You, we come out of the war with ® creat “ner { marine, tat 1 prenw home the qu img to do with it?" Cla tion, “What are we go anid Tt in rumored that Germany wl m the raw rmateri¢ls er that ix true ar ne took were r tals only party manufactured ( the rumor referred to turns out to be the truth, we will hawe jews foreien trade than when the war started, and somehow, somewhere. we must find new and enlarged fields for our products My anewer is that our best bunt ds for trade will be Centre bh America—right at our own di If we had acted the pa The question of freedom of the seas also concerns this country vital and declared jopend on President Wi) © freedom of the seas at the congress of Versailles.” WOMAN MAYOR THREE TIMES; HER RECORD (Special to The Star by N. B.A) LONDON Mra. Hy Part ngton has been elected mayor of Glossop for the third time. She was first elected to succeed her husband. Famous Old Recipe for Cough Syrup have o-thirds spent for by using this pe for making it m Thousands of rund that they ea Come TODAY—and as Early in the Day as You Possibly Can ot Pinex from any a pint bottle METROPOLITAN Wednesday Evening, Dec. 18 NOW PLAYING— UNTIL WED. NIGHT FARNUM Tuesday Last Times Billie Burke Starting Wednesday Another Classy One! Miserables Vietor Hugo's Great Masterpiece SCREEN TELEGRAM —AND— MUTT and JEFF GEORGE T. HOOD Presents HEO IN CONCERT Lower floor (last 11 rows) $1.50 Balcony (first 3 rows). $1.50 LIBERTY BONDS nov Haleony (last 9 rows) 1.00 bone Plus War Tax 207 wat Tuttdiag SEATS ON SALE TODAY Firat and Yesler Way BAR | rs “Once you try, again and again you'll bay” The wife got the vampire to come and stay wi‘h them, and then matched her at cooking and house- work right in front of the misled husband. Talk about a vic- tory! The wedding ring certainly came out on top. INDEPENDENCE The man who practices systematic saving lives the Declaration of In- dependence in a_ praiseworthy, personal fashion. Not only does he add to his own poise and well being but he strengthens the na- tion by placing his surplus earn- ings where it can be used ju- diciously and profitably in the work of the world. ETHELCLAYTON “Women's Weapons” Until Friday Only Savings Department Open Krom 6 to & Every Suturday Evening THE SEATTLE NATIONAL BANK Resources $30,000,000 Always— —The— Symphony Orchestra Malotte On the Wurlitzer ; HUNT TRADE IN SOUTH AMERICA, , IS CLARK'S PLAN cangrems, | halfcentury f Latin America, | we would have Ube lion's share y a flying leap and away with the fight won EATTLI AY, DECEMBER 10, 1918 TUL THE tne : ~~} IF FATTY ARBUCKLE GOT | THIN HE'D LOSE HIS JOB || K~~~ Ethel Clayton, in a scene from “Women's Weapons,” the new which opens at the Coliseum Wednesday Ke ONLY of - remem cam M FATTER Arbuckle doing a Doug TUPADAY'S PROGRAMS Dowgias = Vairbanks in Natimove in “Hye for ty Arbuckle in “The Sheriff KEN —Theda Hare in 6 Clemen « conn Cane Sheritt Wiliam Farnam in n the wor Mise —Hryent = Washbern yoey Trait” upols wi certainly a pw For the healthers who adv ump fairies how to reduc seen * BERGERON SAYS HE WAS ON THE POINT | strenuous stunts, Patty certainly a heartache CAMELS? A WHOLE CARAVAN OF [EM of ¢ ert travel is not the only sort displayed. Vieets of fleet Arabian desert horses are also work ed into the picture A carava amels | "Kye for A Wan” Sire a "ite Sem” OF GIVING UP JOB This mode of | | Was in Miserable Health and ee Kept Getting Worse—Tan- | an Ss g ; q oe eae lac Ends Troubles. tr He makes j 4 ae * not stop to, up al tI gained ten| look before he | but jumps on waid Mod. ten or fifteen cowboys at once. They | eat Derg outh L. etreet, | are taken by surprise. Before they Tacoma. wh ed at the! scramble to their feet. Denton is off Foundation Shipyard | “About @ year ago,” he contin I began to suffer from rhew * BREAD THIEVING which soon ex | WAS SOME CRIME Stealing a loaf very «6 the days Miserables.” whi at the Colonial Mi Jean Valjean, at * loaf of bread for his starving er and her chit dren. He in tried and sentenced to 1 finally | and I just} awful, 1] I had to wition all the ume when t would aknont and 1 in now showing | Ii » Farnum, as te went —. | five years in the galle t t so 1 eee could hardly bear the sight of food] SEATTLE GInt. 18 and turned com st many | SEEN AT MISSION things 1 had fond of | Wanda Hawley, the pretty tutte | tine What litte I did force down | leading lady supporting Rryant | *UFed on my stomach. and I would| . choke with the gas Washburn at the in a former S« on thin week girl, Mine Haw University of Wash come up in my throat lar bthois burning pat ington years ago. It was while in California to study voice culture Mins Hawley received an of fer from a film company and started her screen career ax Wanda Petitt but has since become Mra. Hawley, the wife of a screen player BILLIE ALWAYS DID FAVOR PAJAMAS Attred in a pair of men’s pa jamas, xix sizes too large, rolled up around her ankles and turned back at the cuffe, Billie Burke looks Just as nweet an ever. Hillie dons the pe shoul seca a= “A ed rid of that awful rheumatism | dake-Belleve which closes aches and pains I suffered | Tuesday night, ta be followed by , from so much, my stomach has been Ethel Clayton, in “Wome ons.” FLOODS OF RS od 1 ight, and get up in t FROM TINY FOUNTAIN d ready for | One of the bite of screen strategs y work in weight introduced ir The Clemenceau; and strength and feel c at the Rex this week, in a rand stronger than I have in a close-up of a ti hild erying. Jane | long time | Lee in the tot ¢ n for the jo! Tanlac ia sob Seattle by Bartell | With proper ¢ she enters | Drug personal 4 is tears anlac represent Advertisement WOMEN SUCCESSFUL ay'"sins us IN WORK AT FIGURES °"'Y T's gold filled Hayne Ivertisement. LONDON, Nov, 17.(By Mail.) The war has shown that when a sometimes a real genius at them Ld Society of Incor itors and Accountants h ognized this by deciding t shal admitted to m the same term and conditions a mer There was a big majority in favor | According to the manager of a great bank, a third of the women SAVE YOUR EYES who have come into the business of FAILING EYESIGHT figures during the war have proved OU RESTORED BY OUR SYSTEM It In the Something Healdes Glass Our Ginases Don’t Pay Exorbitant Prices OUR OFFER INCLUDES the eyes, a es "ot unat r ner third might re, but the re real winner er the war BUILD VILLAGE FOR BELGIAN REFUGEES | PRE, Fr and wh pleted, it will resemble a bit of Bel glum transplanted to France. It will VE EX have paved streets, electric light Nive Vers Ts and an up-to-date water and sewage stem, The population will t lected from the most needy refugees in France. ! Paris police captured ‘two bandits wearing stolen American uniform ‘robbed bank of $10,000 World’ Biggest News Story Will Come From the Peace Conference at Versailles It will be reported accurately, promptly, completely and understandingly in the Post-Intelligencer In-additiontothe comprehensive and reliable news dis- patches of the Associated Press, this newspaper has the exclu- sive right to publish the cable service from the LONDON TIMES Great Britain's Most Influential Daily More than a century of honorable achievement will give the London Times and its brilliant staff of special writers an advantage over other newspapers. The Associated Press, the world’s greatest news-gathering agency, will tell the readers of the Post-Intelligencer what has happened. The experts on the staff of “The Thunderer,” with their ripe experience in Old World events, will tell why it hap- pened and what it means. Among those who will write for the Post-Intelligencer are Herbert Sidebotham, the military expert, whose writings Lord Kitchener constantly read; H. Perry Robinson, who served in the United States as the London Times correspondent before he was assigned to the British army; Gerald Campbell, former- ly editorial writer on the London Times; G. Ward Price, an expert on Italian affairs; Harold J. Learoyd, formerly manag- ing editor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger and the New York Evening Post; G. 8. Addams, whose long service with the Reuter agency, in Paris, has made him an encyclopedia of Old World news; James David .Bourchier, who for years has covered the news field in the Balkans, and many others. Readers of the Post-Intelligencer will continue to have the informative articles and the masterly analyses from the pen of FRANK H. SIMONDS Mr. Simonds’ articles on peace will be just as illuminating and as intensely interesting as his articles on the war. There also will be editorial comments and analyses from that stalwart American, THEODORE ROOSEVELT If you wish to keep in touch with the stirring world drama unfolding in Europe, you will need the Post-Intelligencer ev- ery day. 5 : & st &