The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 31, 1919, Page 17

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} SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31 JAPAN MAY BAN | ' PICTURE BRIDES S. F. Association Says Move Is Started | a0, Oct, I association of it would seek to do away with the practice of sending ure brides” to the United Any 14c Borden’s Milk Federal Milk Case ¥ TION JENSEN & VON HERBERG Photoplays That F ove the Value of the Motion Picture Art wmoctation at ite headquar FRIDAY—Good-bye to ing. the “ploture bride” practice : Bryant Washburn in “Why Smith Sin concantion oktmaceiine Gk cut Left Home” of. ine (nea era Thru the persistent and painntal OLYMPIC Pancake FLOUR PeCEAge Asecaepse 29c Log Cabin Syrup— —small ..... —medium Por Troing for Shortent! carried on by th » associa tion in the past several months, says the announcement, “the Jap anese In this state have come to re ulize that the tice of marriage SATURDAY, at 11 A. M.— thru exchange of photographs. tin compatible with the ideals and cus An extraordinary star in the finest toms of the American 1th. can 1%-1b. can 4-Ib. can 6 can can We understand that the govern Western drama he has ever portrayed ment of Japan has also been consid large ...... e ering the advisability of prohibiting this practice, © . The above decision of the board of directors implies no direct allega ' tion that the ‘pleture riages’ ts fj > sedececeeeroes ilegal and that th of 5 |ture brides to America has been in § NEAMETTIO, pke. . Mle | Snider's Cateup, pint _ violation of the ‘gentlemen's agree yal Making Powder, 12-ounce | Blue Label Catsup, % pint ment. ¢ ¢ ¢ ze . fl r r 4 package for B9e | Alb led Oats, small » “J " ied © OPENS SATURDAY We shall take immediate steps to : in Jane Grey's ae, ph - triuihphane novel The Last of Nuanes é Arm & Hammer Soda, pound package for Te Voaris of Wheat, 1 kage for Liberty Public Market (Next to Liberty Theatre) 1,000 1-pound packages of Granulated Sugar, lb. .11¢ One pound to each Snider's Cataup, % pint 23e NEW YORK FANCY PE 30¢ quality; can ming of picture brides | will completely cease pe Nuts, 2 pkew Jello or Jiffy Jetl, pkeg......1e Ghirardelli's Ground Chocolate, | Pink Saimon, tall can 23e customer. 1-pound CAN .esserere ++-38e | Dromedary Tapioca, pkg....12e —--— % GROCETERIAS Same Prices at All Our Stores—Patronize the Groceteria Near Your Home DOWNTOWN ‘ MONT DISTRICT | ALKI POINT x Groceteria No. 6—A5 Vike Stree! Grocete 25—710-712 Blew- | 9, Ke Groceterta No. 3--Pike Ph ett Street 2634 Alki Avenue. Public Market—downstairs 4 a ‘ ‘a a WOODLAND PARK | EASTLAKE : r Groceteria, | Ie. 14 — Westlake | Groceteria N: 19—T7317 Green- | 201 Eastlake Avenue. $ u blic ° wood Ave Groceteria No. 17—Corner Public | . RENTON HILL § Market | NORTH BROADWAY | Groceteria No. 15—1520 Pike St ~ Groceteria. No. 7 — South Ena | pERIOT | Public Market | Groceteria No. $—233 Broadway | Groceteria No. 10—603 Union North. Street QUEEN ANNE HILL | UNIVERSITY pisTnicr Groceteria No. &—Seventh W. and KIRKLAND 3 Groceteria No. 2—6503 14th ave. | West McGra | Groceteria No. 22—Market and N. I | Groceteria No, 20—201 Blaine Picadelli Streets. Grocetoria No, 16—A3rd and 14th | | Street f acelores d Grebettita Ma 18-tibe en eh | Rone ee Groceteria No, 36—Secone iam b REEN LAKE DISTRICT ITF, CENTER } a i Groceteria b—Green Lake | Groceteria No. 24—16th 8. W. and AST UNION DISTHE Public larket. Barton Street. | Groceteria No. —238 BE ul 7 for Information or Complaint, Call Main 3574. Main Office and Warchouse, 208-210 Third Ave. Se, . FILM TOWN FOUNDED NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—Miew Jean St h A) A ti : ‘pega, originally of New Zealand, has DEE PMENS OAayS ACTION on ON ENGLISH E: jlanded in New York for the purpose | LONDON, Oct. 31.—What of learning the American way of im J M t t | planned to rival the famous mevg | parting the three I's apanese lvius Come La OT | coiony near Los Angeles is being | Mine Begg has come to this coun- ” . | tablished on a large estate |try After apending nine years on the|_, SACRAMENTO, Cal. Oct. 31-—(By| the problems that will be developed | here, Two big companies af6 [United Preas)—Gov. Stephens re-|by the presence of that race,” Gov. | |Island of Samoa teaching in native operating. hols. ‘She lo now tnking m courses (fused today to complicate a world) Stephens said in a statement. pi Pe eae eeu Wek ber pinged ain; [crise “when the passions of all peo-| “Without reflecting upon people of} folly to intensify our national pe < ‘When teed 4 hed there |DiG# are at a breaking point,” by]any other race, our own experience | culties.” = 9 gual ease fin ce ie [calling @ mpecial seasion of the Call-|as well as the experience of every| In a calmer time necessary |sbo wi s je post-graduate w ee ‘"\ fornia legislature to consider anti-}other nation with a diverse race | lation will be taken, he added, nse [nome American university, after | Japanese legislation. |probiem teaches but one conclusion.| In regard to the high cost ef - a em Gas rs x ms ¥ “a rind | In a statement he declared against Vexing Problems ing, Stephens said he was as ° OS Se ar Comey on os 709 |a special session for this purpose ax| “I can not shut my eyes to a con-/as any one for a return to merltcan (yy | _ Mise Boae maintains ae care) weil as for the purpose of consider-| dition in world affairs today that) prices, but that it was beyond 4 ; of children, if not as a mother, then |ing the high cost of living. makes it extremely unwise at this| power of the state of Califa : as @ teacher, is woman's true sphere.) ‘The Aight will go on, just the same, particular time to add to the many/|change these world-wide q | ™ aan ee Be however. Senator J. M. Inman will| vexing problems of our American | economic conditions, carry out the program he has out-| people. “These conclusions have be . | Same Program lined. Senator W. E. Brown, Los An-| “No one disputes the lyvereign | oaabed eter Mistute ae on for 19 Years geles, will probably Jead the H.C. L. | right of this state to enact all domes-|he said. “I haye a sympathetie ¢ os | CLEVELAND, Oct. 31—Aaron v.|!*sislation forces. |tic legislation which its welfare dic-|sire to see both ends accon = | “I recognize the growing menace | tates, At the same time, tn this erf-| but I can not bring myself to y 73, fo , an be . Williams, 73, for 19 years has been! a sed by the introduction into our|sis, when the passions of all peoples | these considerations to the | lghting the «treet lamps of Braten slp vets | E ‘ | lanl, the millionaire village inaide (tte of people of another blood and /are at a breaking point, {t would be! consideration of a special | Cleveland. He hasn't had a day off Jand hasn't been downtown in that ——————— Playing “Down Kentucky Way” ise rinsed a daly tt pli ll ‘CLR Doctor Pardoned; Fo LGE L$ J S| — PATHE NEWS — Obstructed Draft Golden Gate After serving a year and a month |of a 17-year sentence In the federal |penitontiary at MeNells tsland Ernest Finnie, found guilty on Sep- | tember 1918, of obstructing the military activities of the United | States government, was grant LONDON; Oct. 31—So many| commutation of ‘sentence by P é CORRECTION dent Wilson, effective October ae v were developed aur-!) Pegnle Read More Good Books Now ||. ime. resper’s tatioween Bait was | Finn ing the war now they are — STEEL cuT who posed as a doctor pion advertised in ‘Thursday's Star at|!ndicted under the war-time teaching their own hustands how to E i 4 = des act, tor adminigterit oplates 15] triching their own husbands vow © | Than Ever Before, Says Librarian | $100 couse. tt mous nave, reall M,2°% for eaministering opiates tn 50 per coup’ 7 ’ | $1.50 per couple. 1604 Fourth ave |they might get out of the military | Advertisoment. : » th lunch box rested on the heavy,!heard and seen enough and they |- sue nner eervice. No feason for the commu. 3 NATURE’S MIRROR == table, and a man, wearing a|want a change. The per cent of Sion of Hawise ebutebee was an] rough, worn coat, his face weather-| fiction, however, is slightly more 5 signed, When | beaten and serious, bent over an|than in any of the past five years.” ron THE SUNDAY = yon." WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE Water will be shat off on Satur | day, November 1, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. ™., in the following districts | < open book. | According to Whrary records, 54 WOMEN 18) “What does he read?” was asked | per cont of all books circulated in well and the librarian 1915 were fiction, while this class healthy—| And she answered, “Historical ac lof reading matter reaches 62 per dititinny dak at the prea , | Seventh ave from King #t. to the , counts, to some extent—psychology | cent at the present tim 4 bby + land spiritualism a great deal.” } Any evening, In the city brary, The Selwyns Serve Charles st.; Eighth ave from parkle iN) «spiritualism, why?” was asked. |both men and women of the book | Dearborn st. to Charles st.; on Lane, | her eyes, a! so Miss Lillian Collins, at the ref-| worm type may be found in the Dearborn and Charles sta, enact rose tint in erence desk in the Seattle Central quiet corners pouring over works of from § nth ave, 8. to Ninth av her cheeks, |!!brary, explained: old masters or reading volumes like 4 and she has “Men of all types are reading the Mlucation of Henry Adama,” a (SIGNPEACE _ } % | savetves| and be CONVINCE works on spiritualism today,” she | book of wide circulation in Seattle NEW YORK, Oct De Fich red)saia, “partly because many loved |during tho past year lay in signing the p treaty and accepting the league of naw tions is impefiling the lives of millions of Turka Greeks, \ b 100d ./onex have been lost in the war and| The woman who dreams, or the| Arabs and Armenian There’ s the general tendency is to pierce the man who “knows,” reads the poems |] ing to Dr. Stanley White, sec @ t) j H retary of the bord of foreign missions of the Presbyterian chureh. elasticity in| reat beyond in the interest of thowe|of Robert W. Service and feels the | Dr, White has just returned G ComEDY ny a MEGROE ...|Who have gone. And partly it is due| “Spell of the Yukon,” even in Seat every MOVE=|+, the teachings and Investigations, tle. ment and Blof noted wr such as Sir Oliver, All classen of people, from the spring in her Lodge, who has written the book of financier to the riveter's helper, are | step. Love ‘Raymond,’ and Barker, author of realizing more and more the value| tomes to every ‘woman who has “The Letters from the Living Dead — is bounding health—but when she is| lee Stee eae . unding " ‘And do the working men read sci- rack Ttoom Mads” and “Within pallid, dull eyed, languid, she has|entitic books?” she was asked, | Prison Walls,” by Thomas Mott Os: no magnetism nor does she appeal) MMs Collins laughed. |born, are among the works that the| bo any man. “You can't judge a man’s cholce| general public appreciate, and call - of ‘reading by his clothes,” she re-|for most often mang a change in feelings and Yet the interest Kipling’s “Rar. |plled. “A fellow in rough clothes | in fiction and! waa In yesterday and asked for a | poetry ie not growing with the same ) After suffering pain, feeling ner-|Greek dictionary, Psy¢hology, at the| speed as that in the physical and vous, dizzy, weak and dragged | Prevent time has a strong appeal—|¢conomie works. And the war has a s b: d k f he '_, |especially applied psychology.” {been left behind us. mee Dy Weaknesses Of er sex: The circulation room was more with eyes sunken, black circles and | crowded than the reference room,| pale cheeks—such a woman is|ana the books that people held seem | HUGE DIAMOND FOUND Favor restored to health by the |¢d of lighter welght and larger print | WORTH HALF MILLION! from Syria and Turkey as a |] member of the commission for |} the American committee for re lief in the Near Bast “The present situation in the Near East is one of the most sensitive and complicated ima |] inabie, All the different gov. | @ Ss |] ernments are claiming a sha | in the division of the Turkish |] ‘They know it and would wel- |] come her aid, | “If the league {s not all that Cy tC) | we should like it to be, let us A * > sign the treaty now and leave Uiivery, cltisen SHGUG reas ESTABLISHED, 1850. {E22} SOLD By GROCERS EVERYWHERE | A NORMAN HACKETT AND AN EXCELLENT CAST 5 fen D, congd Here again the psychic readings had | } ‘avorite Prescription of Dr. Pierce. | jaivon a toremont place, while books| LONDON, Oct. 31.—The Premier hanged, too, in looks, for after |on economic, exporting and foreign | Diamond baking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre-| trade, labor problems, Russia and the ription the skin becomes clear, | Russian language were being read) ff Fives brighter, the cheeks and taken away in great numbers. |4 flawless white diamond of 1,500 | , | Fy | But the war books remained on the | karate, valued at $500,000, plump. It is purely vegetable, | \iivent The famous Cullinan, gontains no alcohol. eople are tired of the war ques-|1905 in the same mining property, | Druggists sell it in tablets or | tion,” said Miss J. EB. Bishop, first weighed 4,032 ‘ats, but flaws in < Fr H assistant in the circulation depart-|it required cutting It up, the larg- | ee Dr. oo PUBS, | eect. “Chek fo met even dace tor|ent yart now belug @ British conn ” trial package, Mining company of the ‘Transvaal is reported to have found | found in reconstruo*™ literature, They have Jewel

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