The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 26, 1924, Page 9

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THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE 9 Versatile Actor i Ava Is ( edian Who Heads New Musical . | Comedy Company at the Palace Hip FREDERICK &3 NELSON a THE FOUNTAIN LUNCH re —___—_____—— een _ LINK AND BEI I G in « / : == (DOMMISTARS STORE|) == ="| I TOM ORRO W—The Promenade of Juvenile Fashions At 2:30 ROWING GIRLS’ and juvenile fash- ions will be displayed on living mod- els tomorrow in the Downstairs Store. The publie is invited to attend. i X sr £e i. 13 Pit | Good Suits for Boys ICTURING two attractive Fall Coats for | $7.95, $9.85, $12.35 = girls, recent arrivals in the Downstairs | eras eae serviceable styles and fab- tures of Downstairs Store Suits for boys. ch suit with two pairs of | knickers, fully lined and with strongly | sewed seams, Each made from good quality, warm fab- rics. The larger model is fully lined and has fur collar. Sizes 10, 12 and 14, $8.75 The smaller coat is a tailored model in brown, tan and ‘yray chinchilla. Fully lined. | Sizes 2, 4 and 6, $8.95. Popular dark gray and brown mixtures and fancy patterned fabrics. Sizes for boys aged 7 to 17 years. At $7.95, $9.85 and Other pretty Coats for girls, in | $12.35 Jack Russell as he appears “off stage,” and as he looks a wide variety of styles, sizes 2 Beet “ye aE ‘ portraying the role of a comical old man in the present pro-| to 6, .95 to $8.95; sizes 7 to | Juvenile Boys Suits in middy and erent ine peer ee ey button-on styles, $6.45, $7.95 and 95 to $19.50. $8.45 BY G. LUCILLE BUTLER | this once I'll agree with them. And m ir Seare gael nt aig 82-1 you see the picture/if you only knew how REALLY OLD in? Got] young he feels—and would like to be je of second child- | let in on the secret—why, take a pipe the other in the grave, I'd/at the other picture—ha, ha! That's sneer the kings of cre-| HIM, too! | wn lordly man- Jack Russell, the new tile ner, “a chappie i ¥ as old as he lessor of the Palace-Hip theate feels—d ha know.” that's 7 And without mean to set ajchap, ts 50 Women’s T opcoats In Warm Brown Coatings of Good Quality | $10 00 Boys’ Raincoats and Hats | | e “Slicker” Raincoats with yoke back and corduroy- {| lined collar. Two pockets. Sizes 6 to 16, $3.75. | at Misses’ and children’s “i playing laced Shoe in brown acters” is an Precedent, as the lawyers say, for) “chi ple ple with him. | OMEN, and young women, can select a good coat | Rubber Raincoats with buckle fastenings and | ———ooooooo || onditions are changing in our black galfskjn. Made on a | Maer m te fi atel kets. S ; 6 to 16, $4.50. | as in every other,” declared reas foot-f tas from this special offering of Topcoats in three | patch pockets. Sizes 6 to 16, $4.00. } ssell, deftly painting wrinkles OR: He,,, SOOUTORM IASC, styles, two as pictured. | BOYS’ RUBBERIZED AND “SOU’WESTER” | across his scholarly serebeet | "The with welt sole and rubber | RAIN HATS in s 614 to 714, 75¢. | daddies ada, ple Aaa: vet heel, These coats are made from good quality fabrics in the | i: passing. The demand in the profes- ston 1s for actors who can jump into y kind of a part a C Mr. Russell has 53 peo} |company, and many of the jsiris and actors have been w |for three years. “That is why I per |sonally write, or re-write, all my| productions,” he said. “Far better | results can be attained by fitting the shdw to the casts,” or “my people,” | as he affectionately terms them.| Stories written about them give them | an opportunity to o¢ natural, and} 6% Gevelop their best style. Russell, also a singer of fine abil-| A | —-- | Sizes 814 to 11, $3.50 popular russet-brown shade. Fully lined and warm. E) Sizes 1114 to 2, $4.00 ceptional value at $10.00, 3 | Boys’ Corduroy Trousers Grow ING . GIRLS ; Other Coats for women and young women $1.95, $2.45, $3.25 BROWN NUBUCK in utility and dress styles ranging in price OXFORDS, trimmed , from $15.00 to $45.00. Dov ms store | An extra pair of Corduroy Knickers is always wn calfs ey useful for boys, aged 6 to 17 years, for school or play wear. These are in dark brown, wide-wale corduroy, some with double seat and knees. Prices | $1.95, $2.45 and $3.25. | Boys’ School Blouses 85c to $1.75 Silk-and-Lisle Pongee rtyle, in brown and Made from good quality percale and madras cloth a Con ble height sae es in neat, serviceable styles for school or dress wear. hee 2% to | Special 64 Yard Sizes 8 to 16, at 85¢ to $1.75. $4.50 ONGEE—the cloth of a score or more of uses—is Youths’ Shirts, $1.45 and $1.75 jity, has @ splendid record back of| him. On the stage, as a child, with his mother, he played with Joseph /| Jefferson, and learned much from that beloved artist. Leaving the| stage for some years in order to} jeomplete his education in Boston, | Russell then drifted Into stock, where | his ability to carry “character” parts| \brought him quickly to the front.| Gee PLAIN-TOE OX FORDS smart new with creased vamp. Nuff sald when he played two years . traight in Oakland, and contracting —DOWN! R 7 na {i a" yeay j charmi “, Ppp . 5 at Fis one aang args || al hata al a here in a new weave that is at once charming and Corded stripe, and artificial-silk stripe madras } that popular demand kept him there | practical. It gets its lustre from silk and its strength cloth fashions these Shirts. Attached collar style 4 |10 months, instead: F from lisle—combined to produce an unusual fabric at in sizes 13, 131 and 14 neck measurement. At It is predicted Russell will be pop-| le aay ; | $1.45 and'$1.75 ular, both as the actor and the man. his low price, yar oi be r? He has heb-cass shows, with tt COCO-FIBER DOOR MATS | : This does not lof snap, and his girl revue is a| | In these shades—mais, natural, pink, orchid, B 0 if Fl IP . $1 45 : mean 30 or 90 Et ichicitig fli’ wolseta Sorell 14x24-inch size | coral, Bermuda, artichoke, peach, delft, gray, oys ; acing é anne ajamas, . } a days, but cash |My Place," as the old 84-year young: | c honeydew and black and white, 36 inches wide. , One-piece style Pajamas made from striped out- | in hand at time pie, —DOWNSTAIRS STORE | Specially priced, Saturday, at 45¢ yard. ing flannel. Military collar style, with mercerized { F of purchase. | Next week Seattle patrons will| | mpectally : odes be “frog” fastenings. Sizes 6 to 16, $1.45. d } DOWNSTAIR, —DOWNSTAIRS STORE | |have the first opportunity of seeing Russell as he REALLY I8! | | Pte tse "MERCY AND OT waravowe os )GAPITAL AGOG™5.£; 2x79 FEAR SHIP LOST BERLIN. CROWDS === = Third & University ON SKAGIT BUSINESS || OVER FIND | gm B Bernat 8 let oe’ Boat With 28 Men Missing) GAPE AT 1R-3 | | ~~ Opposite the Pantages Meer BROWN had a long: | ave-, where she had lived for 16 years on Lake Huron Poisoner Throws Himself distance telephone conver: ret ees SS chael ee | with President Labyrinth Discovered Under |S was well known In that nelst CLEVELAND, Onio, sept, 2¢2.| Regret They Must Give Huge sation with President Coolidge iy on Mercy of Court — || borhood. Sho leaves n son, Roy F.| ay || Friday morning ‘i seerababie atanoar am ‘ ; ; | =e ‘The mayor called tho president || Residential Section Barnett, Seattle, and four daughters, | 7" : ae sg seg es on Ship to America | MER { BY HERBERT B. LITTLE | to see if all arrangements were || Bert Bhle,and Mra,\Claudialiy inxe ien today’ to have gone STEA ‘OUNT VERNON, Il, Sept. 26 meade or Ceclcey cocopt ae | WASHINGTON, Sept] 26.—A laby. Seattle, Mrs, Rebecca Sho:|down in a storm on Lake Huron BY CARL D. GROAT SCHEDULES * “The better the church, the | |-lew Skagit project unit Saturday |lrinth of subterranean passages dis Port Angeles, and Mrs. Mel| ‘The bellef was expressed after the| BERLIN, Sept. 26.—Thousands of Dave” Mendy, Travel ky Stadion 4 p worse the crime,” State's Attorney|| nuigh covered beneath several blocks of tropkina, Ardmore. The funeral will/other boats, searching the lake, re-|Men, women and children of repub. | TACOMA | fee} |Frank G. Thompson, of Jefferson!) Coolidge sald he would press |/Washington's most exclusive resi-/hq held Sunday at 230 from the|ported no trace of the missing|Hean Germany filled Berlin's i county, declared as he put the final|| the button that will start the |/dential section, littered with German | preity undert aking parlors. Felgntée new many houre overdue|streita and’ squares, gaking upward i \touches on his case of murder by|| generators a D. #4 ha newspapers of 191 nd 1918, has re — at Detrolt in awe and admiration as the ZR-3 { |polsoning againat Elsie Sweeten and||be 6 p. m. in Seattle. vived some of the old war atmo ; pm ‘The Clifton left Sturgeon bay last |Sd over the city thru a cloudless Ithe Rev. Lawrence M. Hight. | phere in the capital and talk of apics./extent and the purpose sa” | saturday with a cargo of crushed |SkY Dod ations and | Stone and was last seen near Mack- | Judge J. O. Kern, of the Second A gaping hole, made when the nues are not yet under [judicial circuit of Ilols, who lives |$300 Blane. Ring > wheels of « motor truck sank thru] ‘The electric light insta at Carmi, is the court on whose| |the earth, led to its discovery and|a profusion of bottles « [at Care wait throw himeelt in|. otolen From Home | inves | merica is taking was heard on What a pity howey inaw it Way from tion, Once penetrated, {t|belleved by some to be due to a later} A severe storm swept Lake Hu-|every side in pages ae e enough for 4 Inbabitation of booties 'ron_on Sunday, | School children were given a holi- his request for “mercy, not justice,”|" A $300 diamond ring and $36 in|Was folnd to be large enough for A |day and many shops closed, while | yerson to stand upright, walled with | Thompso: |person to stand upright, walled wi |the proprietors joined the throngs | sald. a olen from the home of od tle <a wired ‘for elec Doe ee ee tn Meanyille;- where oat ™ or eee 7 i i enameled ties and wired for ele Let Kellogg’ $ Bran free your children | outside \the “poisoning pastor” is in Jail, to| Sarah Zeppelin, which will bel he |weld the final link in the chain of|Thursday afternoon. Tho loss was] <A searching party has followed |from that dangerous disease—censtipatior Ls tise Riantiods and taladeaen |his evidence against the pastor. He | reported to the police Thursda. jone of the spoils of war next month, CLALLAM BA NEAH BAY AND WAY PORTS: wants to find out where the first) 1, «| to trace. them all to thelr ends. |_ Children aro subject to constipation, ] Havo your children eat it regularly | hovered all night over the Baltic re. o was bought. bead On the ceiling were pasted numer-| In the excitement of play, they neg- | —two tablespoonfuls daily—ii in chronic | gions | Mon, and Thars., 10:30 p.m. popniy.of aren ’s. Sat a 5 7 aia lous copies of German newspapers| lect themselves and foster this dread | cases, with every meal. ‘They will like | a‘ Goes Thea to Neah Bay on Hight jw known to have made} | H ers | leet, : casos, with every It crossed and recrossed over Co Tee \, sant i ance of arsenic, enough| enough to convict her without a con-|dated during the summer of 1917| disease, Moro than forty other diseases | its wonderful, nut-like flavor—so dif-| penhagen and {tsi barely audible pro- ac ISLAND POINTS pai whole army, Much of|fession.” and 1918, By electric torches it was| ean bo traced to constipation. Don't | ferent from common brana which are | peiters and twinkling cabin lights | ie: 5. sion jto polson a whol litt Hie to ex-| Thompson still refused to say def-|powsible to discern in newspaper arti-| delay. Begin at onco to cleanse their | most unpalatable. were heard and seen in Helsingborg, iene ss lit, nude neta pe ae ite Ina| initely whether or not he would ask|¢les frequent reference to submarine| systems of the dangerous poisons. As a cereal, with milk or cream, they | gwedene | PaMeeane® Fi ik terminate je ix activities, The papers were defaced | Kellogg ’s Bran weeps the intestine | Will enjoy Kellogg ’s Bran, cooked anc | he ZR set out from Frieder Recting with, Bremerton Gy re o i] extent by ptic designs . ‘ . a Spri: 0 ve - | eetight wil be returned to the Jet.|onere but jt is generally thought) eone ee Oy ce [S68 | clean—and purifies it, Tt drives out areal Ted cornet over other |ichshaven at 9:05 a, m. ‘Thursday, BEST GLASSES :. t the end of|here he will do so, i" : P . |the poisons which undermine your | SOrea!s Cook i a als. Try land a little more than 24 hours lat: | ferson county jail @ “ 4]. Investigntors Iso discovered an ’, it delicious muffins, bread, griddle |. an. oat , s a herift Grant} Hight has engaged two Moun Vasiche children’s health, It. makes the bowels ° jer it was hovering over Berlin, this week, probably, Sher | d iron ladder extending downward into si recipes given on every |“" >, Sat y ON LAWTH DT hia Vernon lawyers to plead for mercy | ee ieee annie i vvcrable. dig. | funetion regularly and naturally, President Ebert made a specch of | Bolom oe 4 dis-|for him and told the reporter that p 2 | P aes i come to the giant visitor, ex: | We are one of the few optical) state's Attorney Thompson, of the Indder| Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and krum-| But start them eating Kellogg’s Free Examination lthe death penalty for both pris: ging several rungs ’ rT ‘oule o r Sweete to fol- r , ry " pressing a Wish that the Zeppelin Pie nett S Northwest that really | cussing the confession of Hight, Just he Mh uld urg Py Gi shel B | were uncovered, and a cement arch | bled, is guaranteed to bring results if | Bran to-day. Start overy member of| My Nk 8 ne Aecaountrata’| me wn jensen from start to 7 | said|low his example and throw herse . jo bellaved t6. be. connected ; is % j x " cruise overseas to demons | Dect to change without e the only one in before he left for Nashville, sa |which is. believed to be conn eaton regularly, or your grocer will | your family eating it. Kellogm’a| Co rmany's undiminished courage mabject baolute|on the mercy of the court with apartments still deeper in the) return your money. It is guaranteed | Bran, cooked and krumbled, is made * 5 Pa were revenled. because it is ALL brant® Nothing but | in Battle Creek and is served in indi- ribed | rider still holds. Ten shillings a week is regarded newspapers and other liters| ALL bran can be 100 per cent effec. | vidual packages by tho leading hotela) Animals are sacrificed to an idol PUGET SOUND NAVIGATIONCO UBless absolutely necessary. i 4 Sweeten made her confes-|s a low estimate of what the aver-|ature led to the bellef that the tun tive. Kellogg’s Bran is recommended | and clubs everywhere, Ask for it at| called “Nicholas on tho Wheels’ by | eter) Dork - FOOT BIN ‘Thompson added, “because she}age member of the British parliament [nels may have been the rendezvous | by doctors overywhere—they know | your restaurant, 1t ia gold by all/ a religious sect recently discovered in puont Main YON OPTICAL CO, ‘so w la Ker the goods on her— sponds e week in postage stamps, !of spies during the war, but its wide | from experience that it brings resulta, | grocers, Advertisement | Rus# aA wine?’ ave ne SEATTLE—ON vinet AVE, {that it was caused by the abso tlt Examination free Ly graduate op- | faith in religion ee cor atl Glasses not pr i

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