Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
< 7 o ! ,' THE EVENING -STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1922. Y AMUSEMENT S|z ammn GIRLS INDICTED BY U. S. Sennett comedy; “Mun vs. Beast, e and the Pathe Review, and Friday and|Three Accused of Violating Immi- 10 Face,” a laughable comedy; Wednes- day and Thursday, Sir A. Conan Doyle’'s “The Hound of the Basker- villes,” a thrilling mystery story, Ben " a Mack brifging twelve Armenian women to |two counts, Selvian has since mar- the United States. [fied one of the irls and others of alve | his countrymen have become the hus- Rescue of the twelve women from |y, 5 i e maining cleven the Turks during a dramatic filght. in which he assisted them In reachin HER Leaders in ROGERS out. Since 1888 it has mot only been our desire to supply our patrons with the best of service, to_utilize, newer improvements as they came we now offer to our customers the ocughness of their cleaning. CLEA]:ING DYEING F but also from time to time, the In accordance with this policy today SILVERWARE REE!!! with purchases Start save the little cards and a set will soon to Plnl'Xochnmki Friday. i, Paul Kochanski, the violinist, will be presented in recital by T. Arthur Smith, Inc., at the National Theater ‘Friday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. (This will be the first concert given jin_the rebuilt theater. It has been said of Kochanski that jhe 1s one who “shows himself to be i His program for Friday afternoon preme syncopationists. A 11lt is prom: ised in every number and life at its full in the offering as a whole. Othera will include Rose Seldon and her brother in a wonderful offering of head balancing, posing and jug- glery; Boland and Knight in a song offering, and James Pembrook and company in an amusing playlet, “One on the Alsle,”” which 18 said to be will introduce a new and daring Saturday, Owen Moore, in “Love's An |* Awful Thing”; Mack Sennett's “The Duck Hunter,” starring Billy Bevan and Mildred Jure, the Fox News and “Speed.” Avenue Grand. erts, in “The Old Homestead"”; Tues- day and Wednesday, Willlam Fox Gareth Hughes, in and comedy, “The Steeple- gration Law Following Alleged Marriage Market Report. By the Associated Press, FRESNO, Callf, Horotune Selvian, John Selvian and Sunday and Monday, Theodore Rob- | Harry Karageozian, members of the local Armenian colony, were arrested vesterday on federal grand jury in- Selvian. November 29.— light. & safety here, was told by Horotune | The arcests are the culmination of an {investigation started by the fed- | eral authorities a year ago when an alleged marriage market, it is clalmed the Armenian girls were s0ld to husbands, was brought to|by an exple Horotune Selvian. who declares that | the men w bursed him for his expenses CHICAGO, ion 8 C. Rirck, £ establish Juc., 2 n was made a matter ly perfoot be you (8 genuine -lemnn suull{npedd. ‘mlf; novel in idea and to have a delight- | gpdctace, Nero™: Thursday, Alice |qictments, ChATEINg Vielation of the |ing i thelr eacane sad teamsnorting | pcomnpiosior s made & matter of Clari-Fi m taste and intelligence.” He displays|ful comedy atmosphere. Other acts|Iake and Conrad Nagel, in “Woman's (United States mmigration laws in! them to the United is held on -Filter Syste: Cards With Every richness of conception, 8s well as the | are $o be anpounced. L d Conrad Nagel, in “Woman's —a process of washing garments in Becelpt dignity and repose which accompany| The photoplay, shown for the first nd Screen Graphic; Friday, Clean fluid, thus insuring the thor- the noblest art. time in Washington, “The Unknown," D arnentaiod iwill be as follows: “Sonata” (Cesar|screen star in Richard Talmadge, with ‘Saturday, Viola Dana, in PHONE w w PHONE || Franck), «Concerto in D Minor romance, thrills and unexpected hap- | “June Madness,” ahd Harry Poilard, MAIN [ (R o Y S aab e, | o SURdaY'S BIIL will offer this week's | gk Binee = H H|—— itana” ' (Krelsler), “Chanson Sans | 2tfractions. starting at 3 p.m. Apollo. i = 1507 1152 [Carnanella “Paganiay o"¢ ““*|STRAND — Bothwell Browne's |, Sunday and Monday, Rupert Hughes' 1016 w 709 i Tickets are on sale by T. Arthur 5 Remembrance” and Ben Turpin, in We Call oth St N- . 9th St. We Deli: {Smith, Inc., 1306 G street, Beauties. :‘l,lt:imen.;ndfa Trfflzr;;m‘lx;:‘:::fi “-T-'fig & et F i ensecver A somewhat different vaudeville di- | /947808y, re . = mmi ESTABLISHED SINCE 1888 m Famous Jewish Cantor Coming. Josef Rosenblatt, the renowned Jewish cantor tenor, will appear at the Shubert-Garrick Sunday, Decem- ber 10, at $:30 p.m., in a recital of varied selections, including wonder- version Is promised at the Strand Theater next week, beginning Sunday matinee, in Bothwell Browne and his “Bathing Beauties” with their dance and fashion revue. Others on the bill include the Daily Brothers, “Two Boys and a Sec-Saw”; Ralnbow and Old Homestead”; Thursday, Gareth Hughes, in “Garments of Truth,” and comedy, “Let 'Er Run”; Friday, Pat O'Malley and Pauline Starke, in “My Wild Irish Ros in “The Flivver' Myers, in and Paul Parrott, Saturday, Carmel anger Point,” and BY THE MONTH ON ALL DEPOSITS &7 T e T & e 4 1 in “Pop Tuttle's Grass e e T ful Jewish music. .. | Mohawk, twentieth century Indians; 5 o . 2 i P 5| | The program will demonstrate his| Dolly Grey and Rert Byron, in “A <ven if your deposit is made mervelous vocal dexterity and the [ @Y (GTe¥, and BeEt Bvion. 8T8 d ? You’ll Enjoy Your Thanksgiving Dinner At the Popular . White Palace Cafeterias Roast Young 50c Prepared in the Old-Fashioned Way TURKEY supreme sweetness of his tones. It will be s0 arranged as to appeal to every one. Tickets are on sale at the theater box office. NATIONAL—“La Tendresse.” “‘La Tendresse' {8 perhaps the most moving play of the modern theater. So wrote ~ Alfred Savolr, famous French author and critic, on the first performance of Henry Batallle's “La Tendresse,” which Henry Miller and Ruth Chatterton will present at the National Theater next week, com- mencing Monday. The play received its first produc- tion in English at the Columbia Theater, San Francisco, last July by Henry Miller, and was hailed as the most noteworthy offering the dis- tinguished actor-manager had ever glven to the theater. Its success was duplicated at the Empire Theater, New York. It will be presented here with the New York cast. Associated with Mr. Miller and Miss Chatterton will be H. Cooper-Cliffe, Marguerite St. John, Judith Vosselll, Tom Nesbitt, Norma Havey, Sydney RIggs, Jean de la Cruz, Willlam Hanley, Albert G. An- drews and others. POLI'S—San Carlo Grand Opera. Tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock all tickets now remaining unsold for the witty blackface comedian. Monte Blue and Julia Swayne Gor- don, in Ray C. Smallwood's screen production, “My Old Kentucky Home,” will be the feature photoplay. Short film subjects and special orchestral numbers will complete the show. GAYETY—“Bon Tons.” Sunday afternoon, opening for a week’s engagement, Jacobs and Jer- mon will bring their attraction, “Bon Tons,” to the Gayety Theater. John Barry handles the principal role as a comedian, and in the company are Dave Kindler, character man; Ger- trude Beck, soubrette: Jean De Lisle, the prima donna, and Lou Barry, a dainty engenue. In addition the show is backed by two dozen pretty sing- ing_and dancing girls. “Bon Tons” is tn two acts and twelve Scenes. Photoplays. METROPOLITAN—Charles Ray in “A Tailor Made Man.” Charles Ray’s first nine-reel pro- duction, “A Tailor Made Man,” will be presented for the first time in Washington at Crandall's Metropoll- tan Theater next week, beginning Sunday. It is an adaptation of the Carolina. Sunday, House Peters and Claire Windsor, in “Rich Men’s Wives"; Mon- da}, Charles Ray, in “The Deuce of Spades”; Tuesday, George Loane Tucker’s “The Miracle Man'; Wednes- day and Thursday, Constance Tal- madge, in “East Is West”; Friday, James Oliver Curwood's “The Man from Hell's River,” and Saturday, John Bar- rymore, in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”; | also Pathe News and Aesop's Fables. Elite. Sunday and Monday, Guy Bates Post, in “The Masquerader”: Tuesday, Wini- fred Westover, in “Winifred of Little Smoky”; Wednesday, *‘The hican’s Daughter”; Thursda: Clara Kimball Young, in agda”; Friday, Ruth Clif- ford, in “Tropical Love,” and Satur- day, Johnny Walker, in “My Dad.” Home. Sunday and Monday. Thomas Meighan, in “Manslaughte Tuesday, Katherine MacDonald, in “Domestic Relation Wednesday and Thursday, Norma Tal- madge, in “The Eternal Flame';: Fri- day, Gladys Brockwell, in *Paid Back.’ and Saturday, Alma Rubens, in *“The Valley of Silent Men.” as late as the fifth of December it will draw a full month’s interest— at 3%, if in a savings account, at 2%, if in a checking account Both of our offices will be open from 8:30 A.M. until 5:30 P.M. today and on the first and fourth of December "~ The Washington -Loan and Trust Company Established in 1889 'WNTOWN OFFICE: DO 900-902 F STREET N.W. ANDREW PARKE! Vice President and Trust Officer .LOHN B. LARNER, President WEST END BRANCH: 618-620 17th STREET N.W. HARRY G. MEEW Vice President and Treasurer THOMAS BRADLEY Vice President and Renl Estate Officer Eat Regularly at One of Three S e rand P T COmPany e | Sinich oFiginalls produced by Coman |Juut Around the Comer”: Wednesd Assistant Treasurers - - be on sale at the theater ticket office. | and Harris, with Grant Mitchell in Thursda Viola 2 Dana, in *Glass rnul:l[':*l: :A::;:)\I}; 5 White Palace Cafetenas Mrs. Wilson-Greene, who has had | the role of John Paul Bart, the tal-( Houges”: Friday, *The Prisoner of CHARLES H. . Ir. 314 9th St 1417 G St 1113 Penna. Ave. charge of the subscriptional sales, re- ports an unusually heavy demand for seats, indicating a widespread in- terest in the coming of the songbirds. The opening performance will be glven next Monday ., when Verdi’s masterpiece, will be loffered, with Marie Rappold Bonelli. IDe Mette, Salazar, Deblasi and Ceroi R0 0 0 I I al ' When oS =t only. WRITE You can spend the FOR FREE ally in Southern Por information, ask any Railroad Ticket Office, D. M. D; ‘eal When you travel on the Los Angeles Limited it’s as though your home or club were put on wheels. Beautiful, refined surroundings; ease; comfort; cheeriness. Attendants picked for their courtesy and experience. Luxury, but no extra fare. Pullmans of latest design; standard sleeping cars Spacious observation and lounge car. Barber. Valet. Dining cars the pink of neatness —you can dine well for a dollar. Leaves C. & N. W. Terminal, Chicago 8:00 p. m. The CONTINENTAL LIMITED is another fine train with observation, standard, and the money saving tourist sleepers and diner. C. & N. W. Terminal, Chicago at 10:30 a. m. Both go thescenic way to Los Angeles—the Rockies, color- ful Weber Canyon, Salt Lake City with its Mormon Temple, Tabernacle, marvelous organ and Great Salt Lake, the Nevada Canyons and the orange groves. Leaves ‘winter very economic- Let us tell you BOOKLETS aboutitandsend youfreeillustrated booklets andhotel, apartmentand bungalowlists. ! |in the cast. Peroni will conduct. { GARRICK—“Just Married.” “Just Married,” with Vivian Martin and Lynne Overman, will come to the Shubert Garrick Theater next week, beginning Sunday evening. “Just Married” Is by Adelalde Mat- thews and Anna Nichols, authors of “Scrambled Wives” and “Nightie Night.” Vivlan Martin, before going into pictures, four years ago, made distinct_successes in “Officer 666,” “Stop, Thiet” and “The Only Son.” At the completion of her contract with the Famous Players Miss Martin made a new arrangement by which she might work in the vicinity of New York and resume her work on the stage. The action of “Just Married” covers seven days. All the iIncidents occur |week. The musical program. as ar- | Hound of the Baskervilles: snd Dag on shipboard. the ship being the |ranged by Creatore, will inciude se- | Mason, In “Pop. Tuttle's Grass French liner Lafayette. Miss Martin |lections of his own composition and | Widow”; Friday, James Oliver Cur- and Mr. Overman will be supported by the original New York cast, which includes Dorothy Mortimer, Jess Dandy. Isabel O'Madigan, John Butler, Fred Irving Lewis, Marcelle D'Arville, Blanche Benton, Roy Foster, Anton Ascher and others. PRESIDENT—“Abie’s Irish Rose.” “‘Abie’s Irish Rose.,” the current Broadway success that was presented by Arthur Leslie Smith and Henry Duffy at the President Theater last Sunday night for the first time in ‘Washington, and which is rolling up new laugh records during its first ‘week’s engagement, has been deflnitely announced for a second week at the President, beginning next Sunday night at 8-30 o'clock. This is the comedy success by Anne Nichols, which s now in its eighth month on Broadway and which has been presented for over 400 tiimes in Los Angeles. Tt is now in its twenty-third consecutive week in San Francisco, and is current in all three cities as well as Washington at the present time. 1t finds its chief basis for humor in the marriage of a Jewlsh boy and an Irish girl and their respective efforts to conceal the interracial nature of the wedding. B. F. KEITH'S—Dolly Sisters. The Dollys, twins with terpsicho- rean toes, will be the main magnet at B. F. Keith's next week. Just back from Europe, where they were a smashing hit, and Erte created some gorgeous and bizarre frocks for them, they are taking a brief tour in the two-a-day before returning to Lon- don to flll a starring engagement in a’'new revue. Harry Richman and Edward Dolly, a brother of the ivory- complexioned beauties, are assisting em. The added attraction is Emilie Lea, late of musical comedy, who comes with Clarence Rock and Sam Kauf- man, in ehearsing for Vaudeville.” Miss Lea is noted for her grace and abandon, Rock is a corking planist, while Kaufman rates as one of the best eccentric steppers in vaudeville. Ernest Ball, the composer, returns with his latest songs; Julia Nash and C. H. O'Donnell in a triangle play- lor's assistant who became a steam- ship magnate. It concerns a thoroughly likeable young fellow with strong personal notfons in regard to labor problems and a firm conviction that clothes pave the way to achlevement for any one able to back them up with ambition and judgment. But he hasn't the clothes. Throughout the narrative there is, in addition to a_ delightful comedy veln, a strong element of romance and heart interest. RIALTO—“Shadows.” adapted from Wilbur prize story. “Ching, Ching Chinaman,” and claimed to be the greatest story ever told in photo- play. a Preferred Pictures produc- tion, will be shown at the Rialto next week, with Lon Chaney. Marguerite Dela Motte, Harrison Ford, Walter Long, John Sainpollis and Buddy Messenger in the cast. A notable added attraction will be the appear- ance of Giuseppe Creatore, famous orchestra leader and bandmaster, as guest conductor of the Rialto Or- chestra three times daily during the arrangement. Short film selections also will be shown. PALACE—Wallace Reid in “Clar- ence.” Next week, beginning Sunday after- noon, Loew’s Palace Theater will pre- sent the permiere Washington en- gagement of Booth Tarkington's fa- mous stage play, “Clarence,” in screen form, as a Paramount production, with Wallace Reld,, Agnes Ayres and May McAvoy in the roles of chief im- portance. “Clarence” was produced by William De Mille, the noted director. It is & whimsical comedy of modern Ameri- can family life. Mr. Reid has the rble of Clarence, an ex-soldier, who enters the home of the Wheelers at a time when domestic discipline has gone to pleces and when the family finds it- self at war. His inexhaustible re- sourcefulness meets every emergency and brings order out of chaos. COLUMBIA—Rex Ingram’s “Trifl- ing Women.” Rex Ingram, famous producer of “The Four Horsemen of the Apoca- lypse,” is ®sald to establish a new claim to directoral pre-eminence in “Trifling Women,” the presentation of which will be made for the first time in Washington next Sunday afternoon at Loew's Columbia. “Trifling Women"” is a picture written, adapted and di- rected by Mr. Ingram, and surpasses any of his earlier works. Four of the players who helped make a success of “The Prisoner of Zenda,” another In- gram production, are in the cast— Lewis Stone, Ramon Navarro, Barbara. La Marr and Edward Connelly. It is a story of a siren for whose favor mien were willing to die, who married a rich marquis, proves in- constant on the return of a former lover and of the remakable and super- nltl;rl.l revenge wrought by the hus- band. CRANDALL'S—“East Is West.” Sunday afternoon and through Tuesday Crandall’s Theater will pre- sent First National's picturization of and Saturday, Monroe Salis- bury, in “The Great Alone.” Savoy. Sunday and Monday, Theodore Rob- erts, in “The Old Homestead"”: Tues- day and Wednesday, Willlam Fox spectacle, ‘‘Nero" Thursday, Alice Lake and Conrad Nagel, in Voman's Hate”; Paul Parrott, In “The Fliv- ver,” and Pathe Review; Friday, Pat O'Malloy and Pauline Starke, in *“My Wild Irish Rose,” and comedy, “Busy Bees”; Saturday, Gareth Hughes, in “Garments of Truth,” and Mr. and Mrs. Carter De Haven, in “Entertain- ing the Boss.” York. Sunday and Monday, Thomas Mel- ghan, in Cecil B. De Mille's “Man- slaughter”; Tuesday, Bebe Daniels, in “Pink Gods,” and Paul Parrott, in “The Flivver”; Wednesday, Betty Blythe, in “How Women Love,” and Sunshine comedy, “The Tin Bronch Thursday, Sir A. Conan Doyle's wood’'s “The Valley of Slient Men” and comedy, “Kidding Uncle”: Satur- day, Viola Dana, in “June Madness,” and comedy, “‘Ocean Swells. The s.im%lest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain instantly, Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in a colorless clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in thin plasters. The action is the same. Pain Sto?.s' ‘lnnstantly CHARLES R. GRANT General Cou ARTHUR PETER ing home a Box of ot St P “Why ShoePolish?” .you get more. Ks 15¢ but worth it” Liquids and Pastes for ite, Black, Tan, Broy wm Ox-g?oodebu." Assistant Trust Officer WM, H. BADEN SAFETY WEEK—DON'T GET HURT DON T place small stoves on tables un- less there is metal or asbestos under- " M. D L. let without a problem, “Almost Sin- | Sent First National's plcturization of Genl Agent, C. & N. W. Ry, Gen'l Agent U. P. System, gle”; McLaughlin and Evans, in “Oi e . €al 5 a8 Bevnsyivania Blag. 508 Com'l Trust Bite, a Little Side Street” a bit of the |Lalmadge glves her finest portrayal neath the burners 25th and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia 15th & Market Sts., Philadelphia For Acidity or Bile - Beecham’s Pills act as a splendid tonic to the digestive organs. They remove acidity - and fermentation and excess of bile from the stomach and bowels and promote the East Side tenement dlstrict; Tracy and McBride, with “Bits of Exclusive- ness”; the Chung a Four, a Chinese male quartet, in popular song. successes, and Mary Gautiers Pony on the program, which will be com- pleted by the regular house features. BELASCO—“‘Stepping Around.” James C. Morton and company heads the Shubert unit vaudeville at the lasco next week, opening with the matinee Sunday. “Stepping Around” is its title. It concerns a champion boxer, who, thinking he had killed a man in a fight, flees the country on a ship bound for Egypt. On board he meets a friend who is going to Cairo to sell radio outfits. In Egypt they en- counter a dancing girl and a princess at a slave market, but thelir effort to buy them fails. They follow the buyer and find they are to be the vassals of a shelk and a part of his harem. After many amusing and to date, with Nigel Barrie and War- ner Oland in support; Wednesday and Thursday Mary Carr will be screened in “Silver Wings,” a story of American home life, and Friday and Saturday, Carmel Myers, in “The | Danger Point,” a new American re- lease, with Harry Pollard, in *“Hook, Line and Sinker.” LINCOLN—“Remembrance.” ‘The first three days of next week, at the Lincoln, beginning Sunday afternoon, Rupert Hughes’ “Remem- brance,” a fine story of American home life will be shown, supplement- ed by Buster Keaton in “The Pale Use Only Safe Appliances Stoves should be connected with rigid pip- ing. Do not use rubber hose if it can-be avoided. Do not look for gas leaks with a lighted match or candle. Such action is likely to result in a fire or an explosion, and serious Your S : . % stomach cretion of the gastric juices. In thus il pnicnees s el if not fatal injury. correcting morbid conditions and stimulat- 2nd nine scenes and gives Morton the is ing the digestive processes Beecham’s Pills | Assisting are Martha. Reesros et Take naturally have an excellent effect upon the general health. If you have lost your ap- petite or are suffering from nausea, sick headache, constipation, or giddiness Beecham’ 10e—12 pills 25c—40 pills 650c—90 pills & i oxes vT/b Pills a dancer of grace and pep; Billee Maye, another fast stepper, and Matt Scan- lon, in 2 comedy diversion. Vaudeville specialties are introduc- ed by Harry Roye in a terpsichorean divertissement; Harry Bloom, who features up-to-date melodies; the Vintour brothers, unique acrobates; Marguerite De Von and Ralph Baliley, n a speclalty, and Mamie, Edna and Alfred Morton of the famous family. COSMOS—"“The Melody Revus.” The feature of the Cosinos Theater bill next week will be a breezy of- fering of songs and dances with a Jazz kick to them. It is called “The Melody Revue,” and features Nan Deckert, Atkinson and Mark an Golden Gate Five, a quintet of Boy and company are the others In case of trouble with your gas or gas appli- ‘ances, call Main 8280. . Washington Gas Light Co. BLAST INJURES SEVEN. November Jhen an | persons were injured and six familics IHs ey | were driven from their apartments yesterday