Evening Star Newspaper, February 16, 1923, Page 18

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18 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO . C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 1923. | left no stinging aftermath. gloom of sordld existence, are & pro-|as a lone, silent figuro, standing|tion under emotlonal riress, reading | opment of the plot with spirited ,,c-”,' . ,.03','}’--’%,'.‘.'.3‘,:,2??.'nfif’év.'fiwfi”.‘.afi s-:::lvgt ‘f,?:‘.fl,}:,;"{fi,:{‘:ur‘l“f.'fié’n antde, ho still deminated the pro-|of phrases which breathed the ryirit| o Bol Opcrii, as Launcélat Gobhie, 4 B enst two-thirds of his audlence |compared with those delightfully | C¢edings, although otters were the |of great resentment, und joss o Tt ety Dacrimro straightened up and listened alertly |careless writers, Dickens, Thackery {8upposed participants. His pose, ex-| Were Indicative of tho st} 3 4 2 ¥ for what was to follow. “The first|and Trollove, who wrote to create |Dression end suggestion of intended |DoK6 to demand the ba 0 et | Soulibe ke Ar SN in. When he had finished |18 IO, take three charscters, two boys | Imaginary -individuals who endoyed action ‘were moving fuctors in the Bbecisr RIS uia he mane o " ck again. en he nished | and a girl, and put them in an imagi- | life and amused the readers wilhou 5 i o 7 in the play. o thur Shattuck Recital. this_thrilling plece, he gave, grac-|native room for fifteen minutes, and | making them think morbid thoughts| Tho uccepted ideas of this chief a » « i ric oles abawl Wik mae et Students of the piano and lovers|iously, an encore. see what will happen,” continued the | of psychology.” character in “The Merchant of Ven- much to its picturesqa- of inspirational music last night Mr. Shattuck always will be wel-|author; “at least, that was the first Mr. Walpale left as his parting | Ice” are such that therc can b llulr‘:im;:lll the el | | Venie: and has a plot” as rtror nodern wor 3 3 | come in Washington and one cannot|method I dlscovered. Another is to|admon:tion to his audience the sug- |Cholce In its interpretation. Uniike found In Arthur Shattuck, planist|gotoo far in the wrong direction | start with an idea—the more youthful | gestion that, could each Individual | oiher fgures hakespeare, the Hailed by C ittee Major- | ™. merican, too—a WOrthy person |hy gtating that demands will be the aspiring novellst the more cyni- create for himself each day a tiny[State of mind of Shylock and Lis alled by Commitiee JOT= | to fil the gap made in piano recitals | made for & return at least next year. |cal his idea—then take several people | oasis of calm quiet in which to read | Purposes and prejudices are mattc here by the absence of such inter- and let each other try out the idea; the really good book for even a few |170n which all observers are prac-| A large cast . hook is almost finished before one is|minutes, it would be a decided help |tically agreed. It Is a play, there-|numerous roles 311 . Ity as Nearest Perfection. | i i s khant $rit“n | NATIONAL—Hugh Walpole. |wwaro of fr Thindiv. introduce o fox | (a the cause of roal Starature. fcre, which teats the sapreme quaii: | Dortie wis el the fifth recital of o S tan G gy vl # e ties of the stage artist. Mr. Hamp- | Ughter scenes in her home recital of the Master Plan-{ qp. National Theater was filled | With a slightly tipsy ‘young rich ldler den and his assoclates met the teet | hand was b ini sy The ORIGINAL { Hit in Minority Report. |3 seried ' the Siasomte Kuattorium |4 ourdeaa¥ L0 hoon wikh an “wudience | 10l & voice of disirins from & window | GARRICK—*Merchant of Vemice.” | 2, 1 hip ssectates met tho teof hind was toinie souwls b en N e aa Mk St time in Washington, Mr. p ¢ ad - Just high en e to give addl Shuttuck ‘made an indeilble tmpres- | HIL of enthuslastic wdmiration for|{0n ) Suyilery” as 1o its exnct 1 Wme striking! success: of Wealter|[ICHt be 'saidtha0 (haro are tlmos, [mante In the ‘courtrog ¥ S e OT: | tion—then one is off into a story that wpden’s pre : o Ve | even h 50 pretentions an offering | was imperzonating 1 i In Internationally recognized as | Ui ile " (s hurry to its Anish.s idenisprassttation ofitie cols) “The Merchant of Venice,” when | Miss Mahal Moore. as Jestien, dui alpole remarked that it was ¥ y y afternoon atlun entire com v reaches a higher | ter of Shylock, and Miss Flsie Hoerr- sfon on his audience, which today, no { g | doubt, is musing on the subject: | ¥NO i"ln.‘_ was ’N-‘mflhil\g decidedly dlis level of perfect ticul K |tinctive and individual about Lis | walpole's v i ch t 1 i) tly ~ghastly” the mnumber of e vel of perfection on a particular Kearns, a, id 10| e e matva alpole’s personality is such that he | [Perfes iehastly” AR e S z ot|day, it may well be asscrted that| ! ero ! ong the The qualities and asete possessed |COUId have talked on any subject he | [ue/Prul hible to re e that the star compellcd attentlon, nOt}y, ferday was such a day. The many | feminine < 1 Saute Chairman Johnson Will Urge ! by the vVirtuoso, which wien won. | MKt have chosen from “sailing been published. “One finds the &IX| 400000 he was to be credited with| fomiliar lines of the play wi il | bined, q a leading novelist and possessor of a arming personality and w Mr. TO PRESS FOR ACTION oyt ships to sealing wax" and held his outstanding ooks grouped in all anv a i reta ot d with 0 fetic f thelr truth d O r v i 1 ¥ make his plaving “decidedly | ShihS to seallng wax™ and beld bis | b 1."0f classtfications.” ho remarked. | Ny unusual interpretation of the|tered with a conviction of thalr truth, | and Char p 2 Prompt Passage of Substitute | distinctive and individual,” are: | et COmMPILiely, Cambine it e ate The six Test books, the | character of the immortal Jew of the [41d Mr. Mampden's moments of o tributed succes A/t | W8 Avoid Imitations—Sabstitates . delicite anaieyipa sube ovels st Indecent ks, the &lx |, but because of sheer merit R —— X .« i # far-reaching Kunowl- - 2oph R Skt & by respectable voung ladies, for Senate Measure | > story” to be told by t hioh el e fthont ad. oo mars peoplc traditional Jnes—putting o H n 66 hiso s ‘”w ;4:!!\!.\' “llu i re reading books in gulps now. u! ";‘;‘mu"‘ql“{',(f{'." 2 & veaen i o own tones with a eriti- | - . iy Dicers P, bty into 1, ¢ more of The new tmmigration LIl was|cal catand hring hem A hear o |2 one hax an wbsoin s Iy like everything elve In present-day o"tourt fn'the’ midst of tn ING tormally reported to the Housc late |Derfection s possible, an intelligent |2 (37 J15 FUCIEES s are inclined to believe that, with all | oney lender's own Inhumanity, a nowledie of (he usé and purposea | o GalPole i | these mechunical {inprovements, we | little more of the acting -=F at 9th == yesterday and Chairman Johnsc of the pedal and, perhaps the most ! ries through to the end. the immigration committee ann. [pleasing of all qualities, the distine- | 298 5 on which so many eminent should be uble to do a great many| ‘. Hampden's power was revealed o3 that he will press for prompt |tion ‘between playing fortisstmo and L T s do prev As | : banging. He does not bang, vet he . , - bt | action upgn it. brings from the piano, loyd, clens e comc dur - This bill came from the committes lund' wholosonie (onen which “aegy | Dut is a nutiv - s R i ey e = = as & substitute for the Senatc bill (¢ h the pearly planissine notes. j ot o, thiy antipgdean, fend iyl ) =%l not. be a8 ||| - . admit 25,000 Armenian refugee or- |, irtick w program wae so at- | (et B humor 14 8o excapti i noveltst as this ||l DIAMONDS Coming into the home stretch! us to o all o pre- f ; : phans. It proposes restricting immi- [xoing cutstanding toiney aelore: {delightful and entertaining to - srso than last, and unequiv- | & kil at the Brobably be even worse, be- | Gol Sil . e . . gration to 2 per cent of the nationals {ocally evident cans. o b . be- | old and Silver “ » P, g 3 | Al 5 in| B 1 ~d at land of | o + we are not taking time end h - of each country In the United States| Alth o sacrificed tempo for | T, Tema et o andio: e A KAHN Inc. Wmdmg Up rices in quality SHAIE %5 bl at the timo of the 1890 census. et andled so ably the lut- | \alpole’s youthful adiniration of the |weil. 1t is a question us to whether | 935 F St. N.W. especially in the court scene, where, one would not want to hear | hogks by an American writer who | the modern realists, with their book | imeasurs was hailed on the o1 ey % _'r'._"{'{‘_ g hat | - as “a more nearly scient : : oot The “Waltz in L regulation than anything h % e lewaasiuh sl attempted” and assailed on t! @ SToup of six Chovin | liand as proposing a “deliberate di oS, was plased with an crimination” against immi f nfortable swing, each of the swi southern and eastern Europe. " potes striking home —e: : 3 u cellent per- | Success in Few Years. | tor; ;i The aualence was plesyed 7 \ { % : STHisknieasurs il renctictim AT the SOUS €ONGEN wiLiifs / H Only a few days more and your chance to take ad sra o & io majority favorable h 4 ) 4 J ; rtp;l{o{n greatly,” said the majority 1 the cntire bro A >\ vantage of the great bargains Herzog offers in the “If continued for but a few yo S o et \ vent will have passed. te will provide the way for the ha iR 7 a o event will have pe ling of immigration th Unit prog l i al tes just as the people of u the s C e fae i For the wind-up < ited States want it handicd, L ‘ 3 : . ; ‘ 4 ; ganely. Tumuneit. Wit romars o 8 Sonpcs i gathered broken lines snto s lots and priced for the right of the family 5 . from the opera “Dar- pared orokeniimesionto; b 4 sidered as a unit, but with partict haie.” Bas ofietnd fo chow he Al o thein cven lower than before. s ful ps o welfare of the Uni made i > f 2 : : 4 are for the welfare of th n music for the plano i 1 e i nize no representation from cther s Lumbers on the pro- rom this generation or stu, Nocturne in A Flat” and Silk aur nation and those wiio ¢ Min ; BN Ve St * criminatio zainst the 3 Feanohdeal 5 ) y . . 3 e nmieatce s wala 4 S g ol R " : $25 Suits and O’Coats $19,7.‘) Intermezze 1 I3 ’ - -~ . | H o 5 a¢e Discrimintion. e e MO i e WAY. back ini 1870! when Hookinie $35 Suits and O’Coats $27.75 nark, Italy, Norway. Poland, R which Slr. Shattuck re chusetts avenue just west of Dupont Circle, | L e [ e e if| ! Underwear Neckwear States. Air de Ballet,” from "Aloeste,” “The State Department wiil reco i -Saens, was one of the countries that o or threatens |8 grace and stac 5L/ J/ | 1o interfero with that right = our for, a i 8 ] g K treaty-making powers will mike no ’ helChonin e ritbeiry J - o BT Bt b ; Ry , Felt and Cloth Suits & Overcoats | white and Fancy ceneration the right to protee h DinisceNCYE” . noptirte, the \ 2 i : T solidarity, the comfort, 3 g t 2 3 e tn F \ 4 / Haiid-tailored garments from “Stileplus” a . Adoption of the 2 per cent quota Sk 0 Bandc tha tae { Iz . g " L Sh t hased on the 1890 census would be o | ficuities with eombostre an bers fi; ke, Jot—one o W ] Irts the minority rep«l:\rl, which ;\.4\ s L'\'\n d < : 3 ; v Representatives eigel of New o ), D = e : 7 ork, and Maloney of Massachusetts, | G . $30 s'"t’ and O’Coa!s $73 15 republicans, and Sabath of Illinois, 2 Flat Rhap by Brahmns 27 democrat, i€ which is not often hear. *If it is not intended to arbitrari acc ‘!'l"l’ th “Bird Song” and “Isl 5 —— = e discriminate against the immigration | 0f Shadows™ by Paimgren, and th - ol Values to $5.00 $ ?, $ . e P aitis Oiéchostovaitia: De I OF thie Wooles Earaliem th brickyard blocked the course of Massa to §! 4() Suits and O’Coats $31.75 Values to $6.50 mania, Sv\:den and ulh!:r; ;'."ll: tries, act, 50 well was why did the proponents of the me t . i e take the 1896 census?” the report | ° rancis Walking the Waves, Mpyrs. C. Faunce's Sausage Meat won the re-! K odied wot to reance. immigration anist had not up ancil that time gard of Washington folk—and appeased om Great Britain and Germany, but | given au ve exhibition o Waol ‘hirts - (e famous ic o : oon Make. 4 praasng ot silke completely estop almost all immi o me 1 fultilled a y 1 drawers tration from all other countries.” 1 t moving m many a ’aded appetite. . ! g » i in botk suft ond l colbe e - i o waBealia For a wholesome change in your round of A « trie: d th provisio pe n | ¢ i d Ving hear-blond relatives to enter us | daily meals just say to your grocer. delica- non- ta immigrants. Also - 1 Trovil Was wiven o the provisions tessen or market man., “Mrs. C. Faunce for the examination and investigation : | { ‘ coliars—al, . The cicrar priced. for s up a ter buy a co price it of immigrants in the ports of en - barkation for the United States an Sausage Meat. e R s Ask for it by name, because there's a dif- .Values to $1.50 Tho argument alwo was mlnznr'fl‘ ference in sausage meats—a difference that| he mirority that the bill would . . 1 o unsiciiedTabor, | warrants you doing so—a difference that} = o i shoreiy | ) : i has kept this famous old product the stand- Concerned in T. §. Welfare. 2 5 . | Asserting that the signers iwere | ard of excellence for fifty-three years! not Interested in supplying Tabor,” the report said they were 4 ; “Aeeply concerned in the welfare of Manufactured exclusively, and in accord- “he United States, whi osperity . = depends upon Raving ot least a suff ance with the highest standards, by the ctent mount of unskilled labor.” Referring to the provision of the billwhich would exclude et abiention that the Subremo | KEANE PROVISION COMPANY tourt recer ontitled fo be naturalized as citize i f& WASHINGTON, D. cC. - : of the United States, and added: : ~ = { plctunng’ FOUI" OF t]’)e committee feels fully justified eas«v’xrp provisions 3 a N F h' 2 nent’ which i understood to be | e fitted with the proper { < e 19 e committee be es hat he work vsire to read that eptions (relating to students, pro able, you should | { SN0 1 jonal men and m ters of the eyus examined at gospel) to cla the ‘gentle- e men's agreement’ and that the e - Y . o ment of the plan into Jaw will end S S vonennesabe nns a satisfactory manner without fri ‘OST NO MORE THAN tlon a most troublesome problem. THE ORDINARY KIND. Branch Store 712 11th 8%, N.W, DRY CASE CONTINUED. s il | W A Leese 0pTicaL 0 1sh IQ“eenf" clh‘ll"(ged with sale and pos- | session of whisky In violation of the t national prohjbition law, was called lata osp.lrog':‘nE 1;'3-_' o vesterday afternoon in the United o= 1 States branch of Police Court. On ma- tion of the government !t was continued ‘ until February 21. ! - 8 A oy B e GE) Stusds Sk f There is nothing makes one moro uncomfortable than the con- oung FO B sciousness of an unhealthy loking skin, roughness, a blotch, a . pimple, while an unblemished skin gives a confidence, and no rea- " L f 11 son to avold the closest scrutiny. "A Soft, smooth complexion is i or all ages something every woman is proud o nd justly o, for no matter R how perfectly groomed, or beautifully gowned, an imperfect skin mars the tollette, and she Is ill at ease. Your skin can be radiant with health, free from all roughness, irritation and other disturbances and be kept smooth and firm by the daily use of our Tan Ace Calf E couldn’t change the habits of childhood—and i - Sports Oxford Radium Tissue Cl'eam wouldn’t want to! Bless their hearts, youngsters WILL scuff, scrape and grind the life out of their shoes. O’'DONNELL’S DRUG FSTORES { So, we built shoes as near indestructible as honest ma- terials could make them. Built ’em to stand up under a RADIUM PRODUE:I'S CORPORATION lot of hard service, with a smile. We call them “GRO- 1105 Conn. Avenue. Main 6797. NUPS” Shoes. QT AR Come in low and high cuts—all leathers—styles for dress ‘ and school wear for all ages. All alike in being dressy— INSIST! TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE[ wondrously durable—economical. Demand “Phillips”, the original, genuine Milk of Magnesia, prescribed by physicians since 1873. To avold wrinkles or sagging muscles wear an RADIUM PAD under the chin each night. ARG, Strap Pump “Gro-Nups” Prices B . | i, Childe—$2.75 10 $5 . PHI Lllps Mllk Misses’—$4.75 to $5.50 ; po;g: fifle;- Big Girls’—$5.95 to $7.50 2’; 93." s? KSts. Silk Stockings [ 4 s Boys’—$4.75 to $6 “City Club Shof” ~ 1914.16 Pa. Ave. et U o a ne SIa 1318 G St. 933 Pa. Ave. SE, 2:;.97;’:5& KSts . B3 *Special valte at= th St. 3 “@ro-nups” low shoes—now, also, at our “City Club Shop” S K iy g;‘;: 5‘:“‘;} $235 25 and 50 cent bottles contain directions

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