The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 13, 1909, Page 3

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‘T BISINESS i i STEIEN 0 PLAY T ter Actor Wi - in — Tacom Sylva Gives| Valuable Point- ‘ j the Matter of Cos- ses | SERRA RRR A RHR THIS WEEK. y to Wednes Dustin Farnum in Kirby.” Thursday » Chauncey Ol- f Robin.” iddie Foy in of Broadway.” Climax.” ‘The R. E. French y (Bist to 60th per. ) in “A Midnight ” De! Lawrence lh to 66th per in “The Great — Minnie Selig. Bramwell and jarry and Kate and vaudeville. nes’ Trained and vaudeville. PSP eR EEE BY J. W. SAYRE. Oh etage the means of number of prominent Ms ave seldom, if ever, | Dold of the in this clty in connec so-called logitima’ To the Orpheum we @ for Camille D’Arville, Katie Barr: Will Cress: re, ie, Laddie “al eas @ other p engagements | will be added, | 82k. It a iittle more Devil” craze r! in Stevens. fo “The , With the result neared 4 hes lod by G. Aris 4 Edwin Stevens. Each m proved himsecif a mar- actor, and greatly yet established and Suilivan-| is a few weeks ago ‘of the seats In the vaudeville, and would tg the trifling differenc - soompaa if the fer, takes of the matter the Tacoma cit tonight increase the and the $75 per annum| Pantage Sie Every Woman Knows. So tet ho knows that few (of the se to advance Teasons for th being required Syiva, Btreliy and now Dickens’ | etreuit, John W. and Martin Beck @ praised, has, since its es- iat in this city 14 months day ho in bie . casi or in the east to the lure of which alone of the play ene cast bin at ite to be Rand | | In fact it has helped them, as they alffer- Word has ved at the local booking ih retaliation for the hour and a half to}“Unéle Jost Perkins” herself for public as | our former star | in} ae, Se. UAPHEUM 3 ll a | | MARGUERITA SYLVA. She Says Women Should Be Ador able Rather Than Punctual. teeeeeeeeeees % fashions and never has it taken % | them longer to dress. | Taylor sta. |It will be =) ACTRESS Wl TUAN S00 FOR Blanche Bates Will Put Dainty Foot on Spade to Help Build New Syadiente House. (By United Press) PORTLAND, Or, Oct, 18. Blanche Bates, one of Amertea's foremost actresses protege of David Belasco and heroine of sev eral of his plays, will pla daintily shod foot against a spade tomorrow afternoon and will turn the first sod in the netruction of the new Hellig theatre, The mayor, the council, the bondholders of the theatre corporation, and a few hun dred followers of t drama and ad mirers of the actress will be the audience. Bight blocks away from the place where Miss Bates will perform manual labor is a small ramshackle cottage. This was the birthple of the actress not very much more than @ quarter of a century ag Misa Bates herself asked permis sion to break t ground for the new playhouse. The digging will be done with no ordinary apade | Portland wood will form the handle, | Oregon gold will plate the blade. Excavation for the theatre's foun dations will begin immediately after the ceremony, The Heilig will be situated at Seventh and and will cost $150,000 the new home of the Syndicate attractions. *| “But, after all, the question sim % |} mere down to this: Would a man * prefer to wait ® woman or have an unattractive %, Woman waiting for him? It is far more important for a woman to be % | adorable than for her to be pune} ® | tual.” * onewrente * w®) stock actor, is now at * | York Majestic with * | Home.” * * the Ne “A Citizen's Rigo, the Hungarian violinist whose sensational love affairs with | various European princesses has brought him International notori- ety, has decided to go Into vaude- ville, opening at the American Doubtless one or the other of the San Francisco agents will ge’ gypsy fiddler and send} him north to Seattle to play the vaudeville in this section. At the Local Playhouses. Dustin §=Parnem Moore tonight. Chauncey Olcott} in “Ragged Robin” will then be seen until Sunday night, and on} Monday night Bianche Bates opens in “The Fighting Hope.” Eddie Foy in the musical farce, “Mr. Hamlet of Broadway,” will be in | Presented by the Shuberts at the Alhambra ali this week and all next to te Y. iy. “The Climax” rune at the Grand until Saturday night. On Sanday jafternoon “In Old Kentucky” be gins its biennial visit to this city “The Great Divide” is to be the the Lois for the remainder of the week, to be followed by the Winston Churchill drama, “The Crisis.” The current melodrama at the Seattle is “A Midnight Marriage.” On Sunday afternoon “Confessions of a Wife,” a new play here, will begin its run. Headliners of the coming week at the vaudeville houses will be |“Our Boys in Blue” at the Or- |pheam, Bradlee Martin &@ Co. at the Majestic and the Bella Itatia Troupe at the Pantages. Some Melodramas Still Survive. " When Stair & Haviin last sea- son began sending out small com- panies and inferior productions of the standard melodramas, business | fell off all along the line, with the | result that Manager John Cort sent | them a letter, telling Stair & Hav lin that they could have no mo time in any of bis one-night stands in the Pacific Northwest, That put an end to the popular priced com- | binations that, since 1896, when “A Railroad T.cket” and “U & I” fol- lenene in the old stock companie: Russell & Drew had been offering | the patrons of the old Third Avenue ~l|and of the Seattle theatre. | The loss of these bookings did |} not worry Russell & Drew at all ir | have replaced the road melodramas | with a well-balanced stock company at the Seattie, putting on just the! same melodramas with vastly bet ter casts and with scenic equip ments that are new every week. The result is that the Seattle is en- | Joying more business this fall than it did last fall, 7| for an attractive | | | Sheldon Lewis, the former New | theatre in San Francisco next Sun: |) STAR'S DAILY SHORT STORY THEIR ANNIVERSARY. By Fred C. Kelly. Tt was just four years since the Goitte had bought a brase fern | dish, a pleture of “The Hanging of |the Crane,” and set up housekeep | ne in their five rooms and bath But they were still keen for cele |brating an anniversary when hove tn sight The evening prior t which he had carefully encire’ his note book, Goitt |looking pleased with himself. He seomed to think he was pretty keen at remembering dates. ow, tomorrow night,” one din) he be closes at the | *4*" in a just-look-what-l-brought lyou tone, “we're going to get mar ried all over again. I've got tick jets for a good show, and before we) | go to the show you're going to moet me at the office In your very “OH, WELL,” PUT IN MRS. GOITT FOR THE SAKE OF) KEEPING PEACE, WOULD LIKE A LITTLE CREAM.” Guess | ice niftiest, galliest clothes have dinner together at one of the cafes.” Of course, all this sounded pretty good to Mra. Goltt. They back and forth for some time, they confided in each other what fearfully punk time they had all the earlier part of their live compared to the biissfulness of the four years just ending. Goitt said | they would do things up right, the next evening, and start all again, just as if they hadn't been married more’n a week holding NEW THEATRE * | off came home | We'll | salved | while | over | THE STAR ner, mebb ing to The to th wore | t t din and he mit between th not even want ally ng whe in the Lin tb little tabi appargntly wt mood Order up a ge joltt oup you ¢ od Let in’ to Really, 1 don't believe any soup,” declared Mr Oh, well, L won't order olther,” said Goitt, frowning trifle I supposed of course were going to do it up right, and Hut tings moved along firat rate antil they reached the dessert | Well, I'm going to have eo ream announced “What'll it be for yout “l—< honestly Goitt, in a subdued tone belleve T can eat anything more deed T can't Reen to a party this afternoon inquired Goitt, sarcastically 1 #’pose Just because | wanted to pull a little eating stunt this even-| ing you had to hike out somewhere this afternoon and stuff yourself “Oh, well,” put In Mra, Goitt for} the sake of keeping peace, “I guess | I would like a little ice cream, | come to think of it That quieted things down for the time being. “My! That fee cream made me cold,” remarked Mra, Goltt inno cently, as they Were about to enter the theatre, “I feel as if | we KO ing to have a chill.” “Well, if that ian't just like a} woman,” observed Goitt, sharply; | “eat something you don't want just for the looks of things, 1 suppone it wouldn't have made any differ ence if youd known {t would mean going home tn an ambulance, you'd have taken it just the same, Be: | cause why? For the looks of things! That's all you women think about looks! Goitt was still making remarks of a general nature after he ed, about the fool things women do. Mrs. Goitt was getting more and more on the verge of becoming lachrymose, She was twisting at a foolish little wad of a handker chief, such as we mn will carry and looking at the scene on asbestos curtain, Then sh to dab at her eyes with the wad ot) ja handkerchief. | 1 think you're just as mean ax you can b-be,” she blurted forth, | You wouldn't have talked that way four years ago, You don't seom to o¢are a thing about my feclings any more and | wish some- | times I'd never married you The situation was relleved some by the curtain going up. “Well,” reflected Goitt, “wouldn't }it just make you quit drinking the way ao well intentioned affair will turn outT dinner dire kind of | any a wee | a little Goitt began Mrs "I don't} In BALLINGER ON TRIP. (Ry United Pree.) YOSEMITE, Cal, Oct, 13.— Secretary of the Interior Ballinger | started today for the Hetch-Hetchy jand Lake Eleanor districts for the purpose of viewing the proposed reservotr sites for a San Francisco municipal water supply system. | Union Savings & Trust Co. of Seattle Capital .. . $300,000 Surplus and undivided profits ; Some people think the way to save money is to hoard it—hide it away. If everyone did that, one-half the industries of the country would soon be stopped. Dollars are the toots of business. Deposit them where they will do you some good, and help the community where you live. INTEREST 4] PER CENT Compounded Semi-Annually. |f JAMmS D. HUGR, Prostaent. N. B. SOLNER, Cashie: DIRECTORS: 4 4 Sohmits, J. D. Low i en ae Stewart, G. H. Hebb, R. C McCormick, James D. Hoge. N. B. Boiner. CORNER SECOND and CHCRRY STREET |, Georgetown | Branches at an ONE DOLLAR notice that, like a salmon struggling up stream against red swift current, a few.of the old-t{m |road melodragnaé qre sti}l fighting | their way thfough this territory, | was booked | at the Tacoma theatre Monday even-| «| Ing. it Once’ in a while they get! so|into a elty, but for the most part the route sheet of these attractions must be wierd and wonderful, is | Janet Beecher, who was out here Sand opera. Margverita | as Guy Bates Post's leading woman grreeni ninety | in minutes to go over the} “The Hele to the Hoorah,” is soon to be mad@ @ star by William A. Brady. Massage and pow. tiinutes for a bath {0 Adjust corsets and} here at ' 4 minutes ” . , ie hatr. Te Zi8 Adjust the hat. Twen is all that is Ic T costume. it t* very A Woman’ ager: ith, of @ woman’ ER TeBU. there in a but- $ and everything no Pek to arrange her 9 or & man * to Woman wii) spend three art rlor but # man in a Turkish Yet it takes & Woman puts ¢ takes her i D. husband to #ay8 Minx Sylya, ey cannot under do it fewer Drew has beep a Frohman star for M. N.- Ostermamy who is now as the acting manger of “The Climax,” ia brother to Kath- on | ryn Osterman, the well-known com ty- | edienne. ft to B8ome Frohman Misinformation. There 1s a good deal that Charles Frohman’s press agent does not know about Charles hman's en | terprises. For, instance, the latest s\clreular from the Napoleonic of flees gravely agperta that when Ethel Barrymére comes here, next spring, it will be the first time a Frohman star has ever made @ Pa- cifle coast tour in successive years. The fact that John Drew has just been here twice with year's interval between ought to appeal. to the publicity agent, Hremuch as hie Frohman John jews than a| visita | brings a your Sherman Pacific Coa: ers of Vi Dresent full sixteen years. Sherman Pay & Go; 1406 Second Ave., Seattle ing Machines Nineteen Stores on the Pacific Coast Victor to home! ay & Co, onee! st Distribut ctor Talk WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 190y supply thirty The sale started this with ufficient to hundred morning garment two thousand eight and sixty-four men, women and children, we ) Children's Union Suits " for Misses’ for Women's 50¢ Vests and Tights, 3 for And the savings are on a par with the told of, stocks—quite the best ever To give you an idea, there are— Women's $1.00 Union Suits at 68c 25c ——— pecere $2.00 Vests and $1.45 Union Suite Children’s 75c Wool Vests and Pants The foregoing are but the index toa whole budget of remarkable values, The sale began today—lasts all we Find the men’s goods on the first floor and the women’s and children’s on the Sec- ond, WOMEN’S 89c VESTS AND PANTS f snow white cotton. t fitting silk finished neck Women's V sey ribbed. band on th ular price te and Pants jaatic and perf drawers 88 In this sale at WOMEN'S 75¢ FLEECED UNDER- WEAR Women's Vents cream; high neck eth drawers All in one lot at ......+ and long WOMEN’S $2.00 SILK GARMENTS Women's Vests and Drawers of fiesh, light blue and white. beautiful finish, Regular price price WOMEN’S $2.00 WOOL GARMENTS Women's Vesta and Tights, cent wool, 16 per cent linen the leading mill In the country price $2.00. Sale price WOMEN Four hundred Union Sufts, ] tea. Well known but can't gut price. Wer xray. Regular price $3.00. aidnual sale at rp be ++ 3 Modern Department Stores FOU WILL SAVE MONEY ng your den a . 1 arm geting pot com th cheap but 1 aim very beat be ALHAMBRA THEATRE Russell & Drew, Managers. Main 61 Ind. 253. Matinees Today and Saturday. EDDIE FOY In the New York Casino Succeas, | “MH. HAMLT OF BROADWAY.” Nights, 0¢ to $1.50: Matinees, SOc to $1.00. Seattle Theatre Husecll & Drew, Managers. Roth Phones 43 Matinees Tomorrow and Saturday. | “A Midnight Marriage” (Direction of R. B. French.) Nighta, Ife to $0¢; Matinees, 10c | "and 36 0c. Nights, 10c, 2, 600, T8e. Vaudeviliec ncing today matinee. star feature acts. Selig Bounding The ok Bramwell Katchen Loigset Btandian Booth) B Mudge. Le Motion Pt novelties tent Or the Prices, 100, 200 Tus, OF Pants and Tights in pure white and sleeve Values T5c and over, Soft and shimmering; $2.00 Jersey The finest product of Regular UNION SUITS FOR LARGE finest made in Amer. Woo! and iinen in cream white or stl | Phones Plenty for all who come quickly, WOMEN’S 50c VESTS AND PANTS, 29c | Misses’ and small women's fleece-lined derby ribbed Vents and Pants, white | silk crocheted neck; tn silver gray. Worth 50c. Bale price WOMEN’S $1.00 UNION SUITS Women's white fleece-lined Union Suits, finest fin- ish, open down the front; long sleeves and ankle length; high neck. Regularly wold at $1.00 68c WOMEN’S 75c VESTS AND PANTS Women’s Veits and Pants of gray or cream jersey ribbed cotton, extra length vests, ankle length draw- ers, Regularly 75c a garment, ~55c Bale price BLACK EQUESTRIENNE TIGHTS Three-fourths merino wool, open or closed; fast dyes; finest quality; regular ee up to Ps 50. ~95c Bale price .... ‘ CHILDREN’S S VESTS AND PANTS Children’s Vests and Pants of pure white jersey rib- bed cotton, fleece lined, Sizes up to 16 19¢c All at one price, a garment CHILDREN’S WOOL GARMENTS Children’s natural wool Vests, Pants and Drawers; sizes up to 16. ues up to Tbe. 7 Sale price .. CHILDREN’ Ss UNION SUITS Children’s and misses’ snow white fleece-tined | | Union Suits; finest quality; perfect goods; perfect fitting, winter weight coo BTC | jer. French satin Ke 68c ankle 48c vests, WOMEN’S WHITE VESTS AND PANTS en's white jersey rib- Vests, finest quality | #itk finished; ankle length Pants to match. Regular 60c garments. Sale price 3 for $1 Oo CHILDREN’S FLEECED PANTS Children’s white Pants, jersey ribbed, ined; winter weight. Sizes 1 to 10 Years 4.465 Sizes 10 to 16 years silk and linen in $1.45 ribbed; 85 per $145 cotton fleece advertised ai Ages 10 Ages to 16 .. | tof wf: Moore Theatre *SUcon? s Leading Playhouse. Tonight Mat Today a PARNT M, of (14 Loulstans, Meo KiInnY,” ‘arkington and Harry Leon Wileon. & ©, Mana, . bee te $2.0 Bake Oven Treatment For Ladies and Geni Maxeage and Cooling Room Incteded te ‘Treatment. We Solictt Your Patronage, —TOURIST BATHS— 2 orrow Evening Until Sunday ing Inclusive—Only Matl- | nee Saturday { OHAUNCEY OLCOTT Prices, a Ocetdental. The Father’s Crime Raising a poverty-stricken family in this world when they all might be wealthy. Why do some folks live from hand to mouth, paying rent, rent, rent? It is too bad some fathers are so thick-headed; something like the ox or horse, when chances are growing less every day to get rich buying 5 or 10-Acre Tracts at Birmingham AT $50 PER ACRE ON TERMS OF $2.00 PER MONTH Men with brains buy land on the Sound; fools laugh at them; fools work for others all their life, like the ox. The LAST BIG LAND ==SALE OF== 2,000 ACRES == OPENS == AT BIRMINGHAM, Tomorrow, Oct. 14th Even: y and Week b ing next Saturday SEAT SALE TOMORROW David Belasco Presents CHE BATES In Hor Greatest Success, Pe a) FIGHTING Hore.” y W. J. Hurlburt. One Ye at The Belasco-Stuveysant Thi York Mati- | @ inning Monda oe Thursda b0c to $2.00, Greatest Sensation ot the Pert “THE CLIM. nV obereth Direct tre re, 3 ne $1.66; N.Y. Mati: Beat morning LOIS THEATRE Sunset, Mate 1304; Ind. | Sixth Week th ° eb 8 Lawrence AT 4 tector tif TO-NIGHT ADMIS SION FREE $10,000 Marathon Race Dugdale Park Sunday, C Oct. Greatest International Runners HENRI ST. YVES, JOHNNY HAYES, WADA, JAPANESE MUSHER, AND OTHERS, CHAMPIONS OF IN THE GREATEST MARATHON EVER RUN, THE WORLD, Admission $1.00. at Joe General Seata on sale Music House Reserved Beats $2.00, $3. Schlumpf's Cigar Store, and Shaw's Pharmacy. AND = ‘Friday, Oct, 15th Big FREE BOAT VE- NUS leaves Pier 6 at 10 a. m.; returns at 7 p. m. Come early to get seats; foggy mornings are always sunshiny days. Over 6,000 acres have been sold the last 90 days; dozens of new houses going up. We have work at big for all kinds of men, R, R. and street cars run through this land, as it is only 11 miles from Everett, Get on boat; no tickets needed; or come to C, D. Hillman’s offices in Times Block for free maps and guides of all this coun try. 8 FRESH WATER LAKES FULL OF TROUT AND BLACK BASS ON LAND, 15 MILES OF WALK TO BE LAID. MEN WANTED NOW. wages 17, 2 P.M. TOM LONGBOAT, $600 worth of Berries raised on one acre of this land at Bir- mingham or Earlington or Pa- cific City, 00 and $5.00, Sherman-Clay's

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