The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 17, 1911, Page 8

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VIRGINIA BRISSAC, at the Seattle. JOE WELCH, at the Orpheum. At the Orpheum. | Miss Emma Dunn, the late star of “Mother,” will be the headliner at the Orpheum next week, in a playiet by John Stokes, entitled “The Baby.” Miss Dunn is support ed by a cast of five people. Willa Holt Wakefield, a woman of brilliant attainment who has en tertained New York's “400,” will be heard in song readings "4 The favorite character comedian Ben Welch, in his original and much imitated Italian and Hebrew char-! acters, is the added attra The Charles Ahearn cy edians, wherein a pretty girl fic ures; Hugh McCormick and Grace | Wallace, both ventriloquists fame; Al Carleton, Guy,” and Anderson, McNell and | Saucedo, premier musical trio, com-| pose the offering e Maje | At the Majestic. Charles W. Bowser and company, | supported by Miss Fiorence Aver in| & sketch entitled “Superstition will be the headline feature at the Majestic. One of the greatest fa Yorites in vaudevilie is Josephine Sabel, in songs and showing pretty of The Skinny | gowns. ‘The Farrell. Brothers present a comedy cycling act which has re ceived favorable criticism from the Musicians of ability are the Vindobonas, eccentric and arti but withal musicians, Forsaking| the tented arena for the more dig nified vaudeville, De.Frates, a top- notcher with the Ringling Brothers’ cireus for two years, comes to the| Majestic in an equilibristic offering. | At the Pantages. Allen Doone, author and actor, is! coming to the | new vehicle, “ land,” which carries ten people and | its own scenery. Sam Hood, known | as “the man from Kentucky,” is} billed for a bunch of pertinent puns. | Powell and Rose will do the black face stunt. The Hidalgos are) booked for a Spanish dancing act. | | At the Lois. With the opening of “The Finan-| clers” at the Lois tomorrow after-| noon, Keating and Flood’s new musical comedy company will pre-| sent a rollicking comedy into which many catchy musical numbers will | be interspersed. West and Vack | handle the roles of two gullible Ger- | man brokers, who eventually are} fleeced of all their possessions At the Seattle. Comedy and pathos will rule at the Seattle next week when the Pringle players, strengthened by| William Dowling, Virginia Brissac | and Stanley Johns in leading parts, will be sen in Hal Read's pl | man Hearts.” The play tells a heart story of the pine hills of Ar- kansas, and has plenty of action DENTIST SUES FOR $15,370 DAMAGES | Dr. Arthur Long, who claims he sustained permanent injuries from | a car, yesterday 6 Seattle Electric company $15,370 damage Dr. Long claims that on March 12 a car from which he was alighting stopped so val will be held for the benefit of the street, seriously injuring his head and right arm, the arm with which he made $100 a w Spinning’s Sixteenth Anniversary Sale puree. We Dow, ep out the dust and make "7. oe Cork point Screw, with protected Hand-Strap pbing $2.00 Adjustable Midget Denk ¢ be Metal Berew Driver — Yours for Bargains Spinning’s Bargain Store 1416-1417 Fourth Ave. FLORENCE AN ER, at the Majestic. NANCE O'NEILL, at the Moore. June 17, i561, there was a battle | ta, at Booneville, Mo. Two days be-| have been few to equal him in Se fore the grestiattie. His makeups are excellent seal of the state and Chevalier probably has no rival | of Missourt had'in the delineation of the coster {Fo monger. With Chevalier wore Ed atehous? na Blanche Showalter Jefferson ing soprano, Myron W A « cnr. clover baritone sol and John C. ean that Holliday, a plano accompanist | nm that AGED PHYSICIAN James or) DIES IN KENT} Cole bet blamed} Dr, T. N. Berlin died yesterday for. Gov. ¢ ne Jackson had) at his family residence in Kent at heard that Brig Gen. Nathantel! the age of 88 years, Dr, Berlin was! |Lyon and United States troops | born jn Pittsburg, Pa., and for } were coming to Jefferson City, practiced in Minneapolis. he grabbed the the insif- services will be held Sunday after- | nia of his office and fled to Boone: | y, ville, Lyon followed hotly and col- |), lided with the M i troops at Booneville. not record that he ever got the seal. | in; [But he did get the guna of the | Missouri troops and a lot of pris | Jo loners. | WORTH $2,000 T0 | Miss “OWL” CAR To miss a street car at 2 a worth $2,000, says B. W. McM os when you are left in the woods and | | must walk three miles back into} town to get to a decent hotel. Yes} terday he began suit against the 8, | nickel car fare, | and $2,000 ge eral McMeans alleges that he boarded a Fauntleroy car in Seattle and rode to Wisconsin st where he was given a transfer to a} lear ahead a block away. He started | for it, but the gates of a pay-as-you enter car closed on him as the con- ductor gave the two bells to the mo- torman, and the car watioad by. And it was the last TOMORROW IS | FATHERS’ DAY) It's Fathers’ Day Please read this seriously, written joshing We" father! | For several) years, the: as | 8] does tomorrow. | for ‘tis in no} mood.| are al been a “Moth Day” and we are supposed to write | a letter home to! mother and to} wear a white car nation, Now cometh a day for dad! The movement was| we are all] expected to think | a little more} kindly of father ‘9 tomorrow. Father has paid the bill J.B. Dodge. he has been the t victim of the thankless | child, and there isn't a song in ex istence about “My Dear Old Dad's the Best Friend After All.” If your father has gone unknown country, give him a little care out at the cemetery just a single white rose might do. | If you've still got your father with you, have a heart-to-heart talk with him tomorrow and tell bim that you know and appreciate him. | NEW YORK—Rude was the excuse Willie Lewis for smashing a subway cop court fined the prize fighter F. & F. STATIONERY 523 Union St. STATIONERY OFFICE SUPPLIES patie to the] | tomorrow language Th $10. | RY the | Kreatent actor, | last night made his first appearance | in Seattle, sang a dozen songs, and est Nghtaing se famed as character Albert Chevalier English 4 firmly his claim fa, In character portrayal there | yon in Kent. The Masons w ave charge GIFFORD, Wash. June 17—Dur-| hes | storm here, | & a severe home phn Engestr BaldnessDueto Maltreatment of the Scalp If we could not show for your own personal investi- gation more and better re sults from the use of higg Eczema Dandruff Cure during the past year than has ever been shown by all other hair remedies, would certainly feel our efforts had been an tire failure. Scalp disease and its resulting baldness is rapidly increasing in this country. It is high time to wake up to the fact that you must be shown, and if the remedy has no past record its future is hopeless. There is no reason wt any one should+go bald, but who are you going to blame for this? Not us. The A. P. Riggs Hair Grower & Cure Co. Two Stores 1216 Third Av., Seattle and 391% Stark St., Portland, Or PASTOR RESIGNS WHEN WIFE FINDS HIS LOVE LETTERS M'KEESPORT, Pa, June I The Rev, Dr. Walter B. Price, pam tor of the First Presbyterian chureh, the most fashionable in the ie minaing. His wife, it te ale dincovered love letters in hi * from women of his floek, hool teach wre the board of the letters read "Don't spurn my love, Don't de wert me now » your promise.” ‘The wife and four of the children are still at the parsonage. One child is away at school, Mra. Prie ioned about the dPap- of her husband, said | » not ask me about my 1 do not know where he ora, and laid the of elders, On pearan The elders, Hunter, pre recely ccording to W. W nt of the board of 1 a petition from mbers April 26 ask ing that be | sign. With t petitic was | said, came a statement from the} eo mying 1 cannot stand the conduct of} my husband any longer. Some-| thing must be done. ’ GRAND PICNIC | | At Pleasant Beach Sunday, the 18th. | ping and refreshments. | m. Tick | years 26¢ ‘Secure Health | while you may! ‘The first good | step is to regulate the action of | your sluggish bowels by early use of | Beecham’s Pills Sold Everywhere. In bones 10¢. and 286. | Pacific Coal & Ol! Co. LADY WELLINGTON to} of} Main Office 401 Hinckley Block Both Phon 5040. Latona Bunkers 113 Northlake Ave. North 465; Green 65 West 11 for West Seattle Pacific Coal & Oi! Co. Twice a day, out at Kent,| | south of Seattle, a herd of cows, | the finest in the state, says Dr. ae W. Johnson, chemist |for the state dairy and food |commissioner, are milked by | machinery, the most sanitary | means that you used to pump! | water from the old well, only} | this pump is thoroughly stetil-| lized before using. ‘The milk is then rushed to the back door lof ‘The Dairy, in big, jfifty-gallon cans, where it is poured into the pateurizing ma- chinery and held at a temperas} Jersey ee eee Willa Holt Wakefield Prices 25c, Ratertaine: Aur AGREAT Prices 10¢ and 20c CHAS. BOWSER 50c, 75¢ New Ye Head McCormack and Wallace “THE PERFECT THEATRE” WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEE “SUPERSTITION” AMUSEMENTS Performances Daily at 2:30-8:20 BEN WELCH 4 Muchelm BIG SULLIVAN & CONSIDINE BILL Performances Daily at 2:30-7:15-9 AND COMPANY —In— Advanced Vaudeville The K “The Mouse of Muste Week Commencing Sunday Matinee, June 18, 2:45 ing and Fiood Musical Comedy Company Presents and Lawahier.” WEST AND VACK WITH JEANIE FLETCHER and a Nifty Chorus of Twelve in “THE FINANCIERS” Three Ghowse Dai! Matinees, 2:45; Evenings, 7:45 and 9:15 CHORUS GIRL’ CONTEST EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 16e—-POPULAR SUMMER PRICES—25¢ MATINEES 15¢ Gays: The Artistic Comedian Pantages Theatre WEEK COMMENCING MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE “Novelty, Music and Laughter In Plenty You'll Find at Pantages for Ten and Twenty” _, ALLEN DOONE ople—Special Scenery—Superb Music His Kminent Eminence SAM HOOD “The Man From Kentocky POWELL AND ROSE lutely where the machinery. put on There is by the cold when it service of The Jersey Dairy. No matter what part of town you may live the « servicé is such that you can be |supplied with the absolutely free ‘ture so that it comes out abso-|from all impurities and not in the Two Real pure by mac drivers, state, ‘The runs through ice cold pipes, to bottles are filled by Even the caps are Minstrel 6 NEW MILKING DEVICE NOW BEING USED BY A SEAT- TLE DAIRY milk hinery. no chance for dirt to touch the milk; all machinery is thoroughly sterilized every day and the milk safeguarded | method known, by the semelin every way. The bottled milk is kept in cooling rooms until taken out is still reaches your ta- | ble, so thorough is the delivery and it finest “Unequaled Vaudeville” His Own Romantic Comedy *A Romance in Ireland” Premiere of 8 FOUR JUGGLING In a Rough-House THE HIDALGOS Hpanish Dancers then milk Comes Out Absolutely Pure. 19, AT 2:30 Pasteurizing Machine, Where Milk AMUSEMENTS Week Commencing Mom day, June 19—Matiness Wednesd: nd dnesday and Saturday OF THE DECADE THE DRAMATIC SENSATION suse, THE LILY BELASCO PRESENTS NANCE O'NEIL, CHARLES CARTWRIGHT and the Famous Bek asco Company, the Greatest Histrionic Organization in Amerieg Prices: Nights, $2.00 to 50c; Matinees, $1.50 to 25¢ MOORE THEATRE—4 Nights, Beginning Monday, June 26 CHARLES FROHMAN Presents . JOHN DREW in Hie Greatest Comedy Triumph “SMITH” BY W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM SEATTLE THEATRE ED L. DREW, Mgr. Both Phones 43 GET GOING Week Commencing TOMORROW (SUNDAY) MATINEE An Idy! of the Arkansaw Hills “HUMAN HEARTS” BY HAL REID A Play That Will Never Grow Old—A True Heart Story MR. WILLIAM DOWLAN and MISS VIRGINIA BRISSAC Make Their First Appearance Tomorrow - Nights—15¢, 26c, 38¢ and 50c. Sunday and Saturday Matinees— 10¢ and 25c. Bargain Matinee Wednesday, 15: Tonight—"“THROUGHM DEATH VALLEY”—Last Time Combination Photo-Plays and Vaudeville The Coolest Theatre in Seattle Nursery Where Mothers May Check Their Babies ADMISSION—Entire Balcony—FIVE CENTS Entire Lower Floor—TEN CENTS 1 P. M.—Continuous Performance—11 P. M. Vaudeville Next Week Marie Marry Selwyn MACK AND SHAPTELS “The Blind Boguar's Dream” — | A Musical Drama. BABY FATSY Juvenile Comedienne A “Made-in-Hegttie” Artist The Highest-Priced, Film Shows, WAGNER'S ORCH Three First-Rom Comedy-Drama Tragedy. International Amusement Co. Lessees—W. M. RUSSELL, Mgr, Grand Opening SUNDAY MATINEE, JUNE 18, 2 P. M. to 11 P.M. With the WORLD'S BEST FOTO DRAMAS Best, Safest, Best-Ventiiated Moving Picture Theatre in the World “GET COMING HERE” ADMISSION—ALL SEATS—FIVE CENTS Third Ave. COLISEUM... WORLD'S GREATEST PHOTO-PLAY THEATRE EVERY NEW COLISEUM FULL FILM ‘FIRST ORCHESTRA SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION MISS MAE THURSTON MR. PERCY BRETLAND Soprano Baritone 2,500 UPHOLSTERED OPERA CHAIRS, 5c “BRING THE BABIES” fi HAVE MADE SPECIAL PREP- ARATIONS TO CARE FOR _ _ MILK DURING WARM | WEATHER insures Good Fresh Milk ‘ for th the Baby : f sponsible for the immense sas sels | ness of The Jersey Dairy. | Butter fat otal solids Sotds not f | Refraction of serum } Out of several hundr University of Washington Seattle May Ist, 1911. n Z. Erickson, Jersey Dairy Company, ttle, Washingte Mr. ed ane alyses of samples taken withitt the past year, this is easily the | Des ar Sir: This is to certify |! that on. April. 30th, 1911, 1) Dest sample, as representing made an analysis of a sample| ‘\\! that we have found lof milk taken froth the herd of| Respectfully, C..O. Johnson by one of the city], CHARLES W. JOHNSON, jmilk inspectors, and and |the following results scuba aon ts st for State Dairy Food Commissioner. cows, which is most tant. It has taken a lot of ex it pays. state dairy touched by a single hand, not even when it comes from the impor- eri~ ence and money to get the milk business where it is today, but All the cows that sup- ply milk to The Jersey Dairy are selected with great care and are regularly inspected by the commissioners. his, with the most up-to-date methods of handling the milk, which insures good clean milk and good delivery service, is re- A TYPE OF DELIVERY WAGON

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