The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 13, 1913, Page 2

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fH ATURDAY, Second Big Week MOOR a> Matinee Every Day THE CHEATTLE'S theatrical season Ia making a rather belated bow thie | S year. Each of the three “legit” houses—the Metropolitan, the Moore and the Seattié—however, open up with unusually strong | bills The Seattle, with the return of the Bailey & Mitchell players, | opens Monday hight with “The Traffic,” a play written by a Seattie airi, | that has won enviable fame in California. The Metropolitan will remain dark for another week, and will op a week from tomorrow with Augustin MacHugh's quick-triggered fa melodrama, “Officer 666," The Moore will not open till a week later, when the benutiful Kitty | Gordon will be with us. She is appearing In “The Enchantress,” and, being quite a society lady In that dear old Lunnon town, her engage ment here will be considered somewhat of a society event The vaudeville houses will all have new bills beginning Monday matineo OWING TO THE ENORMOUS SUCCESS OF WONDERFUL NINE-REEL PRODUCTION LES MISERABLES MOORE Extended One Week The Engagement Has Been Loa Miserables,” the elaborate! “Orticer 6660” goes on duty at t nine-reel production of Victor | Metropolitan theatre for a week's ree == Hugo's masterpiece, will remain at engagement, | beginning Sunday, Prices at All Performances 25c and 50c the Moore for one more week wtOtricer 666" comes wot waher Heginning Sunday, September 21,|alded to Seattle | All Seats Reserved K Gordon will ona ft His fame has beon country-wide, nigt ongaKe tin “The Tn /and, tf rumor be true, he will tn chantre a vehicle that is herald on b of tneldent here od as lavishly eq 1 nie, trag athetic, melodramat costume, a cé ation most af and then some, — seatte COMING! opr prima 4 rough three acts of intense inter bad na’e ta and taste est As . f the Hon, Capt Officer climbs up a bal ’ N UALED SUCCESS Harry Heresford, brother of Lord | cony of a ome Fifth av, man Miss Gordon has London b in th second-story win society with her orig and ar dow, and there begins the farce tle creations And, of course, a8/ drama of pursuing a dress suit a warbler, she is known favorably burglar, who ts enamored with a th continents priceless collection of famous There something of a plot paintings and a beautiful girl at —iN » young prince, who could! one and the same time ‘ na re Augustus MacHugh ts the author| ew of the play “THE ENCHANTRESS” SEPTEMBER 13, 1913. Kitty Gordon (Joa. M. Gaites, Direction) “Victor Herbert's best opera.”"—N. Y. Wor | SEATTLE “The Traff play written by Miss Rachael Marshall, the Unt versity of Washington girl, which ade such a tremendous hit tr nd Los Angeles, will r “FIVE NIGHTS Starting SUNDAY, SEPT. 21 PANTAGES the theat H hen the Rat-| Unequaled Vaudeville Means Pantages company will Vaudeville open the regular season Le — — _ The Traffic” 1s a story of two! young sisters, struggling against BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEE the insidious white slave ring. , Society’s Latest Craze It is based upon a real eptsode, | as related in an article that ap | TANGO DANCE peared in Collier's magazine re sips cently || As Danced by ALLISON & TRUCCO. Miss Marshall's dramatization f has such a finished touch that th play ran for four weeks in Sar Francisco and seven weeks tn Los Ang . though it had been book AMEEN ABOU HAMID Arabian Whirling Acrobats. Other Big Features. ee ed for only two weeks in each of) Ne 10c and 20¢. rd bight . —— The prices of last sea-| Ae son will again prevall at the Se ra attle. tek | ; | He EAT | LE. ‘ (EAT RE ORPHEUM Eight vaudeville numbers and the} popular Orpheum Weekly, contatn-| ing local events, is the array of en- tertainment offered tn the Orphe- um's program for the coming week, |beginning Monday. Three of the acts on the Dill are scheduled as headliners. | | Charlotte Parry will present a ne character posing. This act Is book ed as one of the The ap earance here of Maude Lambert ima jonn BAILEY s: MITCHELL MGRS ®2°5 0” Commencing Monday Night, September 15 BAILEY & MITCHELL Open their second season tn “THE TRAFFIC” A drama of the White Slave Problem, and company offering in Miss Eleanor Wil as “Adwin, the Poet,” the Naturalist.” n, as “Ornis, and (at righ the pr PRESIDENT SEES HIS DAUGHTER IN STRANGE PLAY OF PROTEST ." the Bird Spirit; t) Ernest Harold Baynes as “Shy, Ornta,” the “bird eplr No one Was more greatly sury father at the remarkat talent the young woma Her ve was soft and w Jerful. ly app &, as she exhorted the bird hunter to forsake hia rifle The climax of the piece came when the report of a gun sounded through the woods and “Ornis, the bird spirit, is consoled by the fauns, po druid and naturalist, who finally ake of the repentant plume hunt- er lover of birds The setting was picturesque and the performance of much merit By RACHAEL MARSHALL news to the Or MERIDEN, N. H., Sept. 13.—In Matinees Thursday, Saturday, seine 25¢ Bl Wynn is returning with a company |® srove of pine trees, with soft Special Bargain Night Monday 25¢ Blin a pres known as “The| Strains of music from an orchestra it Evenings, except Monday ........-- “60-20-206 King’s Je and Purke| concealed by the forest's « have before as | #4 lghts dulled into a sem a — — - —— alts” » y dawn, President Wil¢n sat i ich appeared at the Moore. and saw his ngest d ——WIRE—— The other numbers are: Robdie nor, play the star Gordone, classte x; Junggman Mackaye’s masque Family, at claire ang Orpheum tion was intended WDOUBLE HEADER TOMORROW 1 show events at the! ' ioe protant « He ° a? | LN | county fair, the opening of the new |" ts agains © provision in Games for 1 Admission) gy. Louis —Fire which destroy-| ball vas well as many other | the Underwood tarift bill, whfch 4 + Commencing at 2 o'clock. led the dlevator of the Stas dard| things of local importance rmits the importation of bird } Sut umes - k § ttle | Tilton Milling company, at A Miss Wilson played the role of | Il, near here, caused a panic | a wenies - pokane vs. Seattle 2, ne: nom cost s snc [PANTAGES os , 2 DUGDALE’S NEW PARK | wore aileht Take 4th Ave. Car. —- opens next Monday for sec | ‘The offering at the Pantages the AT THE THEATRES KETCHIKAN, Alaska.—Canadian| NEXT WEEK ing week contains for the ¢ atre seven games. boundary 8 camp at variety and some novelties rarely Moore ‘Los Miserables,” in Muzon, Dall been de-|seen in vaudev motion pictures (e) TES 8-HOUR by 1 -" The headliners are Ameen Abou “ LA stoves by & wT Hot.| Hamid and Acablen |i. Meravelienn Dace W; DRAWS A FINE °°?" Bade named Rob-| eit a wn |) Seattie—Railley & Mitchell Stock LA roe agg dig reported | ¥ ng acro senting the Pr “The Traffic,” Killed. strenuous danc d marvelous jo. in “The Tratiic, ~V. E. Lott, of the millinery estab- | athle and ac feats for which the A | SAN FRANCISCO.—The Pacific t | Allison and 29 Ss ‘7 ishment at 1529 Second av., tae The United States cannot claim ationa THE MARKETS A sharp advance tn the price of butter Monday ts predicted. on the street today. A shrinkage of} cream has been caused by the| weather and late rains Ed oa market was steady today. demand for the fresh i Rei k is expected next week from the North. There is a large demand 1 a 0 ‘oast S. 8. Co. 1 add a ne o | “| low his back . 0 eight-hour law Stn i be Fs A a oil i; Re (o ciety II present the| the largest creature that ever lived, for apples, which the street is un- fw women. Judge Brown yenter- ir tematein, Sine on les oar tem eee n novelties, in-|for the Gigantosaurus Africanus of |S to supply, owing to the scare: day fined him $10 and costs. Mrs.| p t Ml oluding the recent society craze,|c : : ity. The shortage ts expected to laisse Lott was disch ag Philadelphia to t coast | cha Yanan *| German East Africa, whose nearly | prevail until the arrival of the Jon- as means | Maieno and company will | complete skeleton was Iately dis-|athans, in a couple of weeks, With _ CHICAGO — Chicago fireman a Western ts fee interred by German geologists, was) practically the last of the supply rT 1 tabloid drama v , | carried guests from the uppe Tidten eatin jabout 160 feet long and 13 feet tall.|of Albertas on hand, a peach short Rite it the total While| Anderson and Goines furnish fast|Th@, Upper armbone, of which the|age 1s imminent, ‘Tomatoes are jo be We that building was in flames Inst|fun and Misa Pony Moore and Davy | British muesum has received a/atill scarce night. The building was only par-|and Fifi are billed for “bits of vau- | “Ast, measures 7 feet 1 inch. .| agg real ee tee Tagg y burned partes And, y, the De Vole (Corrected da ly by J W. Godwin | >, obats 0. 4 | TACOMA. — Ludwig Mamiock, ‘RESINOL CURED 8 @ Loe Jaged 20, and Geo, Scheel 100 76 were fatally burned when creo EMPRESS % @ 40 sote they were m took ay |Spude, 78 @ 1.00 2 ‘ Spuds, White river, at the Carbon Che ’ loenl see e 17.00 91920 - he Concealed Bed,” by | Onions .. see 01M 01% \nucttne author cat “Bunty Pulls Lents Bree x4 OLYMPIA—Dr, Hugh Summey ; Rah, Hubbers 01% si h t i a - f d at the sttenaitana “| St. Louis, Mo, June 9, 1913.~ 70 @ 1.00 i 1 yesterday at his hom |Mletcher + oe My wife was troubled with what se 76 lere on oked like water blisters on the|Gorn avi ppt ieey | er r of cannon balls, | back of her hands, They {tched a lettuce 20 @ 25 LEY, Cal. — Secretary and burned so much that she had |Radisnes ai. es ane went for an automobile rido| to be rubbing them most of the yee lor utter, " 7 « poultry, veal and pork Hi - BY A DENTIST sterday. He is inuch improve MRS. WESTMAN AND time. After a while they broke fected daily by Berry’ Bros.) ; | health, but has cancelled hia} ; spen and began running together, ; a8 Be ON FIRST AVE |contemplated swing around tho} HER CHILDREN HERE lictving «raw and very. dosightly Huns over 2 Ibe fat, 15 @ ‘to i NUE | r Mra, Ava Pond We {fore #0 that she had to wear|Hons, tat, 8 Ibs, and ' j | rae ae Mra. Ava Por estman, acquit-| gioves whenever she went ont, | under ‘eT . 13 ij | PORT TOWNSEND.—Capt. B. m,|ted of the murder of her husband “We tried a half-dozen different | 470% are, tive tee ne : aii oF tha weve he and her six children, have taken 2 | pucks, old, tive 10 j " of the revenue cutter Ta reba ae ken | remedies and prescription, but toj#prin «ducklings, 3 been ordered east to|Up ® temporary residence in West | no avail, until one day I received a| | White Peking |... a4 Uy Pr. i | mand the Onondaga, on the At-|Seattle, in a little house furnished | sample of Resinol Soap and Res | Soring auck)Ins 4 ¥ 4 ‘ey hfe nto antic coast tA ae we digege son She {nol Otntment. She got so much ene, fat 3 BA on. scr orricns - a atieiae ete fap celal be Saka #he encouragement from the sample) Turkeys. fat, 24 it ase AN FRANCISCO.—Fifty Hindus “@¥", one know how she I bought a large Jar of Res-|TYKOit. o% i 713 First Wve. Union Bc wino came to thie country From the) Will eare for the children inol Ointment and a cake of |sqftths, ood sise, de. ie 4 nes, were ordered deported Resinol Soap, After using 4t about | Guinea fowl, tive. da 8.01 * igoona, a 0 ; by Commissioner of Immigration WILL FORM CHURCH | three nights we discovered a great | Ol), PYty whew 4 A, Caminetti improvement. In about a week al y¢ fat , Ld apie wh he. disbandment of the in began to form, and the itch 12 a“ PORTLAND.—John Worthington, Union Preatuterian’ chur {28 and burning ceased, After us- fvod *” bidek oe ed |motorman, and John Thomas, cor Valllneterd inlastoa. In ne.|ing only one Jar of Restnol Olnt-| ‘hows, fresh . 10 a dustor, of! .the street car. tt Jance With a vote takow by the | ment tnd a cake of Resinol Soap, |Pork, largor ........ 06 8 crushed Matthew Gevrutz to death ie / ned e o pure T rushed Matthew Gevrutz to deat h presbytery, a new ehureh| She Was entirely cured. This was! WASHINGTON.—A new 85 coun. sp » organized ‘at 2:30 Sunday |" years ago and she has not terfett noto is at large in great HH ee st x orth av, and N, 43nd ét,| orcs: wapey Shan fim euie ave numbers. It {8 a poor photographic fF RAYMOND.—H. W. Urquhard,of || Robt, Asa Smith as pas-|” hetters proof, even than such a| reproduction, but ts on good paper, { EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. §,| ig he ati and Charles H. Faqua,-of lietter, 18 to try Resinol yourself} Just when grapes are ripe and Seattle, have plied for a frar and how quickly the trouble|you're too hot A lazy Sentile’s Lendl) Denth fi 1 bei lazy to ex ; _ eaatasiend mame 5 | # the ng of a g The total area of the Nationas di ra. Resinol Ointment and] pectorate the seeds, surgeons an j : 713 ales Avenue | plant Applicatio i or of June 30, 1912, was| Re yap are sold by all drug-|nounee that they've taken a pin {i tays| made for a franchise at é 00 acres, an ft Ase from | ist For free trial, write to Dept. | from the appendix of Miss Dorothy j { with’ 4 for people who work. Bend 86,000,000 In 1905, 15-R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md, Pine of Now Jersey, Percy Mackaye,| " portrayed by Miss Wil-) SERVICE INDIAN WINS COGBURN, on INDIAN MOTORCYCLE, breaks dirt track RECORD Sept. 9th at King County Fair Grounds (Meadows Race Track), also wins both races, DEFEAT. ING SIMMONS and ROSS, the crack riders from PORTLAND, his nearest competi. tors, both riding EXCELSIOR machines. COGBURN won Ist race by % of a mile, 2nd race by 4 miles. The INDIAN MOTORCYCLE has won nine out of ten events this season in the NORTHWEST, which proves the DURABILITY and QUALITY of the INDIAN MOTORCYCLE, | Ask for Free Demonstration, also about our easy payment plan. Catalog for the asking. OUR AIM rtec Treatment DISTRIBUTORS BALLOU & WRIGHT LARGEST AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORY, MOTORCYCLE AND BICYCLE HOUSE IN THE NORTHWEST. Portland Store, Broadway at Oak. 817 East Pike St., Seattle, Wash. Phone East 471, IT’S GREAT OLD GAME! For this is what they do to you; When the Puget Sound Electric But only a very few of them were railway, operating the Seattle. Ta at the ticket ofice: really used to Tukwila! Some of “Give me a ticket to Riverton them were used in travelin ore th 9 onl: coma Interurban, goes before the sig return,” you say, as you lay half the mileage! y State Public Service _Commission down your 15 cents, As a matter of fact, very few people travel back and forth from Tukwila. The fare to intermediate points is the same as to Tukwila. And the Puget Sound Electric Co. has been getting away with the You get a ticket. “But this is to Tukwila!” you say, as you look at it The ticket man doesn’t pay any attention. And as Tukwila is be- yond destination, you should to formally plead for permission to charge higher rates to the suburb. an towns outside of Seattle and Ta- coma, it will present a report from the ticket offices of the company, showing the sale of tickets. At the Seattie end of the line it worry. ie for some time. will show that its sales to Tukwila, When the company appears be- a neil for instance, are very large! fore the state board, it will show 9 Tukwila is 11 miles from Seattle! by Its ticket sales so many people Don t Read Th ! There won't be many sales to carried 11 miles for 15 cents both Riverton! ways that the board may be expect. 9.70 only f-rent ire in Seattle Riverton Is only elght miles from y see the justice of the “trust™ tims iret Fun eer Seattle! company's demands UNION. WeEmer And there won't be many sales The company has really sold all Bet. Pike and Union on Third Ava to any of the other points closer in these tickets to Tukwila! There's gran we cor ete chang of pro. th Riverton and Tukwilal ino disputing that! GRAND JURY INDICTS NINE AS SLAVERS —— | red In ‘all, the jury reported 24 {n-| dictments to Judge Neterer, four) of which were secret. The fury| was then adjourned until beieee ot) 20, | WE'TAKE IT FOR GRANTED that the — systematic characteristics of thrift are beneficial to the in- dividual, but we fail to teach this habit in our city schools. ff our children are Nine indictments were retz! by the federal grand jury Friday, charging violations of the Mann white slave act. Those indicted are: A. R. Watson, B. Aurand, J W. Wolsh, A J. Glanett, H. FE. M Among those Indicted were Ray Fuhrman, for concealing $500 as-| fortier, James Brennan, I sets of her husband, recently sen- Vigo epee’ |tin, Joe Zydman and ek .ltenced on a aimilar charge; Ohar.|| ‘2%ett it, they’ will te Nooth. Mail was fixed at $5,000 in lie Loule and James Ralston, on al} More efficient citizens, Jeach case. second smuggling charge. our city will be a better | city. LABORER GETS |SENDBODY HOME) 'nterest at | | | a 4V/2% THE BANK FOR SAVINGS LIVERPOOL, Sept. 13.—The cage of the late Mayor William Gaynor of New York were taken on board the Lusitania today. The lship was scheduled to sail at 5/ $30,000 VERDICT pt. 13.—Willis D. Hoag, a $2.50-aday laborer, |p. m. is today awarded damages of The body was taken from the| $30,000, the largest ever given |town hall, where it lay in state! Corner ake Ave. and by a Multnomah county jury in fiast night, to the pler under es-| Pike St. a personal injury ca fast of a detachment of mounted rues Hoag was injured by an elec- tric shock while working as | police and placed in an especially lineman for the Washington- constructed mortuary chapel. It was met at the gang plank} by the officers of the Lusitants The liner will arrive in New York | Friday. | | ENDORSE LISTER — HONOR SYSTEM. The honor system for convicts, Gov. Lister, recely. Oregon Corporation. His sult w based on the theory that the foreman of the company should not have as- signed him to this work on ac- count of lack of experience. ‘NEARLY A HERO’ bes adopted by nanimous endorsement of the > : No th End Improvement club, at a PORTLAND, Sept. 13.—After " Seana ¥ confessing that the story he gave meeting held Friday night. MILLMADE to two local papers to the effect [that he had leaped 75 feet fron! GIRLS STILL AT IT the Broadway bridge and rescued ig a man from drowning in the Wil:| LONDON, pt. 13.—Militant lamette river was false, Walter B.| suffragettes. burned the railroad Manning, a city fireman, is today} station at Kenton early today T '$18,000 ESTATE IS —s |, LEFT TO HOSPITAL | ft the vicinity “Votes for Women” Mr. Renter: ged from the service placarded literature, rn dischar Have you ever PROGRESS IN PANAMA || noticed that home- Tho entire estat f Theodore| | = GTON, Sept. 13.— | : . 8. Benson, formerly a locomotive| | According to | dispatches re- like little bungalow, ; ve) | cetved today at the war de- % engineer, who died two years ago,| | partment from Col. Goethals, the Mill Made bun- leaving property valued at $18,000, has been willed to the Children's Orthopedic hospital chief engineer of the Panama Culebra cut will be fin- and water galow, out at First canal, ished September 15, Two beds will be established, in| | '* aay 7 memory of Benson and his wife, | Willbe admitted to the Basin | Avenue and Wall Mrs, Caroline Greenllef Benson, to by October 6. street P | | | | | |be supported out of the tncome of EN EMC 4 the estate. SEATTLE THEATRE OPENS SEASON MONDAY NIGHT TO OUR PATRONS: Our experience of last season having proved that high class drama at popular prices is what the peo- ple of Seattle desire, we will continue to serve our and ad- of mill "Fully halt the carpenter work on this done before the r was hauled to the lot ming was done at the he walls and partitions ie at the mill. The 1 colling joists ted at the mill. was even set and the door frames were fit- struction vantages’ of a appearance, made character. house was lum up at the and window ted there. mill, The best way to judge, this clientele with the. best plays extant at popular prices.| Soins out_and ook "und Plays booked by us for this season include many| Some” *°°™ invitation» never produced in Seattle—and none of them at_pop- We are always here durin business hours. Evenings am Sundays by appointment. ular prices. We have contracted for plays not con- jtrolled by the trust. Ali are of proven merit. “The Traffic,” a play of intense human interest, written by Miss Rachael Marshall, a Seattle girl, will be our opening production Monday night, Sept. 15. We thank our friends for the patronage ex- tended us last season and invite all of those and their friends to visit our theatre often. “The Best” is our motto Coast Construction Company’ 2500 First Avenue Telephone Hiiott 1121 BAILEY & MITCHELL.

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