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a 2 STAR—SATURDAY, J ULY 3, 1915, PAGE 2. OFFERINGS AT SEATTLE THEATRES THE COMING WEEK Scene ) From “Sarl Mrs. Pat Campbell at the Metropolitan GILL'S GOING TO WEAR HIS ‘OPEN FRONT’ Uxtry! Mayor Gill's going to wear his dress suit to the police band dance tonight, at Lesch! pavilion. He and Mrs. Gill are to lead the grand march, which begins at Pp. m., or thereabouts, Hi look simply grand in a dress suit "Djever see him in {t? No? Then you'd better be there. The more hardy ones will dance until the wee, stilly hours of the Sabbath morn, if they so desire, {t is announced. Early morning church goers may see them, sleepy: eyed, seeking a cable car, In the cold, gray dawn. It promises to be one of THE af- fairs of the season The police band, of 35 pieces, will furnish the music. They'll play stuff which will enable the more rheumatic el ders to enjoy the time-honored round house. | The dance ts under the direction of a committee headed by Police ‘Inspector Mike Powers, supplement-| ed by Tilfkums. The dance is to raise funds to finance a trip for the musical cop-| © pers to the Panama-Pacific expos!-| tion, and possibly farther South. They and the Tilikums plan to| Marshall Caughey, treasurer of th TREND) RARARAAAR Anny | _ Height of Imagination @ Mosquito-less summer resorts. ' Safee and sane Fourths. { ‘ Hugh Wallace as a “per- } sonal” adviser of Wilson. {@ Congressman Humphrey { paying his own “traveling } expenses.” } {J Bob Hodge paying $250 } \ to Ole. ) ) Miss Frances Cowells, 18, of San Francisco, sets up new world’s rec ord in 50-yard swim. Made it in 33 2-5 seconds Twenty requests by army officers for voluntary retirement to engage in manufacture of ordnance for Du-| pont Powder Co. denied by preal- dent. We didn’t raise our army of- ficers for private profits Hugh Wallace of Tacoma Washington, D. C., is wealthy would like to be a personal adviser of President Wilson. Ho is back in Tacoma and once more he de nies he has been selected as sonal representative” of the dent. and and per prest . ’ e Seattie rk board says it’s all right to spoon in park. Take it from us, it’s a pleasure to spoon most anywhere. ——4) While the directors were waiting) for him to explain his accounts, J.| aud smears of paint over the San|Annapolis Banking & Trust Co. Francisco landscape October 1 and| Shot himeelf. 2, Seattle and Washington days. The dance, by the way, will cost of a wheat crop led Fred Pointe You and yours just one dollar. Here are two facts of note in connection with the dance. | Inspector Powers will be decked | out in a new uniform. Alexander Ragtime, Sergeant C G. Carr, who's leader of dat} band, says he can but echo the assertions of the illustrious must- cian, and say, “It's just the finest band whet am.” The Hollywood Lunch and Soda Fountain, 212 Pike St—Ady. PATENTS 7 a ~th Balabridge Manchester, Colby oe Harper. Beats Leave Vier 4. Eliott 2661, Elliott 5842. Don’tSell Your Birthright! In the United States all men are born free and equal. Did you ever stop to think that here you are entitled to financial, as well as by frittering away all of your earnings now. Save at least nick- els, dimes and quar- ters—the fragments of fortune. Deposit them at this strong bank. Soon they will enable you to build an enduring structure of INDE- PENDENCE. Deposits made on or before July 10th draw interest as of the Ist. DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK BRCOND ANU CHERRY Quarreiing over the harvesting |farmer, to kill four persons of one |famity at Vienna, Mo Firet annual Leg of Wash.| }ington Automobile Chamber of Commerce held at paleo today Less accidents reported to state! June,| industrial commission 1914 than tn June, 1915. Condition of Franklin 0, Roose- velt, assistant secretary of navy, in Nod operated on for able today H. Maxwell Brooks of Spok disbarred as attorney on his « motion, reinstated by supreme cc following his pardon from priso appendicitis, fa ISFWHERE MOORE SHOWS vor ane own | purt n, W. D. C. Spike, old resident of Tacoma, dead Bomb explodes in capito! ¢! i Crank shoots J. Plerp Morgan A few things like that and eve: the Rathekeller license fianc P .2 W. W. Chapin, formerly newepa- | Miss perman at Seattle, to marry n ° may get crowded off the first Katherine Grey Sutherland of New York. mento. Monthly report for June of D. #tant labor commins License issued at ent of Seattle public employm office, shows 2,144 positions ft by organization tn that month Nominations for office tral Labor council will be July 14 and election will take a week later ™, BSacra- w. jon- ington and superintend- nent Hed of Cen ade place Mr. and Mra. Henry Fuhrberg of West Seattle, celebrated 25th 1 versary of their wedding this w Party of five boosters and ad’ tising men of Britixh Columbia rived in Beattle Friday, en | home from San Francisco fatr. ve lest fires aro 1 in hand. Cc. W. Wiley, new marine su | Steamahip Co., for Portlan4, to acsume new du ni ver. ar route State Fire Warden Ferris, who Ie; #2 Seattle for a fow days, says for- é per. | {ntendent of Great Northern Pacific left the city Friday/ | Japanese steamer Mexico Maru the Orient. |¢ arrived in Seattle Friday night from *" Diaz is a Gen. Huerta is under arrest. And still Carranza wants to cule Mexico. take a chance. AA Like Jimmy Cre han in a Ford, he’s willing to H Safety First Let It Be the Watchword of Every Boy and Girl. Fair play is always SAFE play. | When you push and grapple and way of danger. When you hear the “siren whistle keep on the sidewalks It's lots of fun to run to fires, but the boy or girl whose motto Is “safety first” keeps at a safe dis- tance from fire engines. Don't—this is for boys—try break thru the fire line can't do any good, and get seriously hurt Don't—here’s another boys—use a slingshot. in the hands of care boys cost many people their eyesight. Don’t play with matches. Don't light fires in the yard un- less some older person ts with | you. Remember this | cident that happens to a child hap. pens in the street. Keep on the | sidewalks, | ous. to You may one for Slingshots | TACOMA, July 3.—Jumping about jerick Gillespie, 14-month-old son of | Mr. and Mra, Raymond &. Gillespie, {fell against the screen of the bath- room window, which gave way. dropped to the story below and frac nurs his skull, He died a few hours later ST. MARY'S, July brothers, Loren and Lowell Lipp, 19, are temporarily disabled with | injuries affecting their hands. They employed at different local in- same day. |trip you are putting yourself in the | nearly every ac.) The streets are danger.) ‘TOT FALLS TO DEATH. | in joy over a prospective bath, Rod-| 2.—T win | trial plants and were hurt the ‘GEORGE FITCH | DROPS IN ON US It fell to the lot of George Fi the writer of “Siwash College” ries, |the humorist with sour face dour talk galley-west Fitch is here en route to Francisco. He will spend the » mer on this coast, “Stwash" yarns. | |!sh humorist of the story He wears a emile all the time joshes about everything he sees Glancing over a timetable komish, Suquamish and Wah kum, he said how a man under the he wants to go. his hands, to knock the old theory ab teh, ato pout and San jum: writing more But he is anything but the spleen- books. and con taining the names of Puyallup, Sky kha “I don’t tumble to| influence makes tho ticket man know where) He must talk with] that itchin and Resinol Soap. You will and healthy again. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap also c away pimples and dandruff, Sold by all siete, Prescribed by doctors for 20 yea: | We guarantee the supertority trial to prove It ‘Trus Deformity Api Artificial Limbs. 1107 THIRD AVENUB SENS TELE g If you are suffering with eczema, ringworm, rash or other tormenting skin-eruption, try Resinol Ointment be surprised how quickly the itching | | stops and the skin becomes clear | lear ot |the Lundberg Truss, and give ftroe A. LUNDBERG CO, and MIZZ! HAIOS IN NEW OPERA “* METROPOLITAN | Mrs. Patrick Campbell, an actress | of world-wide fame, and the cre ator of many hist acters | on th ne be will | at the Metre tre | « stage olltan the and all next week € be seen in a comedy by ( ard Shaw entitled Pr jon.” and in the Pinero classic » Second Mrs. Tanqueray | Pygmalion,” which has proven to be the best laughing success Shaw has ever sent to this coun try, will be presented on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturda evenings, and at the Wednesay matinee, with Mra. Pat rick Campbell in the leading role of Eliza Doolittie lo “Pygm the story ¢ Mr. Shaw tells flower girl picked up in the streets of London | by a professor of phonetics, and in & wager transformed from a drag gletailed peddier to duchess The flower girl has a heart, the professor of ph before the transfo plete, Mrs. Pa transition from the girl of jter to the woman of the artistic achievement, On Tuesday event matinee, Mra. ppearas Paul Second Mrs. 1 as onetics finds out world is and Satur ampbell will Tanqueray tn “The queray.” see MOORE Invested with the prestige of conn in ‘ a and Europe, Bart,” Henry W. Savage's produc tion of BE ) Kalman's music ich was done on under the name of mas,” will be pre day night, July 4th, for four and Wednesday matinee, Mizei Hajos in the leading Sarl.” in addition to {ts run of all last season in New York, at tained the unusual distinction of being performed for an entire sea son in Vienna simultaneously tn two theatres, given in German at the one and in Hungarian at the other. Months were spent tion for the “Sart j cast includes M bert, nights with role In prepara production. The zi Hajos, Bert Gil Charles Meakios, ‘Gretchen Hood, Howard Marsh, John Squires and a number of others as well known, The company in {ts entire ty {s big, and the chorus is an or ganization distinguished for {ts | beauty The score of “Sarl,” written by | Emmerich Kalman, who composed Herbstmanover,” and “Der Kleine Konig,” has been played for more |than a year in every cafe in this country and whistled by every one who ean pucker his lips, and danc ed to by every one who can dance. There in a big special orchestra with the company “-. PANTAGES Topping the new bill at Pantages | next week, opening with the mat inee performance Monday, will be The Shadow Girl,” a musical tab loid, presented by ten Salt Lake beauties, who were well received at this house last season tn anoth- er act. Thin new vehicle is said to contain both music and comedy of decided class. For the added fea ture, Manager Pantages has ar- anged for an engagement of the Scotch entertainers, the Musical Gordon Highland instrumental ists, vocalists, pipers and dancers. The Victoria Four will also be among those present. Other num bers on the program will be fur- nished by Sam Wintz and Clarence Wertz, the eccentric comedians, and Clark and McCullough, tn their latest success, “Much Ado About Nothing.” | EMPRESS With a matines tomorrow, the Empress will offer its usual six-act bill, with a local act as the second added feature The headline attraction will be| ‘On the Veranda,” a musteal com- edy, carrying about a dozen people, mostly giris, while the added fea- ture act will be a Spanish dancer, [a Palirica, and partner. The second added feature will be Bronson'’s Harmony Girls, a trio of |attractive Seattle girls, who are to be heard in vocal selections, past and present. Lonzo Cox will, by the ald of his fingers, produce some fine exam- ples of shadowgraphy, Connors and Witt will offer top- feal songs and play the plano, Dorothy Herrman, a singing comedienne, is another attraction, | A Keystone comedy and world's | jevents in motion pictures will be jother features for the week DROWNED AT sigalg PORTLAND, July Frank Maley, a waiter on ys steamer Beaver, was drowned while swim- ming the river last night, Moore theatre, start-| Mre. Patrick Camp Itan Columbla and Puget Sound R. R. special rates and Sunday train schedule in effect Monday, July 5th, ~Advertisement Don’t Wait for a Big Chance Make a little one now by saving, then if the big chance comes, you'll be ready for it. ell, at Metropol- Interest. Mf Per Cent UNION SAVINGS & TRUST CO. OF SEATTLE Capital and Surplus, $811,000 JAMES D. HOGE, President |N. B. SOLNER, Vice Presi- dent and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING In the Heart of the Financial District pe NOTE Py APPROVED BY THE PEOPLE BY CARL w. W. ACKERMAN BERLIN, July 3.—Imperial Chancellor Von Bethmann- Hollweg left for Galicia today with the completed text of Ger many's reply to the American note. He will submit it to the kaiser, who is In the field. If the emperor approves, the note will probably be presented to Ambassador Gerard Monday The reply is not the mere answer of German diplomats. It may be considered to rep resent the opinion of the people regarding the use of submarines during the present war. Prominent bankers and business men of the empire were requested to voice their ideas, and all unqual ifiedly approved the government's stand, formed me today that Germany ts willing to safeguard passengers from neutral countries who cross the Atlante, even {f they take pas sage on merchantmen of belliger ents, provided the vessels do not carry munitions, and do not misuse the American flag Germany will not abandon submarine warfare, but is willing to modify it to this extent. eee CONSIDER NOTE FRIDAY WASHINGTOD July 3.—Ger many’s note, replying to the re joinder of President Woodrow Wilson regarding the Lusitania, will be handed to Ambassador Gerard by Thursday at the latest, and will the abinet on Friday CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 I'VE DONE SERVICE,’ ASSAILANT SAYS arrived sailant Glencove this morning Goes to Home in Auto He hired an automobile driven by Matt Kramer and went directly to “East Island,” the Morgan es- tate At the = gate, he Kramer, saying he would walk io. Kramer said he saw up the steps and ring the bell, did not wait any longer. Kramer identified the prisoner at police headquarters as the man who came to Glencove ago and engaged him to drive him about He said the man asked to be driven about the Morgan place sev- feral times, He made no attempt to disguise his Interest in the es. | tate, and remarked | “I do not believe I will get out today, I will return another time. Say He's Unbalanced When the Morgan servants over- powered the would-be assassin, he | was taken in charge by Constable Frank McCahill, who placed a charge of felonious assault against him. The justice sald all efforts to get statements from the man as to his identity had been futile. In his pockets were found sev- eral railroad tickets from Texas and Northwestern points. Justice L er summoned Dr, J 8. Connolly examine the prisoner soon after his arrest. Dr, Connolly said he was undoubt- ly mentally unbalanced, eee WAS PROFESSOR OF GERMAN AT CORNELL ITHACA, N. Y., July 3—Frank Holt was a professor in the Ger man department of Cornell during the last year. Holt left here at the end of the last term and was said to have ac cepted an engagement to teach in Dallas, Tex., next year. He was said to be of German de- scent, but a native American. Holt spoke with a German ac cent, He is married, and his wife is understood to have preceded him to Texas. The Holt known here is about 33 years old. University officials knew Iittle regarding Holt before he came to Cornell as an instructor, They said he has been at Cornell only one year. He was of a quiet dis- position and made few friends, He HOLT’S WIFE LIVES AT DALLAS, TEXAS DALLAS, Tex Frank Holt bad been engaged to teach at the Southern Methodist university here next fall. Holt's wife ts the daughter of Rev. O. F. Senesbaugh, but An official who saw the test in-| be considered by the president and| dismissed | the man go| two days | METROPOLITAN wi, STARTING MONDAY MATINEES WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY MRS. PATRICK CAMPBELL Monday, nd Nigt raday, y Nighi PYGMALION By G, BERNAND sitAWw Duesday Night ond Saturdey Matinee THE SECOND MRS. TANQUERAY Ww. PINERO Wea aay Matinee PRIC Nights 50c to $2 Matinees 50c to $1.50 MOORE-TOMORROW Mon., Twi nd Wed. Nights. Popular Matinee Wed, rr Nights, Se to Mat., 25 to 81, MERRIMENT y. n't resist. ME at has charmea cont 8 that are the fet HENRY BAVAC genuine Vie offers © bingest nese Operetta ARI S: MMIZZ1 HAJOS «2 « the Entire Cast That Was in the Run of « } YEAH AND A HALF IN SEW YoRK Inciading Chas, Menkivs, J. K. Murray, Gretchen Hood, Bert Gilbert, Howard Marsh Big Special Orchestra, Brilliant Choru Dances, “Sari” “Sart” Song Hite, “Sart” Gowns. PANTAGE “Other Vaudeville May Come and Go But Pantages GOES ON FOREVER.” ‘BEGINNING MONDAY Tine Well! Well! Well! Here ys—those 10—Salt Lake Beauties—10 cisamnnanl AG einpyones “THE SHADOW GIRL” delightful musical ] MA M¢ they a tabloid, ar SCOTS, ATTENTION! THE MUSICAL GORDON HIGHLANDER: Instrumentalists, are the The vocalists, pipers and dancers, special added attracti: THE VICTORIA FOUR VAUDEVILLE FAVORITE QUARTETTE Other Big Acts—10c and 20c | |presiding elder of the Dallas dis- | trict He ts said to have been en- gaged to teach French. Efforts are being made to locate Mrs. Holt MORGAN NATIONS FINANCIAL KING| — J. P. Morgan is known thruout | the world as America’s financial) |king. He is the senior member of the firm of J. P. Morgan & Co. and jof Morgan, Grenfell & Co. of Lon- don. He is also a director in no-| merous New York financial con-) cerns. | Morgan was born in New York in 867, and is the son of John Pter- pont Morgan, former head af the Morgan interests, who died in 1915. Loaned Money to France eeded his father as the an oa EMPRESS THEATRE | He suc {dominating power in Americ nancial affairs. | France and other powers turned to him to obtain credits in this country for the purchase of munt-| tions following the probe into poner locking directorates which had pre- | vatled in the financial world. The firm of Morgan & Co. has/| \figuged prominently in the affairs jof the New York, New Haven & jartford, in fact, in every big East rn corporation. | Morgan returned from London only a short time ago, where it was | reported he had completed arrange- | ments for the establishment in the United States of gigantic credits | for the allie: | Dominates Politics, Too | As was the case with his father, the public has known little of Mo gan except as a great silent factor in financial affairs. Nevertheless he is not only the | financial leader of this country, but | ja dominating figure in international | | politics. The general characteristics of Morgan are much the same as those her, the greatest aversion to CITY TO BORROW MILLION SOON The city 1s going to borrow be | tween $500,000 and a million dollars soon, That's the amount the needs to tide it over the lean spell | between now and the time the tax collector gets in his deadly work, next April Because of the brilliant Renick jaw, which the all-wise and provi dent last legislature put over, the city will have to scramble like the dickens in the money markets, rath er than transfer money from one accommodation of our patrons in both th food and elie as usual. Diamonds Are appropriate at all times. We have made & careful selection of flaw: less stones, perfectly cut. These ems can mounted in settings mat ufactured by us to your order. Diamonds have perma- nent value and are coming much more valo- able every year. We have them in all sizes, but the smaller stones aré fund to. another, as temporary ni |loans, pending tax collections just as precious propor | The Renick law prohibits this tionately as the ones. GRAHAM & VICTOR Diamond Merchants 821 Second Ave. money transfer. Also, borrowing money is expen sive. It boosts the tax rate. Another disturbing element in the |financtal situation is the cessation of revenues from liquor licenses. | A series of short-time notes will be issued, It will be necessary to raise $100,000 within the next 60! days.