The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 1, 1916, Page 6

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STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAR. 1, PAGE * STRAND THEATRE Joy denote.) SECOND AVE., BETWEEN SPRING AND SENECA holding the — salmon sent 4 to President Wilson, as she appeared on | 5 Yakutat bay, Alaska, In her ( flehing garb, beside her dory. 4 ° : «6 \ 1916, MAIN —_——— of ahaa to White House Braves Seas in Yakutat Bay and Takes Fish With Her M. Meyerteid ‘ Martin Hook Own Hands Burton, Resident Ma Managing Director awe The Best of Vaudeville A REGULAR $2 SHOW At Orpheum Prices 10c—25c—50c—and 75c¢ THIS WEEK HARRY GREEN & CO. By Asron Hotrman “THE CHERRY TREE” * «1 consider Marry Green the only one place."—DAVID WARFIEL 2a Se abit A SATIRICAL COMEDY-DRAMA Produced by the Rolfe Photoplays, Inc. THE UPSTART FIVE-PART METRO WONDER PLAY From the Play of the Same Name by Thomas Barry MARGUERITE SNOW —"Pretty Peggy” of the Films—tIs Starring, Together with GEORGE LE GUERE AN ALL-STAR CAST Pisa Harry Hines The “38th Vartety.” aty Singing Comedionne, Stone and Hayes In « Carnty leode “Green Goods.” Three Natalie Sisters Beauty « jody. Bert Wheeler & Co. Automobile THE LITTLE JADE GOD oF _ Tre a perfectly terrible confes Gara Zora —to— “Dance of the Elements.” Direction of Ida Puller, ORPHEUM TRAVEL Every Newspaper Crit Ue has acknowledged this show to be the best that the amuse SEE IT and be richer by some ha MISS IT and be poorer by some vain regrets. EVERY SEAT IN THE ORPHEUM [8 A GOOD 6EAT Telephone for Reservations—Main 5106. Keep These COMING ATTRACTIONS in Mind CICCOLINI Whom Mme. Melba calls “The World's Greatest Tenor.” Coming March 12th. “The Funniest Gtri Tae. Posie Or Ves?” FANNIE BRICE FRITZI SCHEFF The Brilliant Viennese Prima Donna ing April a6 Why these great names appear here tn Orpheum Vanderille is because the Seattle Orpheum {ts part of the BIG ORPHEUM CIRCUIT. “Thank You.” in Vaude- 19th. Con 4 BA aS tifessions of aWife the world. That ay his part to p to make to you. litte book, Not giving mo an address where 1| Hfest now I am thinking more COUld either send the little god back DREAMS ry clever idea on} The pla had a successf run at the Maxine Elliott theatre in New York. “The Upstart” Is a Production of the Newer, Bigger, Bet- ter Type, Telling a Smashing Good Story of Loveless Marriage and Di- vorce. ARGU CRITE GNOW IN THE UPSTART Malcolm Stuart than any one OF at least thank bim for it Copr | waar “Somewhere tn the Orient,” little} book, 1s a man who evidently think | PUGET SOUND of me occasionally. He certainly can still make himself “the most STEAMERS interesting man” to me | I have been keeping the little ALL LOCAL ROUTES = | i940 koa under my pillow, and do couman you know, little book, that some TOOT OF MARION STW times when I take it In my ha: the calm countenance seems a to want to tell me something. Jminutes by holding onto wreckage, and then was rescued by a torpedo oo re many men and wom- en big ‘the water with bloody heads. Children separated from their mothers screamed. Others were | wide-eyed and silent When President Wilson, cab- Jwith the recipient's "CANVASS VOTE dinner on March 10, they will tins of salmon, enclosad. ~y a bi be paying tribute to an Alaska [gold nugget girl's daring, a» well as help! it was while #he wae at Yanutat| CHICAGO, March | 1.—One of the! most important meetings affecting apital and Iabor ever held on the |demands to the rallway offictals. 15 According to President Warren 8.) Stone, of the engineers, and other | organtzation heads, a strike vot OF INED LINER ‘isiteiaaatasiial ‘One child, I heard, was blown not been taken. To call a Seta, another reforendum vote would be necessary. LONDON, March \to pieces by the explosion. of the liner Maloja, sunk Sunday,| “We picked up a floating Teddy dear’ out of the water as we left.” celebrate National Canned 8: bay that (Miss Jenott, one of mon day. Alaska’s fatrest daughters, eon-| Miss Joy Jenott, braving tur ved ber {dea j bulent seas, with her own Confident that the plan would ‘DOCTOR OFF TO WAR | Ties Teteam. midn’httham, ter Port Town-\Tnest’y Jim Edie came to see m day, and was very enthustastic Dick “I tell you what, Margte,” he sald “I hate like the deuce to have you : is condition, but to have old Dick arou have gs days wh over ‘ownsend, ‘vimana aay ees (Requim).| orte. derstand that you have ns. But You both than | and for me drea: - nt for Olympia anda!t Smhelton. Mttle coloring, for I knew what | had just said had been a lie. I at! have dreams, little b: and I pect that the littie jade god knows more about them than even y or I. | Some way T am getting an un-| canny feeling about th lo jade god. Last night I was looking at {t and admiring the wonderful deta! of the carving when all at once I seemed to see a yacht skimm! along on & moonlit sea On the deck was a man tn white which the tropte moon made almost lustrous He was alone, and his two thin| lonely together, a scarlet line. first time I recognized Stuart, but his brown eyes @ somber; not a flicker of which wok ex Palle at Port Town-! jeend southbound on! Does not call at! evett Meturdaye "4 », for Port! Tittem midwht'Townsend and Nel-'Taeed'y Gaendaryiingham. via af faniThorey “Beeet’yiJoan tetand pointe |satnr'y Hw hal I had always seen © smile which rarely reached ten'Thurs'y | his lps yr For a long time he sat quite ett! in the steamer chatr that was irawn clore to the rail, but he did ot seem to be seeing the path of ‘et that led up from the side of ie boat to heaven ttre He finally got up with an tm patient sigh, and opening a tightly closed hand, disclosed lying tn the palm the twin of my little jade god With a bitter lifting of the thin {nto wh ght have been a oye ees of der for himself, he | fiaturday Only h to throw the bauble 8:00pm \Ateamer Mionx, fort f su mn into the sea, and [Kingston, Lod ngly thinking better of od It Into his pocket. the picture faded. I open #, but lam sure I had not Mundayiven4. Port An TucetyiNech Bay ant . _ ton Thm midn’ht!Port Townsend, Port! fender th Tron@atel ‘ P:0¢amiMteamer Mowz, for! 9:80pm [Kingston Lotiow and’ bway pointe Tightly clasped tn my hand was the bit of carved jade. I, too, would have been tempted to yw it far out into the street ff I could have gotten to my window, but as I could not, I sitpped the little god, who evidently was the god of dreams as well as good luck inder my pillow, and went to sleer to dream no more. ally [Lnalow. Port je*Rangor and Buntayipointe on ood Ca th Warwelton and Anstin Fivtam Mtr. Potinteh tor! dtm f eiton and Aus-| Str. Bellingham! Anetin 11:20 ant Marwe' m. dally except for Meattle wail leave oe ; (To be continued.) Sunday et 9:00 @ m for Port Town | — DOCTOR northbound. This landings nd tor making such landing. Senger rate does not Incind charges Bagesne liability ts mites to wear apparel, not to exceed $190 for ticket. 159 pounds allowed fi 4 ned at ticket Open from @:20 « m. to 12:08 PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION CO. Tie Offies, Colman Dock Fhone, Main 300% 109 Washington St Near Second Ave. ) packing establia |treas vanishes |It'a the quickest hands caught the finny prizes be voted down by my family,” she “ which have been expressed to (explained here. while supervising the president and many other “1 went dignitaries. my plans), Not only were the fish taken from a dory by Miss Jen they were actnally cleaned and prepar for canning by her tn an Alnakar on Yakutat but v “It was my desire to catch every |} To do this it wast necessary to use a dory a the boat ewamped a hair's bre But I stuck to salmon myself bay. Bent From Seattle The cans have been sent from Seattio in boxes resem? ke bricks, and the packages NOSTOMACHPAIN, keeping © the washing, clean ®, cutting and packing k—which I did without n rintended ¢ man amistance. I the sealing. “Machinery and cannerymen have ¢ even sup told me that I am probably the only| 1 9 tranches of the industry.” The dangers Miss Jenott braved |) tn catching and dragging her prizes m the sen have won her the ad miration of hardy veterans. She practically took her Ife in her ery time abe fared ont tn those who kyow of IN FIVE MINUTES hands “Pape’s Diapepsin” is the only real stomach regulator , known. her dory r explo’ DRESS WARM AND KEEP FEET DRY Telle Rheumati Sufferers Take Galts and Get Rid | of Uric Acid “Really does” in order ind put bad stomachs does” over: fan, } urn and sourness in five n that—just that-—makes regulator in the w erments { inutes Pape's ach what born eas eructate # 1 od head y and ac h foul; tongue coated r] es filled with bile and Indigest , to and nd Rheumatism is no respecter of bile an |age, sex, color or rank. If not the er the moment) most dangerous of human affii be een tions, it ts of the most painful hocasen alt much ie | Tone subject to rheumatiam| |should eat loss ment, dreas marvelous, and th@| warmly as possible, avoid any ur pooh of Pape'a | 1U6 @xposure and, above all, drink sane of Pape’s| iota of pure water satisfaction or| Rheumatism hands you ; tn” ing—almont joy ta its harmlessn A large fifty-cer Diapepasin will give doliars’ worth your druggist money back It's worth fts wetght tn gold te and women who can't get thelr achs regulated. It belongs tr your home—should always be kept handy caused by uric 1 Is generated In the bow absort to the blood. It inction of the kidneys to this acid from the it In the url th are 1 ood of th chilly of saad 1 ed od and pore a means of Impurity weather are closed, thu do double 1k and slug eliminate this urt accumulating and the system n the Joints and atiffnes ed rheumatiem firat tw of rheuma pharmacy about reeing the t and pores dneys to in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or surest harmless stomach reg worl’ amp skin forcing the work, they bec gish and fall to acid which {reulating at night and most lator In the kee PUT CREAM IN NOSE AND STOP CATARRH . Tells How To Open Clogged t the Nostrils and End Head-Colds, } {!#, get from any four ounces of Jad Salts put a spoonful In a gle water before breakfast each Your cold in head or catarrh will for a week, This is said be gone. Your clogged nostrils |to nate urle acid by stimulat will open. The air passages of ing the kidneys to normal actior 4 will clear and you can br jth ua ridding the blood of these im purities Jad Salts {8 inexpensive, harm and is made from the acid of for breath at nigh K id lemon combined druggist you with Hthia and fs used with excel of Ely's Cre 1 ent results by thousands) of folks © of thia to rhetmatiam in your offery through every alr ent lithla-wate ch over soothe and he comes urle acid eficial to amed mucous mem-| your kidney brane, and re inatant _ It tm fr wh cold and catarth sufferer needs. Don't stay | stuffed-up and miserable, on rore ass of free more dullness ache; n iffling, | discharges or dryne haw « cous atruge juice, are subject ou have a pleasant r drink wh nd ts be as well head the 8w 1 ef comes Rent your house Ads, Catches Them Herself et 0 ime and a half for overtime. th of wheln sent agreements t expected to be reached for sev weeks. of 360,000 employes on an etght- Expecting to bee sent to the Med fterranean under a captain's com mission, Dr. J. A. M. Hemmeon of Seattle left here Wednesday for Victoria, B.C. He ts a Canadian by birth. He was given a banquet by friends at the Seattle Athletic lub Monday eventng ‘an continent opened here to-| executive committees of the ad brotherhoods § =a od to verify the referendu days at ten hours’ pay and WOMAN INHERITS STRANGE FORTUNI CLEVELAND, March 1.—Mres. Minnie Link, 42, is administer- ing perhaps the strangest legacy er inherited by a woman. The legacy included five chil- dren, four girls and a boy, made representing) orphane the death of their conductors and father, Frank B. Bareach, will choose u penter. a lot of debts, $ abmit } th om cash and a grandmother aged 82 official result of the undersmood be over ngly In favor of the demands announced for several vote provide for s for negotiations on any rin dispute, so the erisia tn orter hours controversy ts) ev committees, by ong probat a car mmittee to KATHLYN WILLIAMS and believe German mines have been [planted thickly near Dover, and fear further disasters to merchant men and passenger ships. Ralph Foster, an American from Kansas, bas told the Maloja disaster, 1 “The first thing T heard was ai; sharp report, Sunday morning, at 10 sald. “Before 1 could the ship began to list » clambered into the lifeboats sting made {t Impossible to swing many of them clear. Ey ery minute the Maloja tipped a lit tle further over. 1 grabbed an oar and slid into the water, but could not ewim away from the wreckage. The waves washed me back 1 reached a capsized boat, jon {t, and was washed off 1 kept up for an hour and ten Kot many details of c¢ THE “COME-BACK” ‘The “Come-back” man was really n@-ovt. Hie weakened ane of overwork, lack roper eating and iiy- demand mulation to for a health-«lving ap: the refreshing sleep essential to 1LD MEDAL Haar t nal remed » the work. They are Three of these capeules derangement or that befall the over- n. Don't walt until t ney If they do and $1.00 per t no substitutes. Look * GOLD Me DAL on every re t e, origi r ported “Haarlem ou Papsules WHEELER OAKMAN Making a Tremendous Hit This Week in REX BEACH’S Most Popular Story in Pictures “THE EER WELL” Nine Acts Special Orchestra Music Throughout the East thia greatest of ill Photoplays showing at ton 25c sat JOUN SECOND First Time in Pictures First Time in City Biggest Film Scoop 1915-16 Season inca Shows Start: 10 a. m. 12 TO THE PUBLIC: Not since HAMRICK Rex Beach's. w which was produc orld famous 1 by the eat Selig how? HN HAMRICK

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