The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 18, 1916, Page 5

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STAR—SATURDAY, MARCI 18, 1916, BANTIAWAS | ~ HIT BY TORPEDO WASHINGTON, March 18, al message from the American consul at Amsterdam, saying two officers and the lookout of the Iner Tuban tia swore she was torpedoed, and | that many passengers held the! same view, tended to substantiate the clatm that a submarine sank the steamer, it was believed today member of the First grade, re- cently epetied down the entire Fifth grade, She epetied all the way thru the Fifth grade book without missing a word, then went half way thru the book again, spelling all the words backward. ortionately, to every 100,000 population, pro} 1 Egypt hae more blind persone, than any country, IVE councilmen met at the Hotel Butler Thursday night. They were Judge Moore, R. H.. Thomson, A. F. Haas, C. B ald and C, Allen Dale. Whatever their carefully worded statements may be y, th fool no one as to the purpose. It was intended as a eting to agree upon a slate for committee assignments when the new council organizes. , Five councilmen can dictate to the other four Fitzge w MOORE ecsinin Beginning Baroain Matinees W onl and MUSICAL COMEDY pa Jo Tomorrow The Star is not surprised at Dale—a man consistent- ly wrong—attending a secret caucus. It is not greatly surprised at Fitzgerald, educated in ward politics It feels sorry for Councilman Haas. A year ago he was all but the victim of a plot to crucify him by would-be slate makers, who tried to put Josiah Collins over and to defeat Haas for re-ele¢tion, The Star came to Haas’ rescue then. It fought the slate makers then, as it ls opposed to them now. Councilman Haas has no business in any “slate-making” secret caucus. But the biggest disappointment of all is in Judge Moore and Thomson, The Star was the first to an- nounce their candidacies and to support them. It be- Heved them to be men of big caliber. It hopes it is not ken. It hopes this affair of Thursday night is not indicative of the kind of service they will give the city. STAR BELIEVES IT EXPRESSE % THE PEOPLE OF SEATTLE IN SA ING t THE CITY EXPECTS THOMSON AND MOORE TO STAND OUT IN THE OPEN, FREE, ABOVE-BOARD. IF THEY ARE TO SERVE THE CITY FAITHFULLY, THEY MUST FORGET THE OLD-TIME, BACK-ROOM CAUCUSES. \WHAT’S AT THEATRES OF gump (Attractive Bills Offered for Week| THE BEST THE ‘WILKES COMPANY number of appreciative in Seattle All Next Week, Starting Sunday Night “The Blindness of Virtue” BY COSMO HAMILTON Featuring NORMAN HACKETT, PHOEBE HUNT, RICHARD VIVIAN, HELENE SULLIVAN, FANCHON EVERHARDT and a Thoroughly Capable Supporting Company -, etrepolitan COMPANY THEATRE PRODUCTIONS ORCHESTRA winning an increasing friendly admirers PRICES—Nighta, 180 maiden, _ — That ~ and eory 4 Main 6211 oe stay The Best of Vaudeville STARTING 8UN- MARCH 19 AND ALL WEEK DAY MAT. 2:20 p. MATINEE DAjLY FIRST SEATTLE APPEARANCE } THE ORPHEUM ROAD SHOW DIREOTION OF MARTIN BECK . : RTHEL BRENDA Fannie Brice | © ciifton and Fowler ‘The —— is Im “The Saint and the Sieser” B on Chilson-Ohrman Tre Distiaguished American Soprane od America's Intermational Danseuse Catherine Powell Im @ Series of Classical Dances From Her Repefiotre | The World at Work asd Piay Extra Added Attraction Gertrude Vanderbilt and Geor Im New Singing ead Dancing Noveit Re XS MATINEES, 2: 30 BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOON _ The Cyclonic Burst of Mirth, Melody and Dancing “A HOLIDAY IN DIXIE LAND” With Wm. Mastin, Virgie Richards & Co. “VOLANT” And His Wonderful Flying Piano The Greatest Aerial coentricity in Vaudeville Other Big Fe atures, Including ROSIE LLOYD The Famous English Comedienne STAR WANT. ADS BRING RESULTS N | (1) Norman Hackett, in “Blindness of Virtue,” at Metropolitan. (2) Miss La France, at the Alhambra. (3) Ann Hamiiton,at the Em- press. (4) Hawaiian Girl, at the Hippodrome. (5) Mme. Le Groh, the Orpheum. (6) Cecilia Novasio, in “The Only Girt,” at the Moore. (7) Rosie Lioyd, at the Pantages. ALHAMBRA at the Metropolitan, opening Sun- jin vandertile.” PPODROME HIPPODROME PRICES NEVER CHANGE THEATRE 5~ACTS OF HIPPODROME VAUDEVILLE THE LINARES —Six Hawaiians— Hulu Hula Dancing-+-Songs and Instrumental Music “The Cuban Prince” In Gongs, Monologues and Acrobatic Dancing Madlyn and F Brown and Kennedy In Dances of Today “The Versatile Girls” lorence Classy Singing and Novelty Change Act GILLARD & CO. IN A SKETCH ENTITLED “A WOMAN OF THE STREETS” BOW ERY LIFE IN NEW YORK The Man Who Never Fails to Get a Laugh! IN “Pincus at the Bat” FIRST-RUN RIPSNORTER FRANK DANIELS COMEDY No. 5—“MR. JACK TRIFLES” Week - Da: Mat- che 1 pag P, ~OC {Continuous Performance Evenings Saturday and Sunday and Sundays 10c THIRD AND CHERRY EUGENE LEVY, MGR. rt bebeting He Is Here SUNDAY! a week's stay the “Orpheum Road Show.” This a, gr@gation represents acts hand- picked by Martin Beck, managing |director of the circuit. At the head of thie show comes Fannie Brice, character tmperson- ator and dubbed “the funniest gir! An extra added at- traction will be Gertrude Vander |appear for TODAY AND WEEK IMOORE wv? 2:18—Twice Dally—s18 Metropolitan Theatre TONIGHT and All Week Wilkes Stock Company ta “BOUGHT AND PAID FOR” Nights, 16¢ to "0c. Main 4211 Matines Saturday, ifo and Next V “The Wiindn Virtue.” EMPRESS Prices 100 and 300 Pour vauderille acts and the first) ay night. leptsode of the famous “The Strange entially a love story, with Case of Mary Page,” the photoplay|!ight touches of comedy run serial, with two other picture fea-| Ding thru it, the play has also at tures, comprise the Dill offered at|tracted much attention for the les- the Alhambra theatre, beginning | 80M It teaches regarding instruction Sunday, Henry B. Walthall and/f young people in the fundamen |Edna Mayo aro featured in the/ tals of life. serial. | The pretty, innocent heroine, a The vaudeville numbers are: | country vicars daughter, thru sheer Three Imperial Japs in acrobatics; |!norance of the very meaning of Davis and Walker in comedy, sing-|*¢, places herself and her equally jing and dancing; Kenny and La|!nnocent sweetheart in a most com | France, a man and a maid, in song| Promising position. The result is land dance, and the Frank Colby almost fatal to the young student, Co., comedy black art instrumen-|her admirer, and to their delightful |talists. | romance. . . | Miss Phoebe Hunt will, of course, HIPPODROME be the heroine of the story, while cts and two| Richard Vivian enacts the student ete te sire ‘ottored on the| Norman Hackett will have the beay- new bill at the Hippodrome theatre, uisd role, as the Vicar, beginning Sunday. Heading the bill will be 6tx Ha | empress wailans, the Linares, two women| Beginning with a matinee Sunday! is four men In song, dance and/the Empress will present as its! headline feature Grant Gardner,| instrumental music. Yther numbers are: The Cuban blackface comedian and cornet! ince, song, monologue, acrobatic | player. dancing; the Versatile Girls, song and novelty change act; Brown and |Kennedy, dances; Gillard and com ny in a sketch, Woman of the |Streeta.” | Frank Trifles, the Bat, | . |MOORE ( / | | Sensational Casting Lamys, a quar- |tet of acrobate Stil another feature of the dill will be Ann Hamilton and her com Jack! pany in an intensely dramatic play- let, “The War Child.” A singing act will be offered by [Scharf and Ramser; a comedy magic act will be offered by Valdo “The Only Girl,’ which ran for/and his company; Handers and| an entire season in New York, is| Millis offers a singing, dancing and| to be the attraction at the Moore | Juggling act for a week, beginning Sunda It 1s a musical comedy, ’ wth | PANTAGES book and lyrics by Henry Blossom,| Headlining the new musle by Victor Herbert, and was|tages next week, op produced under the stage direction | matinee performance Monday, of Fr G. Latham be “A Holiday in Dixie Land.” Wil The play provides much sane|iam Mastin, Virele Richards and and wholesome amusement |a com y of te® will present the The Only Girl was first pro-|act The added feature will be at the 39th St. Theatre, but| “Volant” and hia “flying piano,” as. later removed to the Lyric on| sisted by Miss Peggy Benson, Other count on the latter being a larger|attractions will be Rosie Lioyd, the| playhouse. | English comedienne, a sister of | There will be a chorus of pretty |Alice and Mary Lioyd; Harry Tsuda, girls arrayed in expensive and gor-|the spherical equilibrist; Pealson goous gowns, and an augmented|and Goldie, comedians, presenting orchestra, members of which have|“After the Show,” and Marion Mun been selected by the composer,|son, the quick-change artist | Victor Herbert The new installment of “The Girl wig and the Game" will be shown on| Daniels tf “Mr. and Charlie in “Pincus at are the movie offerings. ee eee bill at Pan will . METROPOLITAN baa screen ‘The Blindness of Virtue,” Cosmo Hamilton's beautiful love story, will |ORPHEUM be the Wilkes company’s offering At the Orpheum tomorrow will The added feature act will ho the| ning with the} RANDRETH “| Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, . QO Ont Qarnigne until relieved Onocolate-Coated 0: ‘ACID IN STOMACH ‘SOURS THE FOOD | Saye Excess of Hydrochiorto Acid | Ie ‘Cause of Indigestion | A well-known authority states |that stomach trouble and indiges tion is nearly always due to acidity | acid stomach—and not, as most folks belleve, from a lack of diges tive juices, He states that an ex |cess of hydrochloric acid in the stomach . retards digestion and starts food fermentation, then our meals sour like garbage in a can, forming serid fluids and gases which inflate the stomach like a toy balloon, We then get that heavy, jumpy feeling th the chest, we eruo tate sour food, belch gas, or have heartburn, flatulence, waterbrash, or nausea He tells us to lay [gestive aids and, instead, get ftom any pharmacy four ounces of Salts and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast while it 4s effervesctng, and fur thermore, to continue this for one eek, While relief follows the |first dose, it is important to new ‘ltralize the acidity, remove the gas |making mass, start the liver, stim. |ulate the kidneys and thus promote a fre flow of pure digestive Juices Jad Salts is inexpensive and is |made from the acid of grapes and | lemon julee, combined with lthia | |and sodium phosphate less salta is used by thousands o! people for stomach trouble with ex cellent resulta aside all di, Jad | This harm. | bilt and George Moore tn novel | singing and dancing features. Other members ar Ethel Clifton and Brenda Fow! in “The Saint and the Sinner;” Mme. Chileon-Obrman, WASHINGTON, March 18.— The emergency appropriation advocated by the navy depart- ment and passed by the senate to equip the Puget Soun y yard for battleship construc tion was opposed by Rear Ad- miral Benson, chief of the bu reau of operations, in a hearing before t' jouse naval commit tee yesterday. He said San Francisco shonld de. selected for the plant, becaune it }had a larger body of water, better fortified, and {s not so near foreign territory He advised against a marked tn- EXPERT ENGINEER TALKS OF THE DAM Engineer William Mulholland of the Los Angeles waterway commis sion, who has been called to con | mult on sealing the Cedar river dam, |hinted Friday that the job may be |done by silting the porous glacial moraine, He told city councilmen Friday that no one could be blamed for locating the dam beside the north bank moraine, because 99 out of 100 engineers would consider the bank safe. He said that there is no danger of the masonry dam ever being washed out, and regard ed it as an “admirable plece of |work.” His final report will not |be made until further data has been | obtained. SAYS HUBBY KNEW Mabel I. Smith got a di- vorce Friday from Dr. Ray Edward |Smith. Sho testified before Judge Smith that she has personal knowl edge of his relations with other women, [FOR SUB WARFARE A bill op. with other} warfare | Mre BERLIN, March 18 |posing any agreement nations to limit submarine except with regard to ships was introduced today reichstag by the national party. in the liberty Orders for 20,000,000 feet of fi lumber for building more sheds In the Cascades this summer will be placed by the Great North ern railway with Washington mills} next week, officials announce (GO AFTER MEMBERS) | Beginning Tuesday and ending Friday, recruiting teams from the |Muntetpal League will be engaged in a elty-wide membership cam: |patkn. They are determined to find |600 new members \ ason better promises to be than ever, larger Admiral Wants Money for Frisco} OTHER GIRLS; QUIT |: passenger || ‘BIG: LUMBER ORDER |Americaa soprano; the Le Grohs,| in eccentric novelty; Pietro, plano |accordionist; Catherine Powell, |ciasstcal dancer, an@ the Travel Weekly. } AGAINST BREMERTON } ferease in the number of subma- rines and said that the Panama canal should be strongly fortified and a strong force kept there to defend it. A powerful San Francisco lobby is at Washington, fighting to land preparedness appropriations. | Admiral Benson fs the first of a long list of navy men heard by the |house committee who did not pro- nounce Bremerton the best-fitted yard, naturally, for extensive devel- | opment. It has been repeatedly pointed out that the channel leading to the | Mare Island yard, at San Francis- co, will not accommodate the heav- fest draft vessels, and that millions will have to be spent to keep the channel dredged The Puget Sound yard bas had the support of navy men who have been stationed there and know the situation. Otherwise, there has been little accomplished tn the way of making the fight at Washington. The records do not show that Admiral Benson ever has been s' tioned on Puget sound TOO WEAK TO FIGHT ‘The “Come-hack never down-and-out, His weakened condition because of overwork, lack xercise, improper eating and liv- Ing, demands stimulation to satisty the cry for a health-giving appetite and the refreshing sleep essential to strength. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem OM Capsules, the national remedy of Holland, will do the work. They are Three of t capsules h day will put a man on his feet before he knows it; whet his uble comes from uric acid polson- ing, the kidneys, grayel or stone in the bladder, stomach derangement or other ailments that befall the over. | zealous American, Don't wait until | you are entirely down-and-out, but | take them today, Your druggist will gladly refund your money If they do and $1.00 per| substitutes. Look | OLD MEDAL on | ley are the pure, orig- 1 Haarlem O11 Capsules. man was really wonderful! |which are Drink Hot Water If You Desire a Rosy Complexion Saye we can’t help but look better and feel better after an Inside bath. To look one’s best and feel one’s, best fs to enjoy an inside bath each. morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fer- mentations and poisonous toxins, before it is absorbed into the blood ~ Just as coal, when it burns, leaves; ) behind a certain amount of incom. . bustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in thé alimentary organs a certain amount of indi- gestible material, which, if not elim< inated, form toxins and poisons, then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which, are {ntended to suck in only nour. ishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to. see your skin get clearer and clears er, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of water with a teaspoonful of limes stone phosphate in it, which is @ harmless means of washing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract, before putting more food into the stomach, Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid complexion, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are both+ ered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phosphated hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks. A quarter pound of Itmestone phosphate costs very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to dem- onstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and fresh- ens the skin on the outside, so hot water and Imestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must al+ ways coysider that internal sanita- tion is vastly more important than. outside cleanliness, because the skin pores do not absorb tmpurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. rt MONDAY NIGHT, snow | } lowa and entire Ballet Rw ‘erformances at S p, m.3 Mat MOORE THEATRE—March 27-28 TUESDAY MATINEE AND NIGHT TRE RE” (Monte- AKE ADAME BUTTERFLY mE “LA BO and “SP. e at every performance. 2p. FP. oo + $4.00; next 10 rows, 83.00; last 7 rows, $4.00; balance $1.00, Cuban sugar crop of the present |

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