The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 8, 1916, Page 5

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Week Com. Monday, April 10 OORE rgain Matinees, Wed. and —— ee ee The De Koven Opera Company, Acknowledged by All Critice the Greatest Light Opera Organization In the World In a Magnificent Production of “ROBIN HOOD” The Ev. and Ever-welcom layl of Light Opera In an All-Star Cast—ivy Scott, Jas. Stevens, Cora Tracy, Herbert Waterous, Carolyn Andrews, So! Soloman, Phil Branson, Tillie Sailinger, Fred Walker, Luigi Greatest Singing Chorus on PRICES—Nighta, 280 to $1.50. Matinees, best seats, $1.00 Another Fine Bill by the NEXT WE Talented Wilkes Players STARTING SUNDAY NIGHT The Clean, Clever, Captivating American Comedy The Fortune Hunter BY WINCHELL SMITH Norman Hackett as Nat Duncan, Phoebe Hunt as Betty Graham. Full Wilkes Cast Metropolitan Theatre Mats. Thurs. and Sat.—i5¢ and 25c Oud The Bést of Vaudeville STARTING SUN. APRIL AND ALL WEEK MAUDE FEALY | “WHEN THE TIDE TURNE D Prices Lewer Floor ....500 Balcony .35¢ and 260 Gallery 180 Main ‘ROBIN HOOD’ AT MOORE (1) Young racne: wat ana © Andrews, In “Robin Hoo: tages. (5) Fortune Hunter,” at Metropolitan. * 8 ALHAMBRA “The Last i} Laugh,” a enbaret |playlet, heads the Sunday program | Ing the at the Alhambra. It ts a playlet with a punch. Gordon and Russell present a} combination banjo, plano and sing: ing act. The Arle: © perch bal ancers. Fiddes ain have a) novelty singing and piano act ‘The picture program consists of five reels of first run pletu A three-reel comedy scream, “For the Love of Mike and Rosia,” ts the picture feature. This program will be shown continuous after 1 p, m Sunday, The pictures start at 11 am. eee HIPPODROME | Exhibiting feats of strength. | Hackenschmift and company will lheadiine the vaudeville bill at the| Brothers combine music and head Hippodrome theatre, beginning Sunday. There are three peo ple in the company. Hacken- schmidt {s a brother of the famous, wrestler. | Other nambers are: Krazy Katz, in “Egotie: Josephine, eques trian novelty; Cecil and Mack, song and dance; Gillard & Co, in a comedy playlet. The film attractions will be: “The Ways of the World,” featur NEW PANTAGES BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEE LEW WILLIAMS AND HIS SOUTH AMERICANS In the Up-to-the-Minute Farcelet “A Tangoland Revolution” The Eminent Character Actor HYMAN ADLER & CO. In the Commercial Comedy Scream “‘Solomon’s Bargain” Other Big Acts—10c and 20c PAN-AMERICAN THEATRE Second Avenue and Seneca Street BEGINNING SUNDAY AFTERNOON Continuous Sunday From 2 P, M. Alf Goulding & Co., in “THE SOCIETY BUGS” Forty Minutes of Mirth, Melody and Dancing Pretty Girls, Pretty Music, Lively Fun AND A SNAPPY VAUDEVILLE BILL ALSO SECOND EPISODE “STINGAREE Featuring True Boardman 10c AND 20c CHORUS GIRL BRIDE WANTS HUBBY BACK SARATOGA, N. Y,, April 8.—Al- tho her marriage to Lovie Ream, fon of the New York society mil ljonaire, Norman B, Ream, has been MetropolitanTheatre TONIGHT and All Week Wilkes Stock Company ia “Within the Law” Nights ibe to b0c, Main 6211. Mats, Thurs. and Sat, Ibe and 26e Next Week—"The Fortune Hunter” been paid her by the Reams, pretty \Mttle Eleanor Pendleton Davidson, Broadway chorus girl, ts in court here today to try and make the judge give her back her “honey boy.” “I really love him, you know,” |said Eleanor today. Miss Pendleton believes Loule ill lov , too, but that his papa and mamma prevailed on him to desert her. She mys she didn't understand what was happentog [when she signed the annulment pe tition. Grant’s Cafe FREE Dancing and Cabaret Evenings, 9 to i ing Vivian Rich, and « Charlie EMPRESS “The Follies of Now,” a musteal comedy, will headline the Empress bill next Sunday matinee. There are 25 people in the com-| pany. Out of the 25 artists, 15 are siris,| and they can sing and dance. The) costuming, staging and scenic em bellishment re new. Under the direction of such « well-known pro ducer of musical comedy produc- tions as Mr. Leon Erroll, this offer. ing promises to be an exceptional one. The Pathe Travelonge, showing Interesting news events, and the |Empress concert orchestra, will be other featur MOORE “Robin Hood,” the best comic lopera America has produced, will) |be sung at the Moore the week be |ginning Monday next, with mat! nees Wednesday and Saturday The story of this popular and artistic success is based upon the old English tale of Robin Hood and/ his band of outlaws, a story ured by Sir Walter Scott tn his famous novel of Ivanhoe. The romance of this picturesque bandit possesses a @arm which can never die, and) |in the opera of “Robin Hood” Reg inald de Koven has given the world} a musical setting an immortal as} |the wonderful story Itself. The de Hightful melodies are as appealing to the musjcal public today as when first sun) The title role will be sung by Ralph Brainard. Friar Tuck will be played by Fred Walker. Cora Tracy will be Alana-Dale, who sings the always popu “O, Prom jo Me. PANTAGES Lew Williams and his South American Girls, {n an up-tothe minute farcelet called “A Tanko- Hand Revolution,” will be the head |line attraction of the new bill at | . opening with the matines |performance Monday. The act is jsald to aboflnd tn mirth, melody and dancing. Hyman Adler, the emt |nent character actor, and his play- jers in “Solomon's Bargaln,” a com |mercial comedy by Jam Horan will be the added feature. Other numbers will be the. Three Hickey Brothers, acrobatic dancers known to fame; Harry Gilbert, the dialect singing comedian; Jennie Middle vich, popular Seattle violinist, and |Spragne and MeNeece, roller skat jing experts. The week will also /bring on the new serial motion plo ‘ture, “The Iron Claw,” featuring | Pearl White. . | . PAN-AMERICAN Featuring the new show at the |Pan-Amertcan theatre, Second and Seneca, next week, opening Sunday afternoon, will b The Bude 40 minutes of mirth, mel jody and dancing by Alf Goulding Jand his fellow players in ‘house's stock company. Harry Sherr, a funny Hebrew comedian, Society |annulled, and, she says, $30,000 has has been added to this organiza | tion, and will make his first ap pearance tomorrow, The vaude ville program will be made up of |Stanton and Rose, comedians, who have a nifty line of patter and songs; Rowley and Tounton, man and maid, Australian dancers, and the Wurdig Trio, harmony singers, The second installment of "Sting aree,” with True Boardman, will be shown on the screen | eee of the giris in cabaret act at Alhambra, at the Moore. St. Clair, at Empress. jthe 4: the} STAR—SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1916. | PAGE COUNCIL CLERKS 5. Offer Good Bills Three committee clerks will lone ir jobs and the city will save 6,220 a year if the council the recommendations of the 4 ment effictenc mittees, made Friday They decided to eliminate the position of clerk for the atreets and sewers committee, finance commit tee and appropriations clerk in the legtelative department Moore, Thomson, Dale voted for the cut and Hosketh opposed tt. fused to vote If the bill is passed the financd! committee matters would handled tn the comptroller’s office The streets and sewers committee would have ita clerical work in the engineering department and finance com Manna and Fitegerald Bolton re be 1 comptrolier would detal! a man to, look after the appropriations com mittee’s clerical work. LORD HARDINGE TO SUCCEED GREY LONDON, Aprt] &—That Str Fd. |ward Grey {# to retire as English foreign minister when Lord Har ding? gives up the vieeroyalty of India, and that Hardinge will be come foreign minister, ts reported in diplomatic circles CHILDREN GET $3,200 The four children of Henry Allen- by, mate on the launch Wakene, asphyxiated by fumes wInpany, aL Mipposrome. («) Une (3) Cora Tracy and Carolyn (4) len McNeeoe, at Pan- (6) Olga Gray, in “The 7 (7) Mende Fesiey, st Orpheum, engine Were named the ° ® benefictartes in a $3,200 Judgment mixture of humor and coquetry | granted by Judge Ronald against which is Maude Fealy, thru follow |the Border Line Transportation Co. ‘ime, will no doubt Jump at) Friday, The father was found dead the chance to see their favorite|in the cabin, November 4, 1915. personally and hear her voice when she comes as n headYner to the Orpheum for the week beginning to- day matinee, She brings a bright | lttle comedy playlet hen the} Tide Turned.” with an adle sur COW porting company | Lydia Barry, comedienne, te an-|y D something more other feature of this show, Homer eae ape commgeica. You must Miles & Co. bring an odd comedy k h bl ure, the liv “An Innocent Bystander.” Manuel ep the blood pure, the liver and kidneys active and the Quiroga fs a young Spa h violin ist. Jim Donovan and Marte Lee— bowels regular. You must also I! Col. Mare Diamond, eorrect the digestive ills that jant of 80, and Mme. Grant uddy skin and Gebutante of 70, eut capers eaten, cause muddy skin and dull eyes, lated to upset one's gravity in the dance a Im gmode. The Carpor and hand balancing. ee METROPOLITAN orman Hackett, the leading man | with the Wilkes company at the} Metropolitan, will have his first chance of the season here tn a Kenuine light comedy role, when he plays Nat Duncan next week in “The Fortude Hunter.” offer you the needed They are mild in eo but guickly Hack ong. | Strengthen stomach, gen- tng ais Od coe oy ig he | tly stimulate the liver and RE yh 9 a) Be es Fd and n kt And no money-making ability, and work as nature een, chnm to go tnto the Is The friend finances the venture, are worth considering and the gay young crusader, with taflored garments in leu o: » | of Seocial Vales to Wome with gg <> pote dons in bones, 10c, 38a. | hies him to a small town and sets his mark for the banker's daughter The adventure seems promising, until t falls madly tn love with whter of a poor druggist Twelve Pages OF PURE READING —The Post-Intelligencer Sun- day Magazine section is the LARGEST in the West. —NO newspaper publishes BETTER reading. —But the Magazine section does not include those popular Sunday features, the Woman’s Section, Sports, Society, The- atrical Page, Music Page and Comics. —All of the above is additional | to THE NEWS—the first con- sideration of this paper of EXCLUSIVE SEVEN DAY ASSOCIATED PRESS SER- | VICE, exclusive Washington, D. C., state, Northwest and | Alaska special service and ex- | elusive European letters. If You Don’t Buy the P. I. You're Bound to Borrow It BETTER ORDER TODAY ORPHEUM Those who have become familiar with the lovely face and alluring | capte done | | wate lexion Beechams Cynthia Grey’s Q.—Please answer my first and only question, which Is The woman | divorced some time| ago has some of my photographs and my discharge papers from the United 6 army. How can | make her give them up, and are the papers of any value to her if | were entitied to a pension? C. A.--If your former wife refuses to restore to you your belongings, have your attorney deal with her do not belfeve she could use your dincharge papers to her advantage when she Is no longer your wife. Q.—Will you please help me out by printing a recipe in your columns nd oblige, H. C pounds of sugar, two boiling water, one-fourth tea spoon cream of tartar. Put Ingredients {n a smooth saucepan. Boll without stirring until syrup begins to discolor, which {s 300 degrees F. Wash off sugar which adheres to sides of saucepan, as in making fondant. Remove saucepan from fire and place in a larger pan of cold water to Instant ly stop boiling, Remove from cold rr and place in saucepan of hot wate Place two broom stick handles over backs of chairs and spread paper on the floor under them, When ayrup ia slightly cooled put dipper in syrup, remove om syrup and shake quickly back 4 forth over broom handles Carefully take off spun suger as soon as formed and shape tn nests or pile lightly on a cold dish. Syrup may be colored if desired, Spun sugar is served around bricks or mould { frozen creams and ices. Dip for spinning sugar are made of coarse wires; about 20 wires 10 inches long are put tn a |bundle and fastened with wire coil ed round and round to form a han- dle, Q.—Should the gentieman escort dance the moonlight waltz with his lady friend, or with the girl he hae brought to the dance, or Is this num- ber open to her or his choice? YAKIMA, A.—It 1s customary for a man to tance the onilght waltzes with the young lady he has escorted; how ever, if they both, for some reason, care to arrange it differently, it is thetr own affair, Q—! have been going with « young man a year and a half. Re cently | Introd chum. They pleased with called upon her last Sunday night. Do you think he has ce: for met Should | br friendship with beth of them? EDITH. A.—The young man certainly is at liberty to call upon any number of different girls, It 1s somewhat embarrassing to hi forfeited his company on Sunday evening by your generosity tn tntroductions, but pay no attention to it. He may appreciate your friendship all the more for having a chance for com- parison. I would not break the friendship with either of them. Don't lose sight of the fact that you have the same privilege, and may accept the invitation of any other boy friend until you are engaged. Q.—WiIIl you kindly tel! me what to do with my Ilps when they dry up and crack? UNCOMFORTABLE, A--Apply glycerine and rose water. several times a day and be fore you retire. Star Want Ads cover the entire Northwest. 'FRENCH OFFER " MAYLOSEJ0BS| LETTERS | BRAVE DEFENSE , April 8.—The German thrown LONDO. crown | forces across Forges brook tn an leffort to squeeze the French out of fethincourt, according to dis | patches from the front today A storm of shells {* falling on both sides of the salfent, prelim inary to another attempt against | the village. The defense of the French, who have held their ground for two weeks under prince has large all England TAFT TAKES STAND ON PREPAREDNESS 8T. LOUIS, April Denouncing professional pacifists as a menace to the safety of the nation, former mer Assistant Secretary of War Breckenridge spoke before a mass meeting here, IT MAKES HIM MAD BAN RAFAEL, Cal., April Joseph Dietz, Oakland feur, was tremendously indig- nant today, because Judge Zook had sentenced him to serve only 18 months for passing worthless checks. Dietz want ed at least four years behind the bare, so he could get a free education in the penitentiary | Hot Water for | Sick Headaches | Telle why everyone should drink hot water with phoe- phate In It before breakfast. —_ 1 Headache of any kind, {s caused by auto-intoxication self-polsoning, Liver |polsons called toxins, |the blood, through jducts, excite the pumps the blood so fast that it congests in the smaller arteries and veins of the head, producing violent, throbbing pain and dis- trees, called headache. You be come nervous, despondent, sick, fe- verish and miserable, your meals sour and almost nauseate you. Then you resort to acetanilide, as- pirtn or the bromides which tem porarily relieve but do not rid the blood of these irritating toxins, A glass of hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate tn it, drank before breakfast for a while, will not only wash these poisons from your system and cure and bowel sucked into the lymph heart which purify and freshen the entire all- mentary canal, Ask your pharmacist for a quar- ter pound of limestone phosphate. It {s inexpensive, harmless as sugar, and almost tasteless, except for a sourish twinge which {s not unpleasant. If you aren't feeling your best, if tongue {s coated or you wake up with bad taste, foul breath or have colds, indigestion, biliousness, con. stipation or sour, acid stomach, begin the phosphated hot water cure to rid your system of toxins and potsons. Results are quick, and ft is claimed that those who continue to flush out the stomach, liver and bowels every morning any he moment. tremendous difficul- | ties, has excited the admiration of President William H. Taft and for-| which means | you of headache but will cleanse, | | Spring Colds Are the Worst They lead to catarrh and The weaken tem and leave to re the sud- es. They interfere digestion and lessen Neglected pneumonia the entir unable ist become that dread dis known as systemic cata Don't neglect them. It's costly as well as dangerous PERUNA Will Safeguard You a box of Peruna Ta with the sudden cold o' Tone your system up with a regular course of the liquid Peruna, for- tify it against colds, get your dl gestion up to normal, take care of yourself, and avoid danger. If you are suffering now begin the treatment at once, Give Nature the help she needs to throw off the catarrhal inflammation, and again become well Peruna has been helping peo- ple for 44 years. Thousands of homes rely on {t for coughs, cold and indigestion. It's a good tonie for the weak, as well e u r exposure Peruna Company, « Colambus Dhte to stop dandruff and loss of hair with Resinol Here is a simple, inexpensive treatment that will almost always stop dandruff and scalp itching, and keep the hairthick, live and lustrous: At night, spread the hair apart and rub a little Resinol Ointment into the scalp gently, with the tip of the finger. Repeat this until the whole scalp has beentreated. Next morn- ing, shampoo thoroughly with Res- inol Soap and hot water. Work the creamy Resinol lather well into the thescalp, Rinse with gradually cool- er water, the last water being cold. Resinol Scap and Resisol Ointment | bea! eczema and similar skinereptons, by all druggiots You are Interested In a position paying from $150 to $300 a month and will spend $78 to qualify, call at once 663 Empire Bidg. CONCERT AT Y. M. C. A. The Y. M. C. A. orchestra will give a concert in the auditorium of the Y. M. C. A. Sunday at 2:45 p. m., which will be free to men. Rev. | Cleveland Kieihauer, pastor of the University Christian church, will speak on “Making a Life.” j 1 AUTO SHOW Opens Monday Evening 7 oClock =A REN A= All Week, Afternoons and Evenings See the finest display of pleasure cars, motor trucks and accessories ever assembled under one roof. $490.00 upwards. Priced from There will be cars on exhibition in this beautiful building, with valve-in-the-head, Continental motors, in roadsters, five and seven-passenger models, with “four,” “six,” “eight” and “twelve” cylinders. See the first car that was ever driven on the streets of Seattle. ae @. See No. 8 Stutz Racer, greatest money winning car in the world. SEATS FOR SPECTATORS LADIES’ TEA ROOM Seattle Auditorium Co. MUSIC

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