The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 24, 1917, Page 5

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WEEK BEGINNING eR ULTAN CONDAY EXTRA MAT, THANKSGIVING $1.00 MATINEE WEDNESDAY LAR MATINER SATURDAY N ITS 80 TO $1.50 Tm The Stiring, Love St Tropi SAnetics. -- The Romance .- Hurricane Countr; RICHARD pe thes vy Torr Bird o Paradise sends his from the southland ane Nurricene . re) A Devistati 8 RUMBA DANCE’ vay ee 40 PLAYERS IN THE COMPANY THREE CARS OF SCENERY AND EFFECTS NEXT ATTRACTION CYFY AND OUT-OF-TOWN MAIL ORDERS RECEIVED Now |— = He: | SYNCOPATED TUES! ve WEDNESDAY DEC. 9, 10,11,12| SPECIAL PRICE MATINEE ESDAY [Fs—PROPLE— 7s 4 {wo-Gmrs—40} [oRcimsTRA } EVES.—S0c to $3.00. MATINER—S0e to $1.50. Pies 10% War Tax. TU Cynthia Grey’s obtained a di; me. they would have and married They fairly hound one for montha vorce 1 lavish flowers and expensive tx, and get) peeved because one I ETTERS # not accept them. They never ke Indecent proposals to me but swear they want to marry me. Whether you take them sertous- ly, of think they only mean a | flirtation, it t= difficult to tmagine Just what is the matter with them HY DO MEN LOSE LOVE? Dear Cynthia Grey: I have been |p Geeply interested in your column,| Are they so dissatisfied that they m eepecially in the letters of those have to make love to the ifrat jwomen who have found their hus-| woman they meet? nds in love with another | To thoses women who wish to My childhood and girlhood were|win their husbands back, I would nightmare; I can never think of | say—be gentle, so sweet, so tender without a shudder. When I, and good, but not humble, but a 24 years old, I met a man, true as to shame them. Bao Seamed to be embodied of all uem It was love at first with us both After nearly courting, we were mar- &nd went into our own little Burely I was the happiest in the world. I had no outside of my home and EXPERIEN UNPLEASANT STEPMOTHER Dear Miss Grey Tam ?1 For four years after my mother died father and I Itved alone, Then he| martied a year ago and I thought| & new life had begun for me. I I have always been told have never had any very serious \that I was pretty—but sometimes trouble with hie wife, She has/ ‘E have been called beautiful. My | snubbed my friends, and seems to} Husband used to take me in his think I should not te even my| ‘arms and call me his beautiful mt and best frie: to the \grife and tell me how he loved me. house at any time or occasion. I am getting disgusted with my life and my nerves are going to pleces We had been married four years when I took my orphaned niece Minto my home, to give her some of Don't advise me to talk to my the dtvantages which I had craved | father. I have, and he blames her| land missed. We talked {t over for it. He could make things dif. earnestly, and decided to have her ferent for me, but he would have fome into our home to have trouble with his wife. Can ; In less than four months she had | you suggest any way at all for me? usurped my place in his affections. ERNESTINE. He became a veritable devil to me. If you think it ts impossible Im less than a year I was facing to do anything with your the world alone again. God one father, why not talk to your knows at 1 I think! stepmother? Tell her frankly my home mea: eto me than| but kindly that if your home f does to most women. In order life cannot be more pleasant = I took up a profess! and = able you cannot stay ¥ e bus and night. will come to | f en where I stay weeks, sometimes months SERVICE FLAGS WE wice in the last four months [| Dear Miss Grey: I have two a the most violent protes-| uncles, blood relatives, in the army.| from married Am I entitled to hang the service case the ther of flag in my window? If not, what I can now reca relation must they be? 4d omen who have declared A READER. they ioved me above all other Certainly you are entitied to things on earth, and if I would! a service flag bearing two only give them the slightest hope stars. | Weaving for Waste or Worth? On the loom of life you may weave the warp and the woof of your finances for waste or for worth. The Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank urges that you do not waste, but save money and bank it here, against the day of adversity or of opportunity. Then will you be unafraid of “tomorrow.” DEXTER HORTON Trust SAVINGS BANK SKATTLE, WASH. ™ Second at Cherry Combined Resources of The Dexter Horton National Bank and The Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank $21,510,451.38 WEEK roacixow SUNDAY Other Matinees Wednesday and Saturday EXTRA HOLIDAY MAT. THURSDAY, THANKSGIVING WILKES THEATRE PLAYERS Fifth and Pine Telephone Elliott 2525-2526 ‘The most intense, intricate and #ensational dramatic oftering of the season “THE SILENT WITNESS” Nights 22¢ to Sie. Matinees Iie and 28c. » PAGE 5 TULLY’S “THE FLAME” AT THE MET Three Star Acts Scheduled on New Bill at the Moore Theatre STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 24, 1917. | 1, Jane Hawthorne, In “The Flame, Ing to the Met. 3. Grace Dean, at the I MARIPOSA LOSS OF FOG SIGNALS » absence of adequate fog wighals for th | pona, ning, near Wrangell, Alaska, according to n of the Seattle the consensus of opi | | f the Jefferson, | » of wignals for the mishap | The only marine guide on the! Straits island reef 1s a lone acety: | lene light | Passengers nay the fog was heavy | and that the Mariposa was running under « slow bell. T way th would have been possible for the Mariposa to have kept her course had there been sufficient warnings. | At the time the steamer Delht went aground and sank in approxt-| mately the same pl weveral years | ago, an effort was made to get lights | then But the government inaisted | the single light was sufficient Word received in Seattle stated | that all efforts to float the steamer | Spokane, which went aground at Idol | point, failed. However, it is believed | the veanel can be salvaged without | much difficulty, The passengers all | left the boat safely and are now headed for Prince Rupert, B, C whence they will proceed to Van ver, Ii. C,, and thence to Seattle, DEP ARE NUMEROUS Deer are so numerous in Weat Virginia now that they are becom | ing destructive—and quite unpopu lar GALETY THEATRE First and Madison 6. Ivan Miller, at the Wilkes, 7. Billie Bringham, at the Gaiety, novelty act while Maudie Smith and Billie Bring | | AT THE THEATRES ham will divide the feminine honors| Frish, Howard and Toolin have a 2 of the bill live harmony and comedy number a “The Flame The chorus of twenty girls wil! be Garnelia Duo are a pair of joore seen in new gostumes and heard in|«iria with a comedy singing and| (Orpheum Clreult Vaudeville) } a new line of catehy songs talking act | Gaiety (Burlesque) reg yur Artane, “The Human Fly,” has al WILKES new balancing act. Wilkes (Stockh) “The Silent Witne The Wilkes players offer aa their eee Thankwgiving wee ion “The | 3 Pb ont (Vaudevitie) } THANKnalving week attract The | COMING TO THE MET. | 4 & play of dramatic| Plays may come and plays may | Palace Hip (Vaudeville) | opport * It will start with the | o, but it will be many a day before! mat * tomorrow (Sunday) and in| 4n author will succeed in evolving a r addition to the regular matinees of | tage production that ts as fasctnat- | METROPOLITAN Wednesday and Sunday during the|ing as Irving Berlin's international Richard Walton Tully, who wrote | week there will be a special “Watoh : : A day |*yncopated musical success, The Bird of Paradise mar, the Sane | Your Step,” which comes to the Met matinee given on Thursday | n ntemaker and : er mo of th! wiving day. “The Silent Witness” |ropolitan theatre on December 9 for ancho,” has produced cmon under the head and Is of the/a limited engagement of four nights in “The Flame, while bine be the same class and standing as euch |and matinee. Attraction at the Metre titan tre'|plays as “Madam X ‘Camiile,”| It will contain all the elements tre for o week soeetien ing SUN! “apno,” ete, in one of the |that go to make up an entertain ay night, December iramas of the stage. It will neces-|ment that appeals to the general “The Flame” tells the story of sitate the entire company tw the | publie American = in - Latin ester ast, and Grace Huff and Ivan Miller | ORPHEUM republic. hese folk go there tO wit both have etron a oe > ong dramatic aaa seek thetr fortune, and when all pojgg | Ae ae es ——- nee jinto the maelstrom of revolutions PANTAGES ‘tin will be featured in hi la ~ and banditry which are a part of at the Pan: | comed: oe oe the life of such peoples. They UN-|tagas, opening with the matinee per. |”. dergo many hardships and thru it Al pop ance Monday, will be H. G. WH the two young people, in whom cM | son's allegorical pantomime, “The Today's Market ters the interest, are protected 8nd) beast and the F | harbored by a young descendant Of) frorbert Brooks, the “Kin the ancient race of the place. It 18) cards” and pan of aa eat | __ Report thru her inter pn that Jsemtd trunk mystery, will also be « etellar | | Y rricees Paid Ww Whsiecate | Pesier ter |finalty reac h nate x ter are attraction, as will the Johnson-Dean jcavtaticn and |has been composed for | Revue, with its plantation singing | CMTARLES | From a scenic standpoint It Is *A!4 | and dancing C . and dan Artichokes—Per don... that “The Flame” ts one of the aon Other numbers: Joseph K. Wat. | Beese—Gre |magnificent aspectacies which MAS) son, celebrated character monolo ever graced our stage, even in lgiet; Mumford and Thompson, tn | day of lavish prod notions. | comedy, and the Four Readings, jug | © sii ® | slera of human beings. | 00) ore Three headline acta on next xt week's} PALACE HIP bill of Orpheum The headliners of the new bill at opens at the oore the Palace Hip Sunday are “The Ten makes it a regular standout Dark Kolghte, an aggregation of in whi runs riot, Inter |«ingers, dancers, musicians and |aperned with noted people 19) comedians. vaudeville wding & Fost an Foster will present a|Peppers—Per ib 00000002 Har a whi mpe —— singing and talking skit called “The be seen. It is called Around | Volunteer Pianist the Corner | The Randow Trio have a comedy ‘Then nes Willie Weston, who} ——_—— has made a name for himself and a |place at the head of character sing ers. | Back to Seattle comes Williams and Wolfus, that eccentric pair who live in the realm of comedy and a. 4 whose life on the stage is Winter Rana Winona Win a Dresden china Winter Bananas singer i also be featured inbleached Tennesse Ten, Continuous Daily Moran § n Haze! known as The Gir With the Lariats does some fancy ro work | with. | GATETY THEATRE | TOMORROW The “Armatrong Follies” will | open jn a brand new musical com Our Big New edy vehicle, at the Gaiety theatre next week ¥ with the matinee called “The Scotch High y, such as it} ‘The theme of the VAUDEVILLE is, will deal with ttish lords, in| America, who get into all kinds of | straightened out in their] proper places Is Headed by the, Will Armatrong will be seen in the role of the kiited lord, as/M peeled sixted by his brother Armatrong Ont. Mitley who will also take like part. This these two ve will be the first tir » comedians hav or-on the stage Seattle in the old Pantages theatre some five years ago. Izzy” Carter will take the comedy role of the, Jewish me GARFIELD MAY SEIZE MINES By United Preas Leased Wire WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—The threat of government seizure of coal | mines was again made by Fuel Ad-| ‘or Garfield today. In a tel-| Michigan Fuel Adminis: | K. Pruden, Lansing, Gar KNIGHTS” A Superb Singing, Dancing and Musical Feature 5—OTHER ACTS—5 Added to Which Is a Big First Run, 5-Part World Picture, Brady-Mado bey Bean Meal Corn Feed Mea! OU Meal € ther | Feature Photoplay ETHEL CLAYTON “The Web of Desire” Weekiny 1 QE Matinees .20¢ Evenings and Sundays. . Children (weekdays) 10¢ Prices Include War Tax. Good block hogs Fencey, 65 to 125-p. Belling Prices to Ket: Pork Veal ministra exram to trator W field said “If~Michigan operators refuse to ship in accordance with prices fixed by you under my authority, I will jtake possession of mines.” This order followed Garfield's mes jnage to Oklahoma operators last night, in which he declared that “un der no circumstances must mines be cloned down. and stating the “al ternative will be to turn over | | | ington creamery, cube. : ington o G Btorage, Califo Btora Egae—Select ranch tn, Pilocke Bwin Badger brick, case. | Ww Rodger brick, o mines to me.” PACKED HOUSES All Week Now It’s See the New MOORE “+ Martin Heck Amerton Vrenents Bi Character In “Just, Are A Comedy by Tom Harry onrneum TRAVELOGUR THEATRE ORPHEUM VAUDEVILLE TWICE DAILY 2:30 AND 8:30 ORPHEUM CIRCUIT A PART OF THt MAIN 3340 BEGINNING TOMORROW MATIN TRIPLE HEADLINE BILL TENNESSEE TEN In Ethiopian Songs, Dances and Antics RATH BROTHERS “A Study in Endurance” HAZEL MORAN The Girl and the Lariats The Little Cheer-Up Winona Winter Musical Comedy and Vaudeville Favorite REMEMBER There Is a Matinee Every Day 0—Prices 10c, M CONCERT ORCHESTRA 25c, 50c, T5e Burlesque SHOW hut tiot fea United Press Correspondent “The thing I will say “True, we got “KEEP THE MEN CARRYING ON? TO VICTORY,” IS MESSAGE TO w LONDO: . Nov. %4.—No long- work for victory by keeping the | men “carrying on.” With the White House pickets in Washington in mind, Mrs. Pank ret was asked if she thought na-| nal service was a better vote win ner than militancy “Now you must not expect me to nbout Amer is heartiest oc tulations on the result in New York “As far as the woman's social! id and political union is concerned, it forgot all else than war, when war began, and devoted itself to helping | sw win. i ta: the vote, but asn't WOMEN FROM MRS. PANKHURST think I can honestly say that that the purpose of our work. © er a suffraget—tor the war Bie —— hoger | that the pe 8. rs , ways inclu more period she's only an English: |i, ses program than suffrage, nee re woman—Mrs. Emmeline Pank- | because our old name was identified hurst believes women should | completely with suffrage that we play an important part in the | have changed it. “We have a definite plan in the nation's Our aim {s to keep England’s men ‘carrying on.’ “Reports that is the aim of most all women. behalf besides #1 received here indicate “Women must exercise their fine en keep the country the criticise the American suffragists,” she said. “They are my friends. As for myself, I am no longer a suffra. get, but for the period of the war,|am sure only an Englishwoman America.” sustaining force in these times. IT found {t true in Russia that no mat- ter how well the men do, the wom- ‘carrying on.’ T same will be true of DANVERS, Mass., Nov. 24—Com- servation religion is the latest in war-time economy here. As a result of the scarcity of coal ply, and the high cost of the available the n churches here have united I for services during the war. Universalist and Unt- TARTING SUNDAY “A SCOTCH HIGH BALL” WITH A KICK IN JT. 20 PRETTY 20 GIRLS 15c 25c 35c PRICES INCLUDING WAR TAX table for the bite you've pre the evening. Cream cheese and chopped olive sandwiches brown bread), Dill pickles, Shrimp salad, Ice cold Bevo. Itself a nutritive drink, Bevo makes an appetizing and delightful addition to any meal—hot or cold, light or heavy. Bevo—the all-year-‘round soft drink, usively by Sold in bottles only and bottied Put on the Bevo Glasses when you set the red for the guests of As a suggestion for a dainty lunch: ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST. Louis on MATS., 2:30 “THE BEAST Featuring MARGUERITE and Her Troupe of TRAINED LEOPARDS AND PUMAS HERBERT BROOKS King of Cards and Originator of the Baffling Steel Trunk Mystery. JOHNSON-DEAN REVUE Plantation Singing and Dancing Other Big Features—General Admission 25c NEW PANTAGES BEG INNING MONDAY AFTERNOON The Beautiful Allegorical Jungle Pantomime AND THE NIGHTS, 7 AND 9 FAIRY” ag &

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