The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 24, 1919, Page 10

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PAGE 10 MOORE , Elizabeth Brice and Will Morrisey, who entertained soltiers in. France for many months while the majority of actors were raking {n easy money in the states, came into their own Sunday at (he Moore theatre. The Orpheum bill t» properly headlined with the Brice-Morrisey Overseas Revue, There are lots of pretty girls and much comely Miss Brice sings “Salvation Sal” fn much the same manner as she sang her former “Passing Show™ numbers, while Morrisey pulls his game funny comedy Al and Fanny Steinman, brother and sister, in an act composed of not much of anything, “spring” some wheeses that are new. A piano, @ piano stool, a hat and funny faces fre the “props” used by this pair, | Roth could sing if they weren't so Successful with their foolishness, Snooser, a white bull dog, vied with the Steinman's in popularity, | Snoorer does a number of intel | lectual stunts which are better than the usual dog stunts. Frank Jerome and “Big” Herbert, tumblers, make good in the last min ute of their act with some astonish ing tumbling, while Mile, Laluce, in a color play, “The Beginning of the | Henry Mall, t | with women home, He mault# the Rutherfords, who were in a New York divorce scandal when Katherine's brother | was divorced. Katherine overhears the insult and plang for revenge by breaking his heart first, and, of course, everything comes out all ht because she “falls” for him be the fimal curtain. ne Darw ® modern vampire brother, with a way Alexia Luce, as the big Southerner, an@ Jane Morgan, as Katherine, all scored, The play will run a week LEVY'S ORPHRUM Levy's Musical comedy company is offermk & real Thanksgiving treat | this week by their presentation of lo’s Thanksgiving,” a ively com: | edy, which is cleverly staged. | Comedy honors are divided be tween Oscar Gerard and Lew White. Gerard (8 the Swedish storekeeper jand White the Hebrew constable, | Rob Sandberg and Robert Lorenzo | are suitably cast as traveling sales- men, and Blanche Trelease gets a lot | of hearty laughs from the audience by her comical impersonation of the village postmistress, | There are lots of good musical spectaltion, Mise Trelease = sings | "Little Joe,” the new song composed World,” dances in almost nothing: | yy the Seattle boy, Harold Weeks ‘The Musical Hunters open Robert Lorenzo and Frank Budd | ba. scored a dix hit in their duet, “When | | You and I Were Young, Maggie.” WILKES Mise Vail, Pauline Arthur and| Does a woman like to be bossed? This question is rather touchy, but it is answered beyond doubt in the affirmative at the Wilkes theatre this week by Katherine Rutherford | @ane Morgan), who plays with the heart of a Southerner for revenge, and who finally succumbs to his “cave man” love making and is con vineed that her yellow dress is red, because he says #0. The play is a comedy, “The Walk Offs.” by the Hattons, and is a story of idle New York society, in which | Katherine Rutherford and her broth. er, portrayed by Hem Hall, have no money, but live in society by bor rowing and by their wits, In her circle Katherine meets! Robert Winston Churchill, a mon. eyed man from Kentucky, who be- lieves a woman's place & or BAFFLING BILL NOT YET TAKEN Train Bandit Carlisle Is En-| joying Freedom DENVER, Colo, Nov. %4.-—RBaf. fing Bil Carlisle ts still absent without leave from Rawlins, Wyo, penitentiary today. The phantom | train robber was last reported in a| telegram from Claremore, Okla, as) en route to Texas, In a letter to his pursuers, mailed in Denver, and in a@nother letter sent from Omaha. ‘The Denver note, saying, “Please give my regards to the Union Pacific Officials,” was.in Carlisle's handwrit- ing. Detectives here combed the city the train robber. The other clues | ‘ere regarded as the work of prac 1 jokers, ‘The hunt for Carlisle in Wyoming, | scene of his four train holdups, has turned into a perfunctory guarding of all passenger trains. Officers be- lieve he has made good his escape from that state, Ba jand Bloom, exmarines, who devoted THE Harry Clevela’ headed the chorus In several pretty specialties, 7 ee | PALACE HIP “Pinched,” a comedy playlet. heads | the new bill which opened at the Pal lace Hip yesterday. The plot has to |do with the plight {n which a rural justice finds himself in a great city | as a result of opentng the vials of his | wrath on the head of an interfering | | policeman. How he aids virtue and conf a “goody-goody” pillar of | society by paying in advance for his interference with legal procedure | won the hearty appreciation of Sun: | day audiences, “A Pair of Jacks,” In uniforms of the United States navy, are Haskell thelr spare time while in the service to writing and composing the songs which they include in their offering. The Three Harveys are a nifty trio, who perform on Roman rings | and a trapesr. Shepard and Ott dance and sing their way into favor. “The Rehearsal” gives opportur ty to Will Fields to put over a com edy monolog, and La Adelia, his pret: ty partner, proves to be a graceful and attractive toe dancer. Meliyar and Hamilton have a com edy acrobatic offering. The feature photoplay is “Stripped | for a Million,” starring Crane Wil bur. | POLICEMAN ARRESTED FOR ELECTION WORK PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 24.—Po lee Sergt. A. W. Young is the first to be arrested under the new char- ter provision making a& pernicious political activity a misdemeanor. Young wore a poltical worker's badge on election day and was ac tive in a voting beoth, Two years’ imprisonment or a $3,000 fine are the _maximum penalties. The earliest glass known to the Romans was in the form of blue beads. Bargains Today, Bargains Tomorrow, Bargains Every Day. We're Everlastingly at It, With Never a Let Up! | Just One of Tomorrow’s Bargains Rich Satin Dresses CO TT QOL S) 1 AN ge us ALT at and nm > A Children’s and Misses’ Scuffer Shoes at Real Savings All are in tan leather, button style, with good leather soles. e, at $2.50 Sizes 81% to1l listog at $3.35 BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT Six smart styles await your selection, | and you'll have a hard | time deciding which mod- | el to choose—they’re all so good looking. They’re brown, navy and black— beading, silk embroi- dery, buttons and Sizes Range from 16 to 40. | Five to the forest, ye tangle skirts! Gangway for the latest gasps in Seattle's “hairdo!” What's that? You haven't heard of it? Why, it's the “Flyaway" coiffure | © bobbed hair, No hairpina, no ban deau, no ribbons? Nothing but an unrestrained fuffiness, let the wind blow where it will! | And that’s not all the Seattle beau ty parlors are called upon to do by way of dolling up Madame'’s hair A still more bisarre effect given you the impression that milady's “crowning glory” in a huge topknot affair. The hair completely covers the forehead and reaches down until it tickels the eyebrows, A broad bandeau encircles the fair forehead That's not all, Another effect strives for utter simplicity ‘The hair is combed straight back from the forehead #o tightly that wrinkles in the forehead become fearfully dix couraged, Needles way, there are Marriage A gigantic | is to be made of New York, Students of social, eugenic and eco- nomic questions are going to ox amine the why and the wherefore! | of such things as the reluctance of) young people to marry early, race) suleide, divorcee and illegitimacy. This survey & to be conducted by the American Social Hygiene associ-| ation, endorsed by the delegates to the association's recent conference here. Paul Popence, the neral | secretary, outlined to me ope of the program, “Eugenically speaking the human race is deteriorating,” he said. “The birth rate is lowest song the most! destrable sections of the population: | it is highest among the poorest and| least educated. Poverty and ignor- ance mean always a high birth rate; money and education mean a lowered | birth rate, “How can we overcome this ten- dency? How can we encourage the mating of eugenically desirable; couples—the ‘X' class people, aa| claswified by Galton? One way is to reorganize motherhood as a profession —the most important of all profes- stons, Many desirable coupies would | have more chil¢ren if they tain of bein, $15.75 | in three colors— | are trimmed with tinsel braid. at $2.95 “WOMAN’S CROWNING GLORY” She Sure Can Get Some Startling Effects by the Manner of Dressing Her Hair | lower «(rata of our population would .[in the near future | study beth directly and in cooper-/of the founder of Armour & Cb.,/ | Employment TAR—MONDAY, NO MBER 24, 1919 THESE ALIENS ~ GAN BE OUSTED 'Deportable in U. S. Classes | | Are Outlined i Much ham been said of late about |deporting certain variety of alien jresidents in this country, They [have been classed as “undesirables. Now just what is an undesirable alien? | So that ali may know clearly what the government regards as an | “undesirable alien,” and that the de sirable aljens need not worry them- nelves more about deportation, The | few faces that can stand this hair straight-back stuff. | Star seta forth the reasons for! Anyway, leave it to the women of | Which an alien may be deported, as stated in the U. 8. immigration Seattic to trot out something new in lft |lawa and also in rules laid down | by the bureau of immigration. Here are the deportable cb legally undesirables Aliens who are anarchists: those who believe in Or advocate the Joverthrow by force or violence of the United States government or | of all forms of law; those who din- | believe in or are opposed to all |organized government; those who/ |teach or advocate the assasnination | of public officials, or the unlawful | |destruction of property; those who} are members of any organization | that entertains belief in, teaches, or advocates the overthrow by force | lor violence of the United States gov- | ernment, or of ali forms of law, | or who advocate the duty, neces Sex education for younm men | |#t¥ oF propriety of unlawfully as | and young women means better || “¥lting or killing any officer of the) children, | | sovernment Sa | Before an arrest is made support Bin.| ne evidence of the charges must be had. ‘The alien is then entitled to a | hearing before the immigration offi. | cer and a full record of this trial | must then be passed upon by the rivilege of adopting but one, bureau of Immigration, which munt ingle health mnduaure red a city he SPProve the findings before deporta- | would choose a horizontal tncrease| ton ts actually carried out. in wages as the best. That would ar ees Eee SEL Sor ARMOUR HEIR GETS $15 WEEK: He’s Cattle Buyer at the, Stockyards —_— | young women and young men to| Chicago, Nov. 24.—No one else in demand clean mates is another|**tir along aristocratic Lake Shore| means. [Drive when Lester Armour, nephew | “All these things we intend to\of J. Ogden Armour, and grandson | e Laboratory -—— - FOR A BETTER RACE ‘This ts the program of the Aerican Social Hygiene associa- tion: | The eugenically ft must be en couraged to mate, Motherhood must be recog: nized as « profession and en- dowed. x 9 SPN Se le 0 2283 and educate them property. dowed motherhood ls one means to this end “The alleviation of poverty ts other means. Surgeon General automatically bring them slower breeding zone. “There are other means of improv- ing the race—it is even possible that some day we may be as careful in breeding human beings as we now! are in breeding hogw—and that we} will not permit the unfit to mate “But that is too much to hope for Fducation of into the ation with settlements, the Boy and|dashes down the front steps of a/ Girl Scouts and other organteations.”| palatial apartment on his way to} - - - work. | He gets $15 a week as a cattle! | buyer. Altho Lester Armour is 25 years jold and has a wife and a five month-old daughter, Mary Elizabeth, he seems able to support them de-| this meager income. | le also drives to work in an tm:! |ported roadster. Rvidently he | erandfather's New Organiza ion of Workers Formed headquarters have been opened at No. 1 Madison block, Third ave. and Madison st, by the American Association of Craftemen and Workmen, a newly formed or ganization of workers whose slogan will be “collective responsibility along with collective bargaining.” Al members must be citizens of the United States, or must have filed al declaration of intention to become a has inherited his genius for manage ment and economizing. | Armour is the lowest paid adult |cmploye at the stockyarde. He has citizen. to punch a time clock at 8.15 every The organization favors creation of | metning in the offices of super. adjustment boards in each industry, |intendent of the Armour plant. looks with disfavor on strikes and) Mr, and Mrs. Lester Armour ha believes that “every man is entitled |radivally cut down thelr social sched. | to an opportunity to earn a living.! wie for the season. | to fair wages, reasonable hours of work and proper working condi tions,” POMEROY RANCHER AND | GUESTS ARE HELD UP! POMEROY, Wash, Nov. 24—/ Hold-ups of stores, trains and autos | becoming pasne, the highwaymen’s EUROPE NEEDS | YANKEE GATS | canny | union now turns its attention to| Fighting Stock for the Old farm houses William Ruchert, rancher, enter-| World Market tained #ix friends last night | — | | “Stick ‘em up,” said a masked} (Special to The Star by N. B.A) | thug, appearing slightly in the rear) NEW YORK, Nov, 24--At the] of & palr of six-guns at the doorway.|fail fur ‘auction, housecat skins | response ight as high ns $2.50 each ‘for! r shots export purposes Now the demand One hundred and seventy-five dol-|for lve cats, of healthy fighting ieee Iatock, comes from European eoun- Sheriff Dixon has a couple of sus-| tries | pects in jail | The war, thru food restrictions, | |the use of cut fur for soldiers’ win ter garments and, in some parts} PORK UP te bill-of-fare, has cut down the! cat population abroad. te and ce ve anne 1 hogs were selling “on Ros ed i te Y the hoof,” Chicago stock yarda, at o buy robust Ame nate, } $22 the hu red weight At the sapehie d SPINOR ane T same time loins of pork were sell ing at $34 the hundred weight big meat packere were BUYID hogs and §! pork. A week lk jeo of hogs dropped $1. But the price of pork loins went up to $35. Another week and hogs were selling at $18.50—as the packers bought them, and pork loins were selling at $36—as the packers sold \N. Y. Printers Are | Back on the Job) NEW YORK, Nov. 24.—With the | |eleht weeks’ printers’ strike hero of | |ficlally at an end, officials of the Typographical union announced all | men for whom there was work had jreturned today, A handful of “vaca. | | Uonist” radicals refused to return to | them. work, @ On August 29 hogs dropped to trie at bee ae What "course $16.50, BUT pork loins went Up || My will purs | to 897.80, oa | Demands for a 44-hour week and other questions will be decided by ar. | bitration, On September 11 hogs reached their LOWEST price (as paid the farmer by the packer)—$16. The CRIN Dic: same day pork loins Fesahed theis [TON OF GOLD PIECES Hie price ( pai 6 I Deckers by. the conaumery—asa ||| SHIPPED TO CHINA | Half a milion dollars in $20 gold In six weeks hog prices fell SIX DOLLARS, In the same. six weeks the price of pork loins went up FOUR DOLLARS, _— | pleces, a ton of motgl, is consigned to the Asia Banking corporation in Shanghai from a Seattle bank to help stabilize currency in China, TheBonMarché — wep) | ( \ B eearreass3c2 J Reduced Qo § 75% nt ht ~ Down Go Prices on the High-Class Suits A SPECIAL SALE—ENDING TUESDAY NIGHT All the exclusive fur-trimmed models — all those high-class suits that have been the envy of so many women this’ : their | have been sharply reduced—if you didn’t want them at original prices you will surely want them now. Here’s the new price list: All $100 to $145 $75 00 | $125 Suits Reduced to All $195 to $350 Suits Reduced to Many beautiful models are here. ‘ Richly trimmed with beautiful furs, beaver, squirrel and seal. ” Smartly fashioned suits cut on the best models. Handsome blues, browns, copper reds, greens, taupes and grays, in” duvetyn, peachbloom or duvets. ia Many models enriched with embroidered designs. a | SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE FSFE MERKEL OESELRESESERE SENET ‘ Santa Claus Is Coming Friday Santa Claus is coming, of course—coming to his home in Toyland at the Bon Marche. He'll be here Friday, ready to greet all his little friends in Seattle. IN THE NEW SHOPPING BOOTH The Ribbon Girl. Join the interest throngs that are-le > daily to make some for their Christmas giving. | “Savory” Roasters TO ROAST YOUR THANKSGIVING TURKEY IN Roasters that will give satisfaction— most popular of all roasters, and there are thousands of satisfied housewives who would have nothing but Savory § tive bit of ribbon ed gEEEROES SEES FEREES. aD Pretty indeed are the Roasters, and al- F trings to ways praise them. Roast — fowl] or turkey ecm rg ae tt in one of these and see for yourself. dark frocks—the beads are painted and are in new designs. " Ribbon-trimmed Ribbon 9 Camisoles, quite the daint iest things that we have seen in the way of a cam- isole—oh, and there are just lots of other attrac tive thing's that the ribbon girl will help you make. RIBBON NOVELTY BOOTH | Size 914x14%4x614 inches, of sheet steel, at $1.50. Size 1134x1714x7% inches, of sheet steel, at $2.00. Size 914x14%4x6'4 inches, of enameled steel, $2.25. Size 1134x1719x7% inches, of enameled steel, $ bs FOURTH FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE Ohis 2.75. 38-Inch Voiles at 25c Fancy Voiles, 88 ins. wide; mill lengths— some suitable for fancy Outing Flannel at 15c White Outing Flan- nel, 23 inches wide; soft and fleecy, at a aprons, dressing % sacques and other very low price. Not gifts. over 12 yards to each. Plush Stoles $10.00 Plush Stoles in black, taupe and brown — 1% yards long; ball trimming on the ends. Figured cok ored lining. : Assorted Collars: $1.00 Each Georgette, Filet, om embroidered Swiss and b Collars in delightful pat | terns and shapes. 5 NECKWEAR UPPER MAIN FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD) Thanksgiving Without Linens? No, Never! At least not when they are as plentiful as they are at the Bon Marche and at prices well within your reach, —-All-Linen Pattern Cloths, floral patterns, 70x70 inches, at $6.95, —All-Linen Pattern Cloths, fine designs, size 72x72 inches, at $9.50, ~—Hemstitched Cloths, all linen, well finished, $6.75. —Hemstitched Cloths, all linen, good size, 66x84 paxie at ee , —Hemstitched Cloths, 68x99 inches, - i patterns, $9.00. note FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD) » Size 66x66 inches,

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