The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 29, 1919, Page 2

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Creat Is today, Dec. 29 ends Saturday, Jan. 10 —for quick disposal we will limit this sale to eleven days only and urge you to take advantage at once of these extraordinary money-saving oppor- tunities; this sale will be a great help to those intending to furnish a new home, or wishing to brighten up the home! —the hundreds of January Sale values will be found throughout the sales floors with large sale tags at- tached for easy, quick buying! As most sale articles are of “one-only” lots, they will be replaced by others as sold, so there will be a constant daily change for you to select from! —COME TOMORROW and each of the follow- ing ten days of this sale! —and you know “Your Credit Is Good!” ANDARD FURNITU L. SCHOENFELD & SONS Second Ave. at Pine St. Established 1864 a | Swenson, au. are $2.00 Amalgam Filling ied Painless Extracting | Have impreaston taken in tho} ‘ guaranteed for 15 year: ct nation nd advice fr Bet we anil WORLD'S living, then, by heck, the women!|and to promote conservative buying. | rolling pin and the vacuum cleaner,|and Seneca st., on January §. |forth into the arena of trade, and L. will be ready for the incinerator, #4 Axel Norberg will be deported The Opening Game of | izations has been sent out by U. &.! thorities show they agents of {for the purpose of organizing the| defense of the 1. W charged Day vs. | | Im order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest 8:30 P. M. Sharp | teed 16 yearu. (War tax .included) 4 get teeth same day. Office, 1218 5th Ave. ny 1s to our office, ° Women to Outline Battle Plans { CHAMPIONSHIP can ‘The conference will be held at the the women of the state, thru their MAY DEPORT THREE | when they return, they promine, the Call for a statewide conference of| Unless they produce citizenship pa the Season District Attorney R. C. Saunders,|the Butte I. W. W and are collect in | women of the state and of Seattle} with the Armistice ia said. SEATTLE § | apd strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; | EXAMINATION FREE, Admission $1.10, Reserved seats now on are im the right place. Bring this ad with you, 907 UNIVERSITY % Oppesite Vraser-Paterscm Om Na | | | f ° ° * ° b or Fight Against High Prices | If the men can't reduce the cont of |rapacity of profiteers in necessities, Laying aside for the nonce the| Women's University club, Fifth ave | OCKEY organizations and clubs, are going q Ww. prothe: H d | mangled corpse of Old Man H. C. of! * hie brother Ea | representatives of women’s organ-| pers. Investigation by federal VANCOUVE! |acting on orders from Washington, | ing money, to be used in the lewal w, jinto an efficient body to curb the) at Centralia, it Wednesday, Dec. 31 you can bite corn off the ob; guar: $5.00 Set of T $10.00 $1.35, $1.65 sale at the Arena 7 satisfaction. Open Sundays From 9 to 12 for Werking People ‘ massacre | | orable mention will be awarded, Con | testants must THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1919 TAILOR-MADE MAN SUCCESS: |Ambition and Bluff Sure-| Fire Elements in America Youngest Female Impersonator in World Lives Here a thie week ‘Tatlor- made the a Metropolitan vengeance —"A At with Man." Altho the James Smith Harry isn we think credit should be to Horatio d the highminded ge we those collar adver energetic young man with success all over bis hand program tailor, aye given nule ar busine and beauty writter nome face "A Tailor made the same » to Advertine todate young shirt, who cc make a mi months, who bluffs hi cosm, and who finally lowly stenographer or tallor's daugh ter or dog-catcher's crippled but love ly step-child Horatio Alger Did It The play nuine appeal Man the pla the belongs to . “lt Pays same Up in @ milk method to few short w sue the} hool # There 4 Ameri neelves a Don't wuccess and it has All Americans ambition and bluff, and excitement and Success with @ large capital. Those are the |ingredients cf “A ‘Tailor-made Man,” and they are elements on| the stage. Who would not thrill at the sight of John Paul Bart, «itting cross legged on a tailor's table, prem. | ing @ pair of gents’ pants at 10:30 in mistake us ar sure-fire peric in Se ureper some rie! derfully or, goes Over big in a/ |eketch called “Litue Kick.” Black | and O'Donnel offer a nifty little ekit! }in ich Misa O'Donnel piays the|* | violin and Black supplies some good | comedy the morning, and the same evening. thru colosnal nerve, an intimate and future business associate of Abraham Nathan, the steamship king? | Why, Horatio Alger made a fortune out of that sort of story! she « girl or ts he a boy It can't fa That's what several hundred peo] 1¢ is marvelous how business #ux ple have tried to guess in Seattle | coum on the stage, ix achieved with the past few weeks, And most of/ our an effort, It involves no trouble them have failed. whatever for an actor to become the} ‘The picture is that of William Rob-| Soap King or the Steamship Haron ert Harris, who prefers to be called/or the Traction Magnate. In the |plain Bill, ke his father, William/pbattroom scene, aa in “A Tailor | Harris, er, of 4656 Myrtle at |made Man,” all those prenent pa Mra. Harris took Bill to the Doll/ preathieus interest to everything he Show at the Arena a few weeks ago Does he with to make a witty im in ® group of 69 little girl#iremerk? Every one immediately prizes were offered to those Who| stops mpeaking. And there is no could guem correctly which one waslyokel who ever says (ax they might):| j ditt "L laughed my head off the first A similar stunt was enacted at the|time I heard that one. Douglas Dancing academy last Fri capable lay night. Only two or three people bs Cas were able to pick Bill out of a crowd,| When the leading man wishes to which included 39 little gtrts. tell the walking delegates of the ing longshoremen that the fu ture of the country depends on their efforts, and that they must accept hin offer, the business agents listen | Feapec tfully, and, at the conclusion! jof his fervid oration and after the |*poradic hand-clapping has died jaway, my “By Jove, Mr. Bart, you're right! And then they shake him i —- ,.,. |b¥ the hand and stride to the door, Public Service Commission | were. before exiting at I. 3, they ‘ |turn aw one man and may: “Damn it, Refuses Reparation | Bart, you're a man. We're with you!” Pie (Wid applause) é r of the Seattic Lighting | Success is a wonderful thing on Co, who paid for, did not re =| ‘he stage. ceive anything like adequate gas ‘A Tailor-made Man” is one of pressure last September, during | ‘hose plays. It is put on by a capable the strike of gas workers, will |°84t. Harold Vermitye, as the tailor not be allowed reparation by the |™Ado man, extracted the mont out of pablle service conmlesion. jthe part. Redfield Clarke played In a decision, which reached the of. | Abraham Nathan, the financial king Iticials Monday, the dotmmisaion held | With restraint, and Florence Ryor | the evidence showed that Seattle con. |", aa the Tatlor’s Daughter, who |numers received substantially the gas |W8* loved by the ambitious and won. naw held tor |derfully wuceseatul young American @ plece of outrageous |%Usiness man, was easy on the eyen m toward the Seattle Light |@9d on the eardrums. n the part of the public mor | ve @ delightful touch of vice commission,” was Fi Anaint. |COntrast to She Sane a4 nt Corporation Coun an J L Kenn ae. | MOORE po haa | The Marmein Sisters and David Individual consumers will now | Schooler are not billed as the head. have to take legal steps against the|UMers at the Moore this week, but if jcompany on their own part, if they | Popularity Im Judged by the applause wish to carry the case further.” from the audience, this trio of per. | In ite decision, the public service | formers were decidedly the headlin lcommixsion bears down on ite state ¢f @9 far ag Sunday afternoon's au ment that during the com: | dience “was concerned. plained of by Seattle gas consumers,| Schooler is a wonderful pianist, “the general measurement of gas to| whose repertoire includes everything consumers was accurate, and that/| from jazz to real classical selections. consumers, as & wholo, paid for sub-|The Marmein Bisters are a pair of stantially what gas they consumed | pretty girls who dance in an entirely and no more. original manner Housewives and restaurant men| The Four Mortone—Sam, Kitty, ontend that gas service during the) Martha and Joe—are a happy strike of gas workers last September | quartet of entertainers. Pa and Ma was not up to standards required by | Morton offer some delightful com- franch ledy, while Daughter Kitty and gon * Gas Miers Did Work Joo sing and dance a bit. Kitty is In light of textimony taken quite the prettiest bit of femgninity sion finds that while the Seattle gas| Piety: ee ney & ee eT supply ra below norm: de 4 } i sartea Boge ge onl ap Biyapic~ Ud ly MoDermott, dressed in a tun ceieinationtte sade sia | uniform, wears a lot of tion to consumers ;* apringe jokes and) The commission holds that the evidence of Seattte consumers that alr and worthless gases poured thru The service prpes of the lighting company, in lieu of usable gases, is not sufficient to phold the charges against the lighting Ww t of the commix re James Du nh and company stage rder a general|® pretty equestrienne act, in which naration of | to eirle, two men, two white horses It ‘ ty. t A white Spitz dog take part. Hudler, Stein and Phillips, a trio inished of male singers, open the show with order wh defective se © was|some fine harmony selections Not Classed “Proper” | WILKES ja Discussing this point, the comrmis-| While Morgan enjoys a sion states | much-needed rest little Mary “We are not prepared to Thorne holds forth the leading rote a strike will in every in “Daddy Long-Legs,” the holiday | a utility for defective service, Neither | offering at Ww theatre thi jare we inclined to establish a p |dent under. which dissatiafiea ployes may cripple pub: and simultaneously the commission as a club on the back of a utilit rew from a blow which uh y ec not right | . should not ity with such an Jane A that insta xOURE the kes Abbot, the 17-year-old being sent to friend “Daddy portray had Wilkes rusha rvice who is whom orphan lego by a she bh une mysterious nicknamed Miss Thorne that to staggering hemselves I that role she has the since charging the but principles object was) whe that would ame Players such in thi upon nd to encourage wu wbtful tory, fami all, is uy uppropriate on ek. Children. th week in the nature of a of a fine, statute | The commission conclues ings with the wt that exists no legal bar to granting form of reparation to er 4 proper attle last Se on order fe at t the juvenile ehar-| Helen and Ruth} Fleischer J fe Amy and au Glover and Mastrr Neal Kling entertaining to younger as orphan und ter by John | 8 valid under Neu home would be ps i find there nome tement wel older Others poople mers in that th o ptember could not coming in. for Alexis Luce the benefactor Norman Teuste and Henry Hall, case, but favorable | | mention are Pendleton, s Jervi in di John Nick: | 4 as truste 1, seeretary Phillips and hare in the| “proper wise; erson CASH PRIZES OFFERED ‘ry gna Menry FOR POSTER DESIGNS Ja", Darwell, starvor sociation will award three the best designg the "Vi Prize Prizes for for its pag lant week 4 the " A jon of the Blue Cru-| or of $25, $18 and hon- 1KUM n comedy, “1920 in the New at Levy's Orpheum this* week | play, produced by Ert Hunt, submit thelr posters| comedy dealing with the A. before 8 p, m., Jan+|of Lew White, candidate jcouncti on the poster VV'S ORF prohibit Dry,” January Wet! t is to be ders. ushers Th: is fortunes atthe ¥ fof vary 3, W.¢. a tiny chap, won is SWEDISH CRUISER NOW |ish cruiser Flygia arrived h yesterda had been in this port since the Fly: gia b the Swedish crown, iu | <ameae | campaigns manager, Doll." eral |thustastic audienc Ose | while | hit |number on the | jtunes,” § | |PALACE HIP a}Palace Hip the holl-| feature wil! | Douglas family formance, | tile und do | vaudevillians ¢| Surprise Four, who appear to ma aa} good a | Amblers | brintic of class jand then flourishes a popular com- bination r| his |pair whose comeliness dancing wet Ucket,” and his]of the feature photoplay, YOU MAY JUST AS This Special Offer of th WELL Have Good Teeth e National Dentists will enable you to have your dental work done and save yourself a lot of money at the same time. $4 est Gold rowns... The reason for THESE REMARKABLE PRICES— this office is under new management, and the new management has deter- mined to make this one of Seattle’s foremost dental offices—hence these money saving prices. THE : ational Dentists N. E. Corner Third and Pike | NATIONAL DENTISTS | THIRD & PIKE cnulsen NOW BOL ICE PROBE MAN'S MURDER Believe Gangsters Take Re- venge on Former Member IN NEW YORK HARBOR NEW YORK, 20.—The Swed. re late from Bermuda, more than No Swedish vessel Deo. week overdue ought Prince Wilhelm, heir to for a tour of the yenra ago. nited States, Gerard girls made On nd the Want a was rep before the had its fill rt Lorenao pleasing trio, makes a big} 108 ANC 28, Dec, 29.—Six | persons are uyder police suspicion today as having possible knowl Jedge of how Lee Thomas Leighton, known until his death as Albert wood, came to be murdered riday night Police investigation hag revealed the opening | that Norwood served a term begin- ning in 1908 in the San Quentin penitentiary for burglary in Los Angeles and that he had been con neeted with alleged criminal rings in the past His wife, Flossy Sturg big hit in “I The ptece times Sunday Frank and ar Blanche “Rose Budd, Rot rd “are Hall in The Fatal For- attraction Helen Homes, the in movi however, stoutly de clares that she first knew her bus: band was an ex-convict when the police showed her his criminal rec ord after his death ubundance in is variety in bill which yesterday, a provided They ar being group, who in gay otch costumes. appear ing merry songs somo energetic dancing of ular Police are convinced that it was A case of revenge—possibly because Leighton had given up the gang life and had turned to honest | | | | | Plenty with Finds His Clothes After Three Weeks It took Felix Bye, a Filipino, three J weeks to find the man he claims stole his clothes, but Sunday morn- ing he spied John Jones, a negro, 34, at Sixth ave. S. and King st, and hastily summoned Patrolmen B. H. Williams and A. G. Lunsford and had Jones arrested. According to Bye, the negro stol» @ suit from Bye's room at the St Paul b 1. Jones was held on an open charge Monday when Bye en deavored to lodge a grand Jarceny charge against him, FREE MASONS TO MEET, The Ancient and Accepted Sed tish Rite Free Masons of Seattle w hold open house at Scottish Rite tem ple on New Year's day from 2 to § p.m. For Colds and Influenza And as a preventive, take LAXA- TIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets, Look for EW. GROVE'S signature on the box. 3 MARY THORN | ster is provided by the} pursuits. Leighton's brothers, Guy and Hal Leighton, have arrived here from | Sacramento to aid in the hunt for | Ieighton'’s assassins, stage hands, which first appear Attractively staged, the Three have an offering of equili foute that is full of thrills | Pha tear eeiaias ,|TAVERN PROPRIETOR | FIGHTS U, S. DECREE lightful instrument Kruzo, Petition for a writ of error has been granted “Bob" Farley, propric minute airs,|tor of the White Horve Tavern, by ter comedy | Jud Jeremiah Neteter in the Merchant | United States district court. The case and | witl be reviewed by the circuit court |of appeals at San Francisco, Farley 4 graceful | Was sentenced last Monday, after be and novel|ing found guilty of retailing liquor approval at his chicken dinner resort, to serve the Ute] two months in the Snohomish county | Jail and to pay a fine of 6500 in © they ever xylophone § in hands who plays a bit of high| to show his capability | of up-to-the There ts vd che k in the playlet Ince,” with “Th Jerome Merrick players Klaine and ‘Titania are numbers Honor win and 2” ts Scored a Decided With the Large Sunday Audience as “JUDY” IN ‘‘Daddy Long Legs’’ AT THE 4

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