The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 27, 1921, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Blea ee AtiLe STAK FRAIN SMOKE —) HUGE LIQUOR __|U. of W. Glee Club . CRE ete CENT OUND Sturt Zist Tour Wilkes Players Put | PORTLAND, Ore, Deo. 27.—Over QUARANTINE WICKED John Stewart, 62, was held in the ling 1 Ome by smoke and gas when their COLUMBUS, Ind, Deo. ot county jail Tuesday without ball as/olub be SEOOND AYENUE AND recuse | ~=On “Tea for Three”) fin stalled in a tunnel between St. || Sinfuiness is a contagious germ | the alleged proprietor of a mammot! | #3 members of the el t Ganstio @hn’s Junction and Portland, on the || disease and should be quaran- || moonshine plant which federal proht | f The tour will last BY GLENN HUGHES be rigor ee Se Bee Saas epee 2° TW. R. & N. railway, one man in|| tined the same as diphtheria and | gition agents and deputies, under pamel geomeng Reyne Boe aa teed One of the wittiest and most re | "Ten fer Turew” te 0 direct cap |i ny eee et ee Danek Westkeun takiseer sae Sheriff Matt Starwich, discovered in| portiand, Vancouver, Wash, Olyny Merny rte age mag bade at the bourgee option of ¢ | In ‘Phe train was found in the tunnel || 4 sermon. - his home at Pontiac Monday | pte and Aberdeen, Tea ,*- Three” the play which (om (rianagie, It & rop idee might, ita crew unconecioun | Set up inye blind basement under | onened Bunday at the Wilkes the |0m under the « Hore W. Walker, conductor, was | | the house, the outfit consisted of two | contained 9,000 gallons of mash. atre, It was written by the facile et ue ad, The others were: Eaward/ man, and R. L. Ranta, brakeman, | ion stills, with copper cooling| Thirty-five gallons of finished prod.| Rot Cooper Megrue, and will be re 0° ©" ” Mmada, engineer; 1. W. Ball, fore | ‘they will recover | potorte, and even concrete vats that! vce were destroyed by the officers. | membered an the starring vehicle for |)" S80 Maks diy ob adroitly de HUSBAND | An unnusual © of the pro duction in recently aasumed the directorship of the company, and those who see him this week as an aetor will agree that his talents are ton play the wife and the friend. They are both quite up to the mark, too, And many a Seattle theatre of regret that this may be the last two capable players, Wor it te mad marks the closing of the reason for the Wilkes Mayers, ‘The reason for thin in no meoret. ‘Their patronage has been inwufficient to warrant their maintenance. And some inter eating conclusions might be drawn ~ from this fact. 1 do not purpose ro ing into an enumeration of such con- clusions in this review, But I may at least remark that the financial | | failure of the Wilkes Players has fi] GE fot been due primarily to their own Oa ‘S} defecta an actors, nor to the general choice of plays for presentation, OTHER THEATRES SUFFER, TOO I have sometimes eritictzed rmther severely the plays which they have shown, and I have also tried to play fair by the public in suggesting from Bf} time to time that the acting lett something to be desired. Hut it is true that at least a 1 of the pro- fi) ductions during the current season v4 have been worth seeing, even from a critical viewpe 4 certainty that viewpoint is more ng than 1 a TeSses As @ matter of fact, the Wilkes g Players have not wuffered alone. The | I) Metropolitan and the Cornish have | ff) both felt the pinch of slim audiences onpectal ring (heir best produc tions, A then, will fl | bring hore the f ‘ | the year of our I« tina fl mood to support w rtediy the Hf} legitimate stage. More is the pity!| i] } “Tea for Three” will run the re mainder the week os usual, and will then continue ur extra per | A $ formances. There be matinee and night performances Sunday January 1, and Monday, Januaty 2. DEPARTMENTS | -MREATWAR] ‘Agricultural and Commerce Suits | Bureaus at Odds e war between the agricuitural depart. | ment and the department of com merce has been precipitated by the; |Special Price Basement ye Our Semi-Annual t limited to those responaibilities bebind Ue scenes. — | Adele Blood and Thomas Chatter. | goer will realize with a certain pane |] Now in Full Progress—With High Grade | time he will be ontertained by these Garments Going at Extreme but true that the present production Reductions! Trimmed Hat the A Group at eI 1 pl A Group at $17 A Group at $21 A Group at $13.50 A Group at $17 Every in Stock $2.95 Every Suit in Stock Reduced to | $17 demand of the Society of American} —— Foresters, indorsed by Col. W. B.| may be surmised. Secretary A. B. Greeley, chief forenter of the United) ni iw the chief sponsor for the art Schaffner arx Clothes |202 222522" with its vast re *, to the de- | sponsor of the socalied Curry bill, vided for turning over all federal ac en oor natu hh can be avoided, and | tivities there—forests, water power, Our entire stock of Suits and Overcoats for Men, wwe, such conte else, tal Sebi Sie eS icant territorial hearings on the Alaska bill. | appointed commission, from which Coats for Women and Boys’ Clothing now on sale at wre aE ap gy ‘The American Foresters’ society|the president of the United States, these greatly reduced prices. Ee ee Oe Hart Schaffner & Marx | | Hart Schaffner & Marx anger In the attempt | tion,” says the society, “has not been now being made to transfer the na-| attempted In our time, Having ap Suits for Men and Overcoats for Men and Young Men Young Men tional forests to the interior depart-| parently failed tn this attempt, resources, | “The purposes back of thie attempt | adopted this latest method.” aetna mem vetee |) FIGHT KR AX ‘The situation today reminds one of HAPPY the Ballinger-Pinchot fight, tn the Taft administration. Ballinger, seo- retary of the interior, was a private | control advocate, just as Fall is to- | day, and a good deal the same type of man, while Greeley, chief forester, | ts a disciple of the first and greatest lof foresters, Gifford Pinchot, clone | personal friend of, and co-worker wih, President Roosevelt, enthusias- | public control of natural resources. | Tho fight threatens to involve See just been appointed by Harding federal chairman of the Col is under the administration of the in. terior department, part ne in’ be killed." | which was directly aimed at contin-| Secretar ts oppowed tO OY | ued public control of Alaska. It pro-| | ernment hip or contro! of pub- ment. advocates of private control have} \tie reclamationist and advocate of | retary of Commerce Hoover, who has ‘ President |®¥* Lexington, Ky. | Bureau of Missing Relatives fhe Star invites ite readers te use ine ment ae an ald in finding missing depart | relatives or friends. The department is te help im reuniting these whe have bees separated. Those whose relatives friends are missing are invited to directiy to The their comm { en. eee GRACE EICHLE.—Ben Eichle looking for bis sister, Grace, whom he has not seen for 13 yeara. His en- Ure family of four sisters and two brothers was adopted. The Eichles are from Red Deer, Alta. Eichie cap be reached at Camp No. 2, Clear Lake Lumber Co., Clear Lake, Wash. | STAFEY IKO.—Nme years aso | Stafey Iko, then nine years of age, |was adopted from Alberta. Her |brother, Ben Iko, is trying to find her. Address him at Camp No. 2, Clear Lake, Wash., care of Ben Lay- j bourne, | MRS. WADE HAMPTON, — For- merly Mrs. Bortha, Mrs. Wade | Hampton is sought by her daughter, Mrs, Pearl Sams, of 553 Pemberton GEORGE WILSON.—Cart Collins, orado river power commission, which|of Pocasco, writes that he believes the George Wilson whose name ap- peared in this column some time ago is now living in Burnett. Hart Schaffner & Marx Hart Schaffner & Marx Coats for Women Boys’ Clothing We have more stock than we ought to have, so we’ve reduced prices—we're giving you extraordinary values; it’s the time to buy; you'll never have a better chance. | Unless you see the name ‘ not getting genuine Aspiri peace treaty that he cele-| Corner Second and Seneca Buckingham palace balcony | zt Wad | Over 21 years and proved safe by millions f | Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Shop |2ecn%2 Se. tte “tor 4 Neuralgia Neuritis brated by stepping out on the | Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain | WARNING! Say ‘Bayer’ when you buy Aspirin. ‘Bayer’’ on tablets, you are n prescribed by physicians where. he had this ome | Accept only ‘‘Bayer’’ package which contains proper directions. taken of himself in his new| Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—-Druggtete. fanc v vest, Aspirin Le the trade mark of Dayor Manufacture of Monvaceticacidester ef Salicyiicacl@

Other pages from this issue: