The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 2, 1922, Page 5

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SeTURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1 * New Opera at Metropolitan t~dlarty Pfeil, tenor, at Metropolitan. 2—Florence Tennyson, Pantages. 3—Miss Preston, Palace Hip. 4—Mar- jorie Burt, Moore. Beginning Sunday night on the | Quartet” But tn third week of its engagement at the | Girl” we find “A Soldier's Lite,” the Gypay’s Lite We Read,” Metropolitan, the American Light }1ampt I Dwelt in Marble Ha! Opera company wil} present Balfe’s|~ntiss Forever Past,” “The Heart immortal grand-light opera, “The Bo- | Bowed Down,” “Then You'll Remem “The Bohemian 5 - for popular concert operas that have lived on close to a [bers ee century without losing any of its; | RAY SAMUELS tine harm, and seems to be as! AT much & favorite now as on its first | Ray Samuels, “The Blue Streak | presentation in 1843. When Picco-|of Vaudeville,” is the headliner of Jomini, as Arline, sang in an Italian | the Orpheum vaudeville bill opening ‘yersion at Drury Lane in 1858, the | Sunday at the Moore. Miss Samuels press stated that it was received| needs no introduction to Moore with “applause from the many loud | patrons. She is always a tremendous enough to rend the heavens.” Thows hit over the entire Orpheum circult, rounds of applause have never died which ts chiefly the reason Cart| down, for this opera has been greeted Reiter, the theater manager, wanted with wild acclaim in constant reviv- the star for the first show of the new als the world around since its initial season. performance. | Most operas are known to the gO) inctuding Ernest Anderson and Mar eral public by one, oF possibly two sore Hurt in a comedy sketch, “The fumbers. In Tannhauser it is “The | biesy Heights,” which is said to te Pilgrim's Chorus,” in Lucia, “The |. scream. “Sextet and im Rigoletto, “The| he Hanaka Trio open the show, followed by Dave Roth, Swarts and | clifford, Franklyn and Charles, and |the closing act ts “A Little Some: | thing New,” in which the Mellette Sisters, accompanied Dave Dreyer, appear Aesop's Fables, Pathe News and Topics of the Day complete the| | show. | DANCE OFFERING |PANTAGES FEATURE “Stepping Some,” one of | ville’s most artistic dance offerings, by| vaud lot the new week's bill at | Pantages, beginning with next Mon |day's matines. Thro brilliant color jing and gorgeous costumes and set most-talked-of acts of the sea Featured as its star is Her man Wainurn,, assisted by Alice Manning and the fetching Dyer Six ters. The Ross-Wyse trio, Tony Wyser, a versatile midget, ANTAGES MATINEES 2:30 NIGHTS 7 and 9 re Indianapolis leaves Colman doe #0 a m., re- turns arriving about 10 p.m. PUGET soUND NAVIGATION COMPANY Main 3993. Colmes Deek. ALL NEXT WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEE BRILLIANT TERPSICHOREAN Novelty STEPPING SOME A DANCE CREATION with Herman Wainura Assisted by Alice Manning and the Dyer Sisters TYLER & CROLIUS JUGGLING NELSON Comedy and Mystery ith Glenn Goff at the Hobt. Morton organ Season’s Comedy Feature Ross Wyse and Tony ial Featuring Tony, the Wonder of Wonders ~| film feature. hhemian Girl” "This is one of the few |ber Me,” and a dozen ensembie num. | ‘There will be six other big acta, | pretty | | ts announced as the headline feature |Tol* the } tings, this dance creation ts one of featuring THE SEATTLE STAR * FROM ENGLAND OF POLL TAXERS Britain Gets Fr French Reply on Finances Gilmore Says “Tripple oa for Hart Machine “How did the poll tax ever pass?" | PARIS, Sept. 2 | The next move in {the game of diplomacy now being| ‘That's the quent William A Played in connection with payment |Gilmore, candidate for the repub of international debts ts up to Great |lican nomination fe nator in the Britain, 37th district, says is puzzling him France has replied to the sures: | when he notices how many solons of | tion of Balfour that French debts to|the last Meislature are running on | Hritatn be paid, so Britain can pay a record of having opposed the head | the United States. }\evy | The French reply ts that France| “One of my opponents,” sald Gil: | cannot pay anything until Germany | more, “is making a campaign alleg. | han paid for the damage done this|ing that he voted against the poll! | country in the war. tax. That man is Robert A. Tripple. Morning newspapers here today |The fact ts that Tripple and Senator lauded the frank: of Premter| Palmer, my other opponent, worked | Poineare’s reply, They generally ex | hand in glove with the Hart machine Pressed the belief that the answer in the alature which also suggests that an interna-| “On © 537 of the Journal of the | tonal debt commission be formed, | nouns of representatives It is written jwith United States representation, /that when the poll tax waa before } Will please America~—but will dis |the house Mr, Tripple moved an please Britain. amendment to require persons up to} ) 'Moonshine and Weak | 60 years old to pay It Instead of limit: | ing It to those who were 60 or under, | When this amendment lost he w | eved he vote © bil |Heart Caused Death | revved ne vote! againes the bill | After probing the death of Dr.| enator: Wo aelaianiien ‘aide the JJohn It. Conley, aged dentist, who! ot shows that Mr. Tripple voted | died last Tuesday claiming to have!" oy bag been the victim of paisoned whisky, |Seuinet it. and then, after the bill y nf me rom he te, obtained | & coroner's Jury Friday decided that |am* from the senate, obtained) By Wanda von Kettler ‘onley’s death resulted EA cen gpe sree tg 0 theory ley Conley’e death + _? . change his vote from nay to yea Mere man. [disease and excessive [shine, Conley was found in his of Ing. .“What is his is * ay —_ “ite wid nu « poo ; the ladies, taking his vote, his jdrug. He told pol re he died ublic offi id finall: ct. aa ee eee Toys This Year | persist oni 8 |doped whisky oad then had robbed Poor mere man. him. This statement was not borne | f Chri t That barbersh: a arbershop invasion, of Retwiatsnsme'ae rer ac”) for Christmas |.to saree ces } cussed bobbed hair Time was | the i ‘Cut in Salary Is | Will Go Higher) :'.:» is, v0<raos'nw via tiitable chair within the striped pe realm. The mirrors on barber-shop walls were those in all the world in which feminine winsomeness had | Protested by Ross | Potnting out that he has been head of the municipal light plant since tt» J.D. Ross, in @ letter sent German Finances Have Knocked Hole in > anes Pridey, provenied Santa’s Bag | not dared to peck and be reflected inst having bin salary cut from ? A barbershop was a holy | $7,500 to $6,000 a year WASHINGTON, Sept —The| ‘thing Im those days. Today— ) I do not think I should be pen | things that go into Banta ¢ big | Wel, says the lady, tripping lalized for my work in building up a inte the shop and adjusting her. t ¢ to warm the hearts of young: | } $3,000,000 business.” he » My | sters at Christmas time ate going to| **lf In tho tiltable chair, “Please jatlary does not come out of taxes. | cont more this year trim it quite close around the }but out of the profits of the light! sides and the back, but don't fo; there's no strike in progress at old Bt. Nick's fabled toy factory at ae North pole—not at all—but mere lone of the promised sensations of ly this the bil. | “Porelgn orders for German toys | Lovers of music will find delight / have been canceled recently because make my bangs too short. And you might turn me around so I ean look in the glass and see what you're doing.” I needed to question only two wielders of the clippers yesterday | | plan.” in Phillip Fetn and Filo: the Increased cost of production and fon, late stars of the Bost the scarcity of raw materials have |*fernoon to be convinced of the an Carlos companies. forced the German prices up to the |Place woman ts now claiming for her own. Harry Tyler and Gladys Crotius| lev! of the world market,” says the ay all, thetr amusing little offering department of commerce. “It would |, ™xClaimed the man tn the white “Tis to Laugh n very Hkely that Germany has eget to whom I put the question Juasiing a. performer| Now lost the advantage that it ap |*t the Northold Inn barber sho — e t ‘Oh yen, indeed, a lot of them, E whose s#uperiat Juggling is | Deared to posmens when the mark wax , a 4 mingled with droll eccentricities, wm) 4 fly, and American |*TY “ey the girls come in for hair . cuts, Walt in line? Why of course also a comedy feature of the new | ™0Ufacturers need not fear such se bit competition.” | o j jecause of lo oduct! *, ‘The Pantagescope will present aj Because of low production costs, Germany has always been—except | Pathe news weekly and a comedy | 4iring the war-—the chiet source of | American toys. Imporgs from that country last year amounted to $4, | 861,000, which t# nearly two-thirds of | the 1913 figure. ‘The German toy industry Is tocat They take their turn with the reset "So you're stepping off with the trade of the beauty parlors,” com. mented 1. Not exactly,” |the white jacket, [facial treatments or anything like jthat—aa yet. The ladies, #0 far, have come fn just for the halr-clip- vere MAGICIAN HEADS PALACE HIP SHOW ‘The great Justinian! and his com. pany of mystery manters head the} new bill opening at the Paince Hip | ed tn three main centers—Thuringia, |DINg. But they’re coming strong today, whieh includes, besides the! where most of the dolle are made;|™Ore and more every day for that headline attraction, a ventriloquist, | Nurnberg-Fuerth, In Bavarta, the |!*’* hard to say—,” and he sighed lcanine contortionint and other acts. | center of the mechanical and metal| But the sigh was one of wondering | Justiniant brings @ series Of! toy industry, and Erzegebirge, in |**pectation, not of exasperation. stunts, including production of gold: | gaxony, where wooden and papier | The barber fs one man at least fish from thin air, making 40ck®| mache toys are made. who profits by woman's modern free. om of thought and ways. clipped head means just that much in his cash register, so he disappear from a trunk, elevating « woman without the usual deceptive |paraphernalia and similar de | Silvermoon is the dog phenom property of Jack Roshier, who has other bark-amiths with clever antics to go through. The star t# said to be the only four-footed actor in the world who can go through this type of entertainment. A dance revue, the first since the jcircutt has changed hands, ts offered hy the Five Prestons, a quintet of There are few factories, a» most of the dolls and the wooden toys are made In the homes, all members of the family participating, and sold to dealers. It is estimated that at Son neberg, the center of the doll district, there are 30,000 home workers mak ing dolls and Christmas tree decorn. tions, The mechanical toys, however, are uaually made tn factories AUTO ABLAZE more |dropping In on the nearby barber | |not wish to fuss with a beauty par }lor appointment. Down at the Flatiron barber shop I asked the second white-Jjacketed gentleman about his experiences with the ladies desiring halreuits “Nothing unusual at all to have |pretty «iris, pupils of one of the y them in here” he declared with 1 most’ able dance teachers in the| LL Ky COMET! grin. “Several of thetr number come West * in each day with new Ideas for clip Lea and Perrin's saucy skit ts an-|_ PORTLAND, Sept. 2 | pina D' Portland c e home ot other number including snappy dia. | Brows an enna, Been ete rm an automobile trip to California all logue, pretty gowns and much music, |} lwhile Lawrence Johnson is a singer! 't Up. As Se eee home a passing motorist threw « jot ability An shecteing myctery Grama. cigaret stub Into the luggage carrier ‘New {east spoke 1. “You,” exclaimed he, “you see, they have ideas of their own about in which an amateur sleuth outwits ex. | behind Brown's car. Soon the breeze perienced professionals, is the prom. fanned fine fiery tail behind the| automobile | 1 forth in the feature photo- ‘Sherlock wn,” with Bert 1, the Metro star, in the lead For miles the comet car sped on, its occupants blithely responding to | what they mistook for signs of wel . Pe Ns saa jcome, waved from motorists they Ton Y . met The Browns were in a hurry! AMUSEMENTS Ito get home and distanced all follow- J ing care They were not halted un }til an approaching driver stopped his car in the middie of the road, got down and waved his arma | A few seconds were sufficient to clear away the burning clothing and camp equipment, damage to which amounting to about $100 was the only serious result. Lyt | | Until Friday We Have With Us —_——— Great Justiniani World's Greatest Ilusionist The Five Prestons in “A Melodious Dance Revue” Jack Roshier’s Canine Novelty He was a detective, all right He had a badge What it did tor— and to—him is Lawrence Johnson MRS, JOHN JOHNSON “Ventriloquial Fun” Pep,” « Saucy Skit down, My per cent better,” 8207 Twenty-first Ave. W., Says: kidneys were a hundred | Every druggist has Doan’s, 60c a the way they want ft cut. them, of cours, get thone ideas from of movie stars and #0 k ou! | Dleture jbut a lot of them |atyles for themaeives.”* “Are they very ea 1, AP THEY? |e "WE NF » TO THEY AY them around that they may it wo I asked him what patrons thought about the feminine invasion. He grinned again. “Don't he declared, “ 'B'lieve joy it. Fact in, we quite used to it r tent Poor mere man particular?” ask. | ve wt the man re} DO THI And we need to turn to the looking glans doing we're his masculine || He's gotten used to tt His vote, his now hin barbershop. Nothing left | squelched utterly | Wouldn't it be terrible }man? GIRL KIDNAPED | | BY THREE MEN, urday j the roadside. |. Bertha struggied for more than two hours before she was able to/ the heavy rope with | ra | which she had been tied, and stag-| avery | exeape from gered home. | The child told her mother, Mra. A. | into the thicket, ered doned. Her home ts between Lake City jand Lake Forest Park, north of the city limits public consciousness, that she had been bound and aban. to |Gents May Dress Well on $1,250 .| LONDON, Sept. the fashic ED C, 6624 Carleton Ave., Says: “L suffered from kidney trouble, | Orpheum Vaudeville Reop ens DEBT MOVE DUE 'HITS AT RECORD Men Lose Last § Stronghold | Women Invade Barber ‘Shop Some of THE GREATEST SINGING ORGANIZATION ON TOUR ETROPOLITAN THIRD BIG WEEK | STARTING || TOMORROW BRANDON BROS. REX REYNOLDS The American Light Opera Co. | The Mest Tuneful of All Comic Operas eve they exactly object,” y almost en Hof us @ And his ned to a look of resigned con-| grin office—and | be i for him now—he is| | | } -|Left Bound "Beside Road; | Assailants Sought replied the man in| While ityearold Bertha Acke: “We don't give|man lay in a precarious condition at| her home, Sheriff Matt Starwich and | his bloodhounds were searching Bat-| for three men who waylaid| | the child on the new Bothell highway | jand left her bound and helpless by | Ackerman, that while she was on her should not fret if the convenience of | way to the neighborhood store she wha suddenly accosted by three men shop appeals to the lady who does|in an automobile, who dragged her When she recov Bertha found a few miles neys. And weak kidneys cause many queer aches and pains. Your back aches; you are lame and stiff, nervous and unstrung. Your head aches, you are dizzy, suffer sharp, rheumatic pains and feel weak, tired, nervous and depressed. Don’t wait! Neglect may mean some serious kidney sickness. Begin today with Doan’s Kidney Pills. Doan’s have brought new health to thousands of weak, tired, ailing people. | They should help you. Ask your neighbor! Read How These Seattle Folks Found Relief: “The first symptom of kidney complaint in. my © was. lame I had severe pains across my ‘kid- ally settled in my kidneys and A Kiddies back. When I troned clothes, sharp neys, and I could hardly get up or caused: badness aeeiaiek “Ak anes Don tForget Always pains caughy me in the small of my down, and had to lay off work for peserer i riggs amish fa a away. | frequently Wad to sit 4 one whole week. My kidneys were back nearly drove me wild, and and rest. My kidneys: had cause disordered. Everything seemed, to nights I was restless and I tired uch annoyance. My feet and hands go around in circles at times, “ . Bloated badly, too. 1 read about was awfully dizzy. I read’ about easily and could scarcely do my Lea & Perrin Doan's Kidney Pills and one box Doan's Kidne Pilla in the paper, housework. Doan’ Kidney Pills, which T used, soon relieved me of one sufficient to cure procured:from Wolffe Drum Store, in the backache and took the swelling of the geadache and dizzy spells. my kidne: Doan’s Kidney Pills box. Foster-Milburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N.Y. ten 1! *|can dress well and keep abreast of | potson and dies —According to experts any normal man SINGING ARTISTS 50 i 50 Vy Beautiful and Faultless in Construction, Stage Settings and Effects ] Wednesday-Saturday MATINEES 2Be-80e -:- Plus Tax Best Light Gpera Ever Offered Seattle at Popular Prices Bergeon nae 25e-50c-75c-$1 70? | MATINEES— | | 25c-50c Fi LARGE AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA Duwamish G. O. P. to Meet Tonight The Duwamish Republican will meet in Duwamish hall at~ p.m. Saturday. August Toeliner wi " preside. 4 |Royal Economists Close Up Laundry RICHMOND, Eng., Sept. 2-—The laundry at which clothes from the royal palaces have been washed for many years has been closed in the interest of economy. EUGENE, Ore—Siver gray fox, {Drunkard s “Bomb” | valued at $1,500, one of pair brought Puts End to Show trom Catitornia for purpose of breed- EDINBURGH, Sept. 2. — Ejected | IN& encapes from Greenup ‘a from a theater because intoxicated, |Tanch and now being sought | Alexander Saller threw a “stink-| °° ‘ |bomb” Into the alsie and the per- | formance had to stop. NEW YORK.—Lillian Gay, member of opera company, as result of the styles on @ expenditure of only|about her sweetheart, Dominic Ruse 1,250 a year. so, and her sister. hake Off That Backache! wt let that dull, nagging back- ache make you old and miser- able? Get rid of it! It’s time you stopped. worrying and complaining and gave some attention to your kid- neys. Present day life, with its hurry and worry, is mighty hard on the kid- HINDS MRS, A. J. LATTIN 723 Cloverdale St., Says: “Whenever I caught cold it usu- always rid me of the backache and working like ue made my kidneys well,”

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