The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 11, 1922, Page 3

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" ee EMONDAY. SEETEMEER 11, 1922, Sap] .M.S. Pinafore Is |, _ Big Winner at Met By 3g Hughes Joharm the audtence with the famiita: | slody, “I'm Called Little Butter: | A celidithig gufermnace of [OOTnT™,S Little Butter that f jeup.” and altho her forte ts sent! ras A ny Seeeolng comle [ment rather than comedy, ahe sus a eats very well the bewitching ¢ Mahted Sunday Mis wine ite Sia w nth } — Sg Metropolitan — theater, One of the striking features of the this Gilbert and Sullivan {ynow is Victoria Andrews, who, as masterpiece, the American Light | ¢),9 midshipmite, dances a hornpipe | Opera company opened its four in a very She drew the Week in Seattle, and it ix a com | mon impression among Hght | opera fans that every week's Production has excelled its prede- ce 4 ss0rs. 1 medy-villain of the — piece Hoth the whimsical buoyancy and] Ty Pfeil sings the tenor role the extravagant satire of the opera| of Ralph Rackstraw In properly Tonight—Last Times “NICE PEOPLE 3 DAYS—STARTING TUESDAY TODAY'S PROGRAMS Keld in “Nice ™ Hy | BLU Gitbert tn N—Pearl White ie “The Mroadway Peacock,” COLONIAL = May MeAvey tn Through the Glass Window OAK—Erie Vou Stroheim in * Mustanads.”” amusement with bis inter pretation of Dick Deadeye, the ‘ | veteran, Ed Andrews, fur- iE | | Isp jeldedly meritorious, Paula Ayers ts/night this week, with popular his father into a hero, HE’LL FAVOR _ HAS STING . AVERAGE FOLK!. ALUMNI OKD H jiimeni overcomes his cowardice, When tc “If elected to the state legislature| Fred W. Heastings, a candidate for with th jfrom the 47th legislative district I/ reelection to the state senate from adole } will vote to reduce appropri the by y of hful suitor mak ions for |"tho Queen Anno Hill and sixth | jstate purposes and our state inastitu:|/ward district, has recelved the In Malakoff, candidate for state rep- | helped to defeat the attempt to lim " " t chan ative ‘hoapes ping from stone to ston: and runs away, It tsa ple alo secured an| see amendment to the governor's code COLUMBIA exempting the university from its} faome of the legislation enacted atition fees, He the last Weislature under the direc |tion of Gov, Lous F. Hart. I favor | jthe repeal of the obnoxious poll tax./ provisions, He believes, he says, lThere should be some drastic legis |that the youth of the « jlation to curb the narcotic evil, titled to } “It will be my purpose if elected to the legisiature to serve the com. | |mon people, for I feel that the best | |way to eliminate class legislation ta |? jto serve the average citizen Instead | lof seeking favors of the special tn |terests that generally have well-paid attorneys to serve them.” Marion Davies, star in Cosmopoll- itan Productions, declares that the | jPension act — time she goes to England paca she will make a pilgrimage to the eee ae ING Bobbed Hair at pesitiy Bury 8t. Edmunds. Miss Davies plays the part of the capricious) wa who gave . in her forth picturen, “When Knight in Fiower.” She has become deeply interested in the character of Princess Mary thru much study of English history. in Richard Wash- burn Child's amazi: story of mystery an mistrust. ® are D \there’s a certain type education, without any jine clever | hampering res |woman’s love, ¢ Hastings also ve Against the | distrust a woman he has wronged poll tax and the certifieate of neces-| ‘The theme is # sity bills, He supported the allen: \+Paid Back,” the U land taw, the soldiers’ bonus and the ‘the ¢ Orthopedic Industrial Home appre free tions. bia thin week | ations, In'a story of a quadrangle and an un Pasaage of a bill giving to denerted| woman, She loves o hold" of the third. Fre on and Wilt players ee Universal City 10» tami Now that bobbed hair ta getting |“*? the leadir its just deserts and a lot of frivolous | flappers are wondering what kind |COLISEUM jof an accelerator they can find t jassiet nature's natural process, newspaper feature writer bethow herself to make a check-up of bobbec and unbobbed heads tn the movies Many of her film admirers must Norma and Constance Talmadge. | have thought at various times that)! & Judge who have just completed “The Volce|Gindys Walton, for instance, had| Barbara Benton (Katherine Mac y|Marital joys and sor | MacDonai | West," respectively, are en route to! nave secured such a reputation as a|°®%4. Judge Benton, when The Playhouse of No Regrets Egypt, where Norma expects to com: | fiapper without bobbed -hair? But |PO longer om his ecru mune with the inx | 4 to} d ctre: Going into the poorer part For Twe Weeks Onty! a Sphing in regar Gladys ts an actress ag well as a| land of the Pharaohs; sho simplly | owners, then there isn't a more seri. [28480 Denton. The two'wétngh be: in a whole mile of y tanghel | wants to see the land of Cleopatra, |ousminded level-headed group of “Grandma's Boy” Mis First Five-Act Picture AND IT'S A RIOT! a = BE COLSE UME [within the walle of Carl Laemle’s| age an onto’ | flim city. Judge and Mrs, Ben mn. ready for it, with the crowning glory of woman unimpaired, Among those who have escaped are Priactiia Dean, Virginia Valli, Gladys Walton, | pictures of the season. An tm Louise Lorraine, jtrude Olmstead, Laura LaPlante, | Lillian Rich, Edna Murphy, Barbara Belford, Andree Tournier, Una|™&snitude of this production, its tr ltrevelyn and Marjorie Daw. Going |™#ndous settings, trappings, lavish | Over to the Century lot, however, we Ifind one bobbed head. That belongs | ‘his production an }to Baby Peggy, three years old! She|®0t im any way hamper or over lis expected to outgrow It Nn 6 theater bc * and eater, big week at the Blue Mouse theat Von Stroheim's One More Day to See written by Alexander Dumas. An all-star cast has been assem marring' glamor fades— “Bomestic Relations” New Gland Test‘ ‘llowing prominent pia i n Gilbert, Estelle or, WII V. Mong, George Seigmann, Rot | By Increasing the power of cer tain glands in the human body, @/ gcuatiy well known, but too numer Baltimore physician believes he can ous ¢ mention, proiong life. The doctor spent con | se [siderable time in rmany, where} | WINTER RDEN he conducted a series of highly suc saa tiie totale ak toh Win cessful laboratory experiments. This| nies cath W physician's method treats the glands peatwae Pentetha” wh jin such a way ag to multiply their ‘aeiiian te a ery Gobet pinperent powses disasters and triumphs |latest discovery in gland lean be enjoyed in the form of!Gr ter ¢ “7 = TALMADGE Opens Wednesday ™ at the Coliseum in = “THE g ETERNAL = FLAME” MAY McAVOY “Through a Giass Window” You'll smile a lot—and cry » little—at this tender Romance- Drama. REMEMBER— at White Way. nds of healthy young animals. | who: Glandogen has had unusual success | the in the treatment of thousands of | ers. ing men and women It ie ob je at all Bartell drug stores. and Wife Solve) mn» ted» tw Fuel Problem soe COLONIAL beauty and personality k ace seething with merry-mak falls in lov # of the warnings of her 10¢ ALWAYS outcome of the beauty’s ro. the while it can be had? I am afro }it'’s going to be very scarce this|the G as Window,” the film attrac |not be any on the market at all. It| interest story. llooks that way from the present| There is pathos in the story of the | conditions, and if we do get any we | plucky little girl who struggles with for it.” who is a bit too weak. | “I don't know what to say, John | rights we should have It put fn now. | pleasing as the wop yendor. |to spend some money for your | Realart offering, ° | clothes next week. Your old blu ee |wuit looks terrible, simply terrible, |OAK | John, and you will disgrace us both} “Blind Husbands,” the picture at \if you wear it much longer.” |the Oak, carries the spectator to a suit is a wreck and it's also getting |an amazing intrigue of love is pre pretty thin. I was looking it over |sented | yesterday and I thought at the tim | “Well, I am glad we've got that | Austrian officer He makes the dis r along anyway. Up to now you've |covery while the w yeen insisting that that suit was as|in tie jagged ice-trap of the moun that it is @ has-been, maybe thero 1s | life | sme 1 “Paid Back” |some chance of your getting a new| ‘The climax is a smashing indict +6 ae | ment of men who trifle with other STUART HOLMES os, I know that I must have a|men's wives. GLADYS BROCK WELL new one. In fact, 1 think I have a| Eric Von Stroheim is featured a suit and|the Austrian officer, und you | plan worked out for the i n HAUPTMAN'S the coal, I can get my suit HESTRA Any Time 106 All the Time can buy yourse | Cherry's by m | down, and finish by t payments. Then, we Jour winter coal, Let's both shop | cast. |there tomorrow. They are 1015 See ond ave. in the Rialto bidg,, over the Pig'n Whistle.”—Advertisement, One hundred or more 5 are expected to form the delegation that willleave September 21 to at Rtend the Seattle day celebration, | September 22, at the Yakima Wash ington State fair, Those desiring to Join the delegation are asked to cal! bie Chamber of Commerce, ‘ " king a small payr aking month! tarred on the stage. May McAvoy Lloyd tn “Grand- | Were Well Interpreted Sunday night.) romantic fashion; George Olsen cee The principals were in good volee,| brings his mannerisms to the |Laneery the tempo was sustained, and the| part of Sir Joseph Porter, “wh 46(7X\RANDMA'S BOY," Harold ‘ensembles were up to the high stand.| rules the water, and Carl J Lioyd’s latest, showing now at ard already established by this! Bundschu ts effective as the jthe Liberty, Is the beat mvreen comic company | krandiloquent Capt, Corcoran. [since Charlie Chaplin's "The Kid." Theo Pennington, soprano, tn-| Altogether, it i# a delightful pro-| The story, in brief, Is about a boy | ereases In popularity with each pro. | duction. It has the right spirit of who thought himself a coward until! duction, and her handling of Jose | levity, and it has punch his grandmother gave him a talia} Dhine’s lyric role this week {9 de| The opera will be sung every man, telling him it had transformed | ey & good opportunity to!matinees Wednesday and Saturday Relieving in the charm, Lioyd his grandmother has manufactured charm, he comes to believe it mm the comedy ts backgrounded | pathos of the neurosis of} maeif in the prew of his sweetheart—you know him |Hons, with the possible exception of }dorsement of the University of] The whole five reels are filled] our higher educational Institutions,” | Washington Alumn! association. jwith humorous twists, One particu-| OG As an the statement Monday of Morris! Mr, Hastings, tn the 1921 seasion, |!" ny Incident occurs when | L arries his girl across a creek, | “While I am running for the re |'t the number of students who could otiates it safely until the last) |mysett iy complete harmony with|fought the act requiring high tul-/*hrown Into the creek. The stone/ ¢ man who, nm be in winning a «n't know when to| Hands of Nara,” ongly exploited tn ersal drama at} pital and Women's| This isn't a triangle picture. It ta} the 1919 session be obtained the leven one at that—three men and onal of them, is wives the benefit of the mothers'|married to another and gets in the m this un |usual foundation situations develop Gladys Brockwell, Stuart Holmes, Lucas | “Domestic Relations," a First }National attraction, now at the} + | Collneum theater, deals largely with >was. Katherine is adorable in her role Jas the beautiful, but neglected wife From the Minaret” and “East Is|pobbed her hair. How could Gladys|D0ald) leaves the home of her hus her next picture, which will have an | fiapper and her wig<maker can keep |‘!tY, Barbara meets a Mrs, Martin, Y Eastern atmosphere. Constance has | secret. S80, if bobbed heads indi-|“>0se husband, Jos, ts werving a GB 2° ulterior motive in visiting the | cate frivolous, flighty and: carefree |Pri#on sentence meted qut to him by {come fast friends and the result t# whom she so cleverly represented in| giris anywhere than at Universal |* Series of dramatic situations which “Polly of the Follies,” last spring. | City. For there ian't a bobbed head |Cventually bring freedom to Joo | Martin and the reconciliation of “ho ‘Adulte [| Whatever the next hirsute fashion : may be, the Universal beauties are|BLUE MOUSE Cm “Monte Cristo,” now on Sts second | j wilt take its place with the really Mary Philbin, Ger-|Portant idea tn the staging of this }mammoth screen play ix the fact that in spite of the overwhelming ness and fortune spent tn making | unusual one, does | shadow the world-famous story as |Physician Makes bled for “Monte Cristo,” including }McKim and thousands of other neaday night in| Tapy |trancing life typified by New York's Glandogen, a highly concentrated! Miss White's role fg that of a viva- glandular tonic, prepared from the| cious hostess of a noted cabaret, with @ young h an affair can only end leads the story to a highly “Mary, what do you think about} With an Italian vegetable vendor ordering a few loads of coal now/as hero and a little doughnut and 1| coffee waitress as heroine, “Through coming winter. In fact, there may | tion at the Colonial ts real human | will probably pay three or four prices | the burden of biind mother and a y MacAvoy is charming as the | We do need the coal badly, and by|heroine and Raymond McKeo is | But you know that we were going| “Through the Glass Window” ts a “You're right, Mary. That blue |fashionable hotel in the Alps, where | A famous American physician Ithat it wouldn't last much longer.” {finds his wife is flirting with an Kling officer is | good as new. If you at last realize |tains, powerless to save his own a dress and coat at} William DeMille {s to sereen nt|"Grumpy” in which Cyril Maude an also get injand Theodore Roberts will be in the Minter is to be starred ‘THE SEATTLE STAR Bebe Is Regular Heart-Breaker in Picture Play at the Strand| | | | People this Paramount offering. “All further reference to possl- bility of @ ‘settlement’ of the railroad strike are mythleal if what is meant by ‘settlement’ bs a return of the strikers with full seniority rights,” according to a statement sent The Star today by the Federated Industries of Washington. Thir organisation, says John H | MeIntosh |more than jment | "been in co-operation with the trans 3,000 business establish the shortest possible time.” far as the raltroads ere concerned, work, the va remained at heon at ——— KEEP WELL FRESH AIR BY DR. R. HH. BISHOP NE physician's } fm ft. revolutionary, for we often| hear of ing cold” in a ca Really ever, it Isn't e draught that cold, but overheatin, 1 room bef posure to it is the first necessity of life, yet a stu people worry about every | draught and extra current of alr Inate f worrying, the right thin: | is to t advant of the draug breathe deep! eral times ser h better you feel Th a blanket of hot alr around the human body at all times. It requires a strong curent of air or & breeze to lift this blanket and make the body cool and comfortable, The current may be provided by an elec tric fan or it may come from a ven tilation shaft or, better yet, from a wind op and bottom, Just air is fresh and kept the result will be the in mott same. Everyone should get accustomed to fresh air, breathe all of it that ts possible, and then he won't mind hardened to cold alr are less subject than others to colds, bronchitis and pneumonia No condition tends more surely to colds, grip and lowered vitality than a crowded room with no tion, Re sure to open your windows wide at night and obey these general air-hygiene rules if you would enjoy per Go out aft ep out if you can, the deeply COTM Cc 2nd nnd Last >| Bebe Daniels, She is the captivating little heroine of “Nice ” the holdover attraction at the Strand. Conrad Nagle} When « man gets what he wants! and Wallace Reid vie with each other for Bebe’ § ction in too easily, he ‘how’ beware. rat od affe tion ’ My “Nice People” will be shown for the last time tonight. “The in-which Clara Kimball Young and Elliott | Dexter appear, opens Tuesday. ‘Rail Strike Is Settled, the roads hsp shops aro being | « per cent of | ginal force and normal as| job filled by an efficient | leswens the chances of strikers Just that much, for the map. agement of the roads is determined the men who have re- to the roads, and to the United States an arm of the govern-| itself, will be protected | 2 ¥ word comes that some rond has entered into a new agree-| on one potnt manager, comprises labor board, and shippers, He says it har continental railroads in this ntate in |helping to bring the ratiread strike, | ment with {ts employes. Jalready lost by the shop crafta, to a 100 per cent successful conclusion in this shows tho utter folly of the faith the tkers place in thelr national lead. | ors when the latter advise them t for a national rettlement. | | tne |}! Four Pieces—Dresser, Chiffonier, Dressing and { “Tho etrike ts already settled In #0) the statement adds. “Despite the caretullysbroadcasted propaganda to the contrary, the shops crafty en tered upon a losing fight from the day they went out, for in addition t the considerable number of men who ancien striker now is to apply for work trust to being accepted if any va provided he has committed an overt act against cancy exists, not the "Many thousands of went on strike have gone back to! has} ly dependents and who falls to | seek employment while there ts still work for him is taking a grave re-| ity on himself and family, days when there will mechanics are num: filling. On some | openings for The headquarters of the Industries is 422 Alaska bulk la prescription for e: good health is “to get in a draught and stay |OLD COAT HAS PERSONALITY Licyd Hamilton needs a new coat according to a certain Los Angeles lacks a sense of his coat to nt This rounds} tatlor who evidently Hamilton sent | this ta ailor for repairs, but the errand |boy returned at once with the coat and the following note: atch: |, it’s no good, It's got four bad brings on the| , uns | » or after ex-| It's no good Maybo-the boy got the wrong |moths have 1d cost you $15 and I can't afford I would have to nee because tle |* |to take the chance. money fn adv: Open an Account at Grote-Rankin’s THE.GROTE- RANKIN @) PIKE Sr. "AND. FIFTit "AV The Fashion Fete in Retrospect To those who took advantage of the opportunity offered by the Fashion Fete, to compare—critically, thoughtfully—the pre-eminence of The Grote-Rankin Co. as a homefurnishing institution of the higher order, must surely have been gratified. And to those who did not see The Grote-Rankin Co.’s beautiful displays, the opportunity and the cordial invitation are still open. Come to see and compare—you will find prices extremely moderate. 5 is an unusually low $ e O price for Mahogany- or Walnut-finished Bedroom Suites EE. Ae a Eh Table and Bed This price is possible only because we bought a lai | number of these Suites, at important price conc | sions. This saving, together with a smaller profit for us, |] combines to make these Suites outstanding values. | | 1 I couldn't sell the darn thing for! six bits.” | Despite the tallor’s advice, the! comedian is not going to replace — coat, The offending garment. hap- pens to be his chief comedy “prop.” In fact, he has been wearing the} cutaway for eight years, and he! ioves every hole and patch in it, He wears it in “The Speeder,” the first of his new series of Hamilton come- ldies for Educational, now at the | Strand. AMUSEMENTS ——PANTAG! ita. 2180 Nights, 7&9 ww Playing LLY “SWEDE” HALL Robison & Pierce, Page, Hack & Mack, George La Shay, Gocts . @ Duffy, Carson & Kane, Pan- ee tagescope. Gen, Adm.: Mats, 25e; Nights 40¢ | (Paid Advertising) PT MM (gnst Hardware G + ob-| zl SIXTH AVENUE and PIKE STREET Store Hours, 8 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Agency for cold, wintry alr, Those who are | alr clreula: | Combination Gas, Coal and Woodll Orders HNN ae ——————e— =i ab Hatten bed | BUY GARDEN HOSE NOW For Next Year at Less Than Cost 50 feet 5-inch 5-ply Guaranteed Rubber Hose. Regular price $8.75—special $4.95 BLUE ENAMELED WARE, Choice 98c Heavy coat robin’s- egg blue ware with white specks. A very exceptional purchase. Assortment consists of: 6-at. Teakettles 12-qt. Seamless Pails 6-qt. Convex Covered Ket: tles 2qt. Double Rice Bollers 10-at. Preserving Kettles 14-qt. Roll-Rim Dish Pans No Phone or ©, 0, D.

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