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Incomparable “MANSLAUGHTER” 22 favorites, tn Tromas Meighan, Leatrice Joy and Lois Wilson, G——"Tink Gods.” Until Friday Night Onty— BARTHELMESS Just TH Friday Night— “THE SIRE SATURDAY— TED MUSICAL Com wh Mat. Dally—Twe Shows Nightly 10e-20e. Nox aud Loge Sea’ Herbert Rawlinson Dance Halls What Star Man Found Out in Night. It’s Matter of Wages, Say Girls. Nobody Seems to Be Especially Bad. Employes Are Protected by Police. Editor's Note: Because of the controversy raging In the clty hall over the desirability of the dance halls below Yesler way, a Star reporter visited the section and in the following article gives his im. | pressions, By Seaburn Brown Below Yesler way—on Fifth ave., on Washington st.— in an ill-lighted world, peopled with soap-box orators who shout of the Utopia promised by the Industrial Workers of the World, and opium-dreamy-eyed Orientals, operate sev- eral dance halls which at present are the object of an avalanche of complaints now under investigation by a! member of the city council. Branding these halls as dens of vice, the girls who work in them as dangerous sirens, some citizens are demanding! that the council revoke licenses granted thru Mayor Brown. Defendaners of the institutions say “1 live with my family in an they are havens of legitimate amuse-| uptown residence district. I am ment for the lower classes of white ® graduate of a Seattle high men and for yellow men who are| school, and lots of my friends out of place and unwelcome in the] don’t know that I work here; | no-called respectable emporiums of| yet, why shouldn't I, when it is Terpsichore in the district north of] the only chance open to make Yesler way. wages? Woe girls are safe; tho The women who democratical. | police keep drunks out and pro ly dance—for a consideration of | tect us from insult.” 10 cents a whirl—with whom | ever the inevitable “copper” at | the ‘a will admit, ae mixed | the “whites only” rule ts not tn force, The hall happened to be one where in type, Many of them com- | “Wouldn't you rather work where pare favorably, in dress, man you could dance with white men ex- ner and conversational power, | clusively? I questioned. “ | So alma SR ag rely | “No; I certainly prefer this Joint,” cern an et dance | W4 Der startling reply, “These Fil ‘me hagem iby — ae ge Non |tpino and Jap boys are polite and |know how to tre some out escort for a social evening. patil nt eae one odin 4 by oe ot Too, there are some whose paint) Uatversity, and all of them « ti or 7 I covers the hard mouth and eyes. hem epend money more liberally the wagging lips art discolored un Esl g aoe ae dereyelids of the chronic dissipator.| he Orientals, They have to This class is spoken of by the more| °°M* Gown herewfor a good timo be- communicative ag “married” —altho | Aus the bon-tons won't tolerate wedding rings are rarely in evi.| ‘Dem at thelr dances diate, In another hall, where a sign ov Saturday evening, in the course| the door barred all races but the of half a dozen dances and reveral | Caucasian, the tragedy of the lite minutes in one of the curtained-off/ came to the surface, refreshment booths, one girl, whose} Two boys of 20, evidently tn from youthful face bore the modern em-|the country to “see the town,” were bellishments of vermillion tints, but| thrown into a fever of excitement by jheld clear, healthy eyes, told me)the sight of a little blonde girl who| that she ¢ up a department store | was struggling to keep her feet In al Job for a place in the dance hall. joust with « drunken partner who/| “Who can live on $13 a week?"| had in some way concealed hia “pol she demanded. “That was my wage | uted" condition while passing the - the store. Here the girls make | uniformed guard at the door rom $25 to $50 a week. Last night—- “G jod! Friday, the 13th, was lucky for me— | iene car Geen T earned $15. We buy dance tickets | from the ‘house’ for a nickel and eeil | them to patrons at a dime each. M—r? exclaimed one of the youths, The girl caught his eye at the moment, Her face suddenly showed white thru its artificial complexion. ° : His Rheumatism | “te dance ended. ner partner's . thick tongue stuttered a demand H as Entirely for another dance, but she left Ps him, started to leave the floor, Disappeared then turned and came over to the boys. ‘The successful treatment of rheu- “Don't tell anyone up home matism by taking Tanlac, Is one of| Jou, seem me, me Dleaded. “I the outstanding features of that re-| fpinaee, Set me other Job than markable medicine. Thousands of : people everywhere have testified) “This ain't all you're dotn’,” “ac. that it has brought them complete |Cused the first lad. “I hardly recom: relief from this torturous disease. |"ized you. Gosh, you look tough!" Edward Ware, 226 Juneau st,| The boys promised to forget they Seattle, Wash. says: had found her and left the hall. Re- “I had all sorts of trouble with lieved, the girl returned to the my stomach and was in pain day |@ance. and night from rheumatiam. I was| I noticed a tall girl whone intelli. completely rundown and covld|@ent face reflected a contempt for hardly work. Tanlac overcame my jher surroundings. I produced a |troubles and fixed me up in great |dime and obtained a dance, She shape. I'm considerably heavier | talked readily, |than I wae and I feel fit as a fid- “Only place I can make good dle all the time.” money,” came the usual When the digestive system, liver|“I don’t intend to stay he and kidneys are not working prop- | months longer. Forty bucks a week erly, uric acid and other impurities |pited up pretty fast, and in Febru. accumulate in the muscles id jary I leave for a university to take! Joints, causing bearmapeee Tan-/up journalism.” Hi {lac quickly overcomes this condition) Regulation th all of the halle vis. by enabling the vital organs to per | ited was efficient and rigid. Drunken form their functions properly. Getimen were barred by the police a@ bottle today at any good druggist. guards and the dancers —Advertisement. ly, Even the “shimmie"—much in | Blackheaded Pimples Quit WithS.S.S. You can be sure of this, nature substitute for red-blood-cella. live in the red riv long as there are enow ich red-blood-cells in it, More red- J The shame ofa blemished face | a Roar mt alts produced by a blosd-cells is one of the A. B. Medical science. Red-cells bure rich blood. They mean clear, rud- 47, lovable complexions. wer, because all your nerves forever from pimples, lackhead pest, from bo’ ma and skin eruptions, from rheu! tem impurities, from that tired, hausted, run-down feeling. & be most important th a 1 drug stores in larger size bottle te Nea! ake Rept fete the more econo! sss a yorus uptown—waa forbidden by oe ae notices in conspicuous places, and 0 L 0 | ] the rule seemed universally ob. nerved. cHEATRi : mone wet rere THE LAST TIME TODAY THE the desert sands—a master- i plece of film art. ironized Yeast for Rheumatism rst Do You Realize What Ironised Yeast-Vitamines Will Do for j Rheumatism and Lumbago? |. Do you know that vitamines and fron are part of ree, very life? Do i-blood you know that the t ni factory in your body ne material 4 needs them badly you kno | Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body full of youth and health may | be yours if you will keep your ~~ system in AMATEURS TONIGHT 7:30 and 930 HAARLEM OIL ‘The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles, the enemies of life and looks. In use since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. ~ eeent po fmnation All G roniaed Teast on jone. Awony surely Wonderfeli” For Sale by the Owl Drug Co. | queer poisons, Joint poisons, muse —— | fotsons, acid poisons are formed 4 stead of the healthy flesh and t SPINAL IRRITATION fist’sicea heute’ "sat nt aay one by? tt you Lg ead gt Th it, 0 » ains distort your body, end in, That's what causes—Pain or dis- | OPP in'an unspeakable agony, ff dull tress In back of head; pulling of cords pains make you breathe heavily and in the neck; trouble with eyes; pain moan, do not grumble + between shoulders or in other pars Be sme onary, of spine, or burning, aching, tender- are different how than they used ness or soreness; belt of constriciium be, in the days of liniments, ‘eaabaeed af Heated drugs, and all that-—r fingers or feet or coldness or |{ron f tingling ke pricking of pins; |body-and-blood builders of ail tim pectiiar, almost indescribable pains peware of imitations and substitut or distress in heart, stomach, kid- | hecause Troi neys or other parts of chest or ab-| combination of yeast and iron, but " wi domen; backache; sciatica. This dis- Xi) itgelf, There iw only one ro ease is very easily cured by right |ized Yeast in all fig, ors, Sold ag methods, Elegant illustrated book. |all drug stor: t$100a ntainin: diet let, Price 10 cents, s alm the: 0. 8. PUB. CO. Mra oni er Route 3, Box 112-J, San Diego, | Atlanta, Ga. Say goodbye to rho Callt package and and Bladder Troubles and Rheuma-| power. tism, 50c. a box—at druggists—write for free sample to Na-Dru-Co., Inc., matism from now onl , Buffalo, N. ¥. 1364 THE SEATTLE STAR DANCERS VISIT MRS. LANDES Tell Councilwoman Some Are Mothers Mra. Henry Landes, councilwom- an, was believed Monday to have undergone a slight change of heart toward the “dance hall evil,” which she has been fighting, following a visit from three dance hall Nelson, May Stanford and Winnifred Dur gin—pointed out to Mra, Landes that many of the dance hall employes were mothers, who would be unable to earn enough to support thelr chil dren in industrial positions “They didn't make @ bad impres. sion,” Mrs, Landes said afterward. “We had a very pleasant talk and I got their viewpoint.” While the girls were viniting Mrs. Landes, Arn 8. Allen, secretary of the Y. M. ©. A, was making « speech before association members in which he eriticteed Mayor Brown for permitting dance halls in the| lower end of town, PAA SRA OG | | | Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, in-|Picture of the romance and adven stantly that corn #tops hurting, then | tures of Charlotte Woods, shortly you lift it right off with | Popular dance hall fingers, Truly! Casino, the bright spot of an Alaskan Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of | « e” for a few cents, sufficient | Dorothy Dalton as the dancer, ts the} to remove every hard corn, soft corn, |featured attraction at or corn between the toes, and the|theater th At the point of a gun the dance hall queen forces a stranger to kins for which she charges him one She uses the money to start “Free calluses, without soreness or irrita- tion.-Advertinement Do not miss it— | | Fraser- Paterson Co.’s 10th Anniversary Sale ‘Teday—Firat Seattle Bhow | ‘The Werld’s Most Neted Art | comEDY | 100 EVENTS ALL THE TIME ~ COMING! > Ipaiscural’® BERT LYTELL in “The Idle Rich” LULL E The one remedy that always gives ief from the awful pain of Kidney reli ‘ AS Sto Deu A History tells in cold print of the barbarian cruelty when} the Visigoths swept into the midst of Rome’s effete civiliza-| invested the story with the drama} of movement; he has put it on the films in “Manslaughter,’ his latest production for Paramount, now in its second week | at the Strand theater. ‘Above is the barbarian leader, as por-| trayed by Thomas Meighan. Leatrice Joy is seen in the play as a rich orphan whose | reckless mode of living causes endless trouble. The district | attorney, the part enacted by Meighan, prosecutes her vigor- onal after ohe is arrested for manslaughter. + * tion. Cecil B. DeMille ha LIBERTY ‘The Siren Call" is an interesting | been fired because he couldn't de liver the goods and who launches a | business of his own on nothing more Gore's |Herbert Rawlinson is Harriet Ham “The Stren Call,” | COLISEUM | Richard Barthelmess ts seen tn an- | jother emotional role in “The Bond | * a First National attraction, xhowing at the Coliseum theater. | Barthelmess, as in “Tol'able David,” || |hin success of last year, takes ad- vantage of the opportunities the play | a bank account for a baby whose |ofters. The plot of the story cen parents had perished in the snow. ‘The baby is later the cause of several unusual twists in the story. [picture shows a number of fights and thrilling scenes, end fog | dollar. |ters around a boy bound out to a viliianous farmer and | jwho is accused of murder when the jfarmer accidentally shoota himself. ‘The play is filled with thrilling twists until the final happy fintah. «ee BLUE MOUSE “Sliver Wings,” production, Blue Mouse theater, ao Willtam Fox now running at features Mary “the sweetest mother on the screen.” Mra, Carr became popular after her performance in the Fox pic- ture, “Over the Hil played the part of Ma Benton. “Silver Wings” is « simple picture of American hone life, depicting the sorrows and joys of a mother. |———— = = ® picturization of the family traged- jem that surround ua dally. play that brings tears and smiles to jeven the most hat . WINTER Geraldine Farrar’s latest Goldwyn | Se Picture, “The World and Its | Stahl used in one of the night scenes of “One Clear Call," the First Na- tional attraction which is now show- | Arabs appear in the plece. ‘ ing at the Princess theater. Henry| The story deals with the exper fences of a white girl who marries @ Woman,” which is now being shown at the Winter Garden theater, pre- sents & seven-reel photoplay tn which the Russian revolution is the back- ground for the story of the rise of an/a, the head of the white-robed clan | sheik. in “The Birth of a Nation,” is the fugitive in the chase. eee Carr, in which she American girl to fame as a Russian opera singer which is interwoven with the tale of her love for the im- perial Russian prince. COLONIAL A hundred daring riders in South. ern California were gathered for the clan of night riders which John M. COLUMBIA Money may be the root of all evil. THE G on RANKIN CO, [vit BUILT ON VALUES Oe Demonstration Interesting Demonstra- tions | Going On in | Our Windows | Come and see the New Maytag Washer in operation. The Maytag intro- duces a new principle in electric washing. OTTO F. KEGEL, President Week “A Tempest in a Tub” KAKKS Marvelous action produced by the new gyrator in the Women ing the heaviest nN & $ confidence. Playing opposite eee who had been GARDEN That’s the nearest it can be described. everywhere are viewing it with amazement. the problem of clean- lightest or pieces by water action alone. We want you to see it perform—we want you to have one in your own home. Maytag Washer. It solves Gyrafoam .00 DOWN puts this wonderful Washer in your home. Six Sizes of Floss Cushions are interestingly priced! 22-inch, square ..$1.25 22-inch, round. ..$1.35 16 by 20-inch, oblong .......$1.00 24-inch, square ..$1.50 24-inch, round...$1.75 18 by 20-inch, oblong .......$1.25 —Second Floor, Drapery Sectien B. Walthall, who will be remembered “The Sheik’s Wife,” a spectacular French production made in Arabia, will be shown for the last times Mon- day night. In addition to the cast of | possible in order to take talented French actors who made the |but if it hadn't been for money the |hero would never have married the |herotne and “Confidence,” Rawlinson’s latest Universal starring | | vehicle now at the Columbia would never have been filmed. The story concerns @ salesman who had just genuine MIFFLIN ALKOHOL MASSAGE Che talrrnal onic 95% Alcohol New Designs DIAMOND MOUNTINGS Platinum— $35 to $300 18k White Gold— E : 1518 SECOND AVENUE Between Pike and Pine Established 1883 SS al Don’t Envy Perfect Health—EnjoyIt! You Can’t Be Happy When Every Day Brings that Nagging Backache and That Tired, Weak, All - Worn - Out Feeling.’ RE you one of those unfortunate folks who is always envying the good health and happiness of others? Do you arise in the morning lame and stiff? Drag through the day with your back a dull, unceasing ache? Evening find you “all played out,” thinking only of a little rest before to- morrow’s weary grind? Do friends and family wonder why you are so discour- aged and out of sorts? It's time, then, you were giving some attention to your kidneys! The kidneys, you know, are the blood- “Use Doan’s,”’ Say These Seattle Folks: J. W. PHILLIPS, Contractor, 8023 Second Ave. N. E., says: “Hard work effected my kidneys, and caused attacks of Jamo back. When I had an attack I noticed a soreness in the small of my back, and when I tried to lift, my back gave out. Doan's Kidney Pills al- ways drove the pain out of my back and stopped the annoyance.” Doan’s Kidne filters, Let them fall behind and the effect on blood and nerves is quickly apparent. Your back aches, you suf- fer, sharp, stabbing pains and feel dull, nervous, irritable and depressed. Your head aches, you are dizzy, and apt to be annoyed by other kidney disorders. Heed these early warnings! Realize that your kidneys have fallen behind, and give them the help they need be- fore some serious kidney sickness de- velops. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Doan’s have brought new health and strength to thousands. They should help you. Ask your neighbor! MRS. MARY ECKERT 3247 Twentieth Ave. W., says: “Some four years ago I was feeling bad, and suffered from kidney disorder, @ terrific pain in the small of my back, and I cou 4 could ardly get didn’t ant Kidney Pil Cr made my back strong and well, and from pain. My kidneys acted normal, and I felt fine in every way after taking Piils At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. Come and see the New Made entirely of aluminum—a Washer that will not rust, corrode, leak, warp or swell. journey from their native land to Arabia, large numbers of full-blooded saking All Others” as hurriedly roles in “The Power of a Lie.”