Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Mar 1923, p. 14

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FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1023. E DAILY BRITISH WHIG TH AMUSEMENTS ree ae What the Press Agents Say About Coming Attractions "Stl In he 'KFA PROD ) DAYS GRAND ONLY The World's Most Famous Theatrical Organization. Tonight & Saturday EVENINGS: . 25¢., 50c., 73c., $1.00, $1.50 mid GRAND OPERA HOUSE. ["Bob™ Ott and Company Will Open Two Weeks' Engagement. A big treat is in store for the pat- irons of the Grand Opera House. |"Bob" Ott, and his talented com- | pany, will open a two weeks' en- gagement on Monday, March 5th, [ana during'the company's stay in the | icity, they "will present four brand | new musical plays, and each one a (winner. "Bob" Ott knows just what the theatregoers want, and every- | {thing he puts on goes over big. H» | land the members of his company |nrade .a big hit on the 'oecasion of | their visit to this city a few weeks! |2g0, and tha return i engagement, | GRAND ALL NEXTWEEK MATINEES WEDNESDAY"AND SATURDAY. EVENING 8.15 BY REQUEST--RETURN ENGAGEMENT N And His Talented {which was promised, has been looked | £ ¢ : ASSOCIATES | {forward to with keen interest, ~------PRESENTING BRAND NEW PRODUCTIONS---- | The plays have been well selected, MONDAY, TUESDAY WEDNESDAY ' {and hold intense interest from start | & , a ' "> THE FUNNY "HAZEL" to finish, while the musical numbers | lare catchy, and most cnjoyable. | - SONG-PLAY {Special mention must be made of the i ~ THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY |dancing, as not in many moons, has | "MY MOTHER" {a Kingston audience had the pleas- | PRICES: EVG. ....20c-830c-50c. MATINEES ....10c-20c.-80c. 1 NAN KV ow SY v cog! < NTN, »? ad eo . er, ® BE EARLY SON-METIVIER 'S DOORS OPEN 9 A.M. a $ 300 PAIRS HOSIERY $1 : 1 ~ Regular $1.50 to $2.00. English All-Wool Sport Hose--ribbed or plain HOUSE DRESSES or with Silk Clocks. All sizes to 10", Ginghams and Chambrays in Checks : and plain colors. Sizes from 34 to 49. DOLLAR DAY '1.0 i] | '1 lure of witnessing such good dancing jas is given by the young girls in the | jchorus of this company, and by the | way, it may not be generally known | but the girls in this company have | {been undérgoing special training fop | . | thedr dancing. The dancing was a | IT'S A WONDER ! 1 {special feature on the occasion of the . ; a [first visit to the Grand. i F For the fltst three nights of next | {week, March 5th, 6th and 7th, the {ccmpany will present "Hazel." and for the balance of ,the week, "My {Mother," on March 8th," 9th and [10th { For the firstsalf of the second | {week, March 12th, 13th and 14th, {the company will put en "Every Day i WITH in Every Way,' (a musical Auto Sug- "ON CHANEY jaegtion by Pool Cue), "My Mother" 2 ._ and E. K. LINCOLN {as the mame would indicate, is cna! at's a Guaranteed Attraction ! lof the swoute orins ever told. It Pl . ALLEN {is by Matthew . as is also "Hazel," | aying-AL a musical jazette, ------ Only Two Days More Matinees . Evenings . (Tax/included) "THE WORLD'S SWEETHEART" MARY PICKFORD eS TORM 'THE AT JACK 200 UNDERSKIRTS Regular $1.75 to $2.00. Talletine, Heatherbloom, Mercerized Cotton; Black, Navy Rose and Copen. DOLLAR DAY... CHILDREN'S HOSIERY English All-Wool Ribbed; Black, Brown and White. All sizes. DOLLAR DAY ...2 pairs $1.00 WOOL HOSE $ Reg. to $1.75. : Reg. $1.50 to $2.00 3. i Satin or Habutai; Navy, Pink, White or Mauve. DOLLAR DAY WOMEN'S VESTS 4 For 2 styles Women's Ribbed Knitted Vests. Ribbed or in plain Heather 'BLOOMERS DOLLAR DAY PURE SILK HOSIERY Seamed Back or Seamless, first quality--Black, Navy or Grey. DOLLAR DAY. SILK HOSIERY 2 Regular $1.00. For In the popular shades Navy, * Sand, Black and White. Al sizes 8153 to 10. DOLLAR DAY CORSETS New low bust styles. Sizes 21 to 30: Pink or White. DOLLAR DAY NIGHT GOWNS Regular $2.00. Pink or White Nainsook; lace trimmed or hem- stitched. - DOLLAR DAY .. GAUNTLET GLOVES Regular $1.75. Perrin's make in Brown and Fawn shades only, Sizes 63% and 7. DOLLAR DAY [2 A ---- a "Ar Peveeno senor ® 2 AHERICAN AMBASSADOR HAILS PRINCE OF WALES M nt As "The White Prince"--Har= vey Makes a Hit at Lon- ow wt nena $ mixtures and\ English Black Cashmere. . DOLLAR DAY Regular $1.50. Kpitted ribbed styles; large make; CAMISOLES White and Natural. DOLLAR DAY No exchanges. "TESS i | | COUNTRY" PTY BY FAR THE GREATEST PICTURE IN THE | y No Phone JACKSON-M CTT BRILLIANT CAREER OF THIS WONDER STAR FOUR DAYS--COMMENCING MONDAY, MARCH 5th \ MARION DAVIES - "When Knighthood Was In Flower" gh -- LIMITED I14 PRINCESS STREET No refunds. Orders ran somes --. S------------r MUST ACCEPT TURKEYS DEMANDS 10 GAIN PEACE Mustapha Kemal Declares in a Speech to the Angora Assembly. oe wars Nr em rere former Emperor of Germany and is valued at $100,000. The antique Gotiic tapestries are valued as high as $125,000 each. Of "Oh, it's a lovely war" fame. Now | Phase s eal ai¢ objects doing his greatest numbers in the new | hese and the other r 3 oll i revue "Full_o' Pep," presented by the used in the production totas. mere Old Dumbells at the Grand Opera! pan $500,000 in value. The jew- House to-night aud the balance of tals elry which was used could not be Y dupiicated tor $1,000,000. In the scene showing the stieets HAVE X-RAY EYES. , rr ------------ | with the exports of ten years ago, FOR THE UNEMPLOYED 1° 531d, must ba recovered, : Sir William hinted that a threat GLE -- to British sh i y of Overs 0 Br h shipping was coming from - Trade Outlines Govern- "RED" NEWMAN 2 Yar London, March 2.--Tests have shown, says an article -* in the Daily Mail, that two sons of a Spanish nobleman have X-ray eyes. They can read through silver, brass os LR oe which had been reduced under the : Germany, whose mercantile marine, ment's Policy. . London, March 2.--Speaking at Southampton Bir Willlam Joyuson- { , Secretary for Overseas Trade, 3 & broad survey of the indus- "trial Situation and declared the Gov- iment was determined to find work for the unemployed in Great instead of doles. The D,000,000 of export trade which } country now lacked comparea i : NOTICE. hereby notify the public that my Viol Elzabeth Irish, having and board without just: will not be responsible for any incurred by her from and after date hereof. ted at Odessa, March 2nd, 1923 ARTHUR : MELVEN IRISH beace treaty to 400,000 tons, would total two and a halt million by the end of this year. Many people did not rea.ize that Germany was not a poor country. Reference was made by the speak- er to the 'the black cloud" which had come over the revival of trade, namely the difficuities between France and Germany. "We must not forget," he said, "though (we gnay not agree with what she is doing, that France az: suffered twice with the German en- emy on her land within fifty years and though her action is detriment- al to our immediate hopes of repar- ations I ask you to realize that France was our ally and Germany our enemy." The audiences applaud- ed this part of Sir William's speach. In closing the-speaker said that Britain's great aim was to get back het position in the Dominion mar- ets. pi Hay From Canada Proves To Contain Much Liquor n which motivates the vital Pirst National attraction dope Hampton is starring at Allen theatre today and Saturday. The glow is first noticed after the recovery of the cup from a pawnshop | to which | thief. J: Warburton Asha by EK. K, Lincoln) is elated when the goblet which he had found in an old English forest is returned to him. Warburton hands the cup to his man to be replaced in the drawing room. A few minutes later he is startled to lear the butler shriek, and, runa- ing from the room, he finds the man stumbling up rightened, Following to the drawing room, Warburton is amazed room in darkness, strange glow which seemed to ema- "Light In The Dark." A cup that glows in the dark! This is the mysterieus lot of - "The Light in the Dark," the in: which the it had been taken {played the stairs, except ate from the cup. object thrilling by a | terribly to find the for a of Paris before Notre Dame, when Princess Mary, as impersonated by Miss Davies, comes to wed the King of France, over 3,000, people and thirty-three horses appear. This scene alone cost $41,921.26 to com- struct, and, with its thirty-two sep- larate buildings of old French style, occupied 28,800 square feet of flour space. Another studio contained the du- plicate of the great hall in Hampton Court, the historic palace bullt by Cardinal Wolsey and presented to the King. This setting was con< structed in detail from the actual measurements and furnishings or the original, which is one of the relics of Tudor times still preserved in Efeland. In filming the picture 294,000 feet of negative stock were exposed, as many as fifteen cameramen work- ing at a time, as was the case when the big Paris street scene was tak- en. To reduce the picture to its Angora; March 2.--Only by ac- cepting Turkey's economic and fin- anocial demands can the Alles have peace in the Near East, Mustapha Kemal declared in a speech to the national assembly to-day. Kemal, whoirecently stood for reconciliation with the weste powers and at- tempted to restrain impetuous young pationalists who were all for war, declared ~he. did not, know -whether peace or war would come, Whatever happens, he said, the Turkish army is ready. i The assembly has indicated its willingness to accept the Lausanne treaty wigh certain very definite re- servations: regarding the financial and economic clauses. BLUNDERS + ee ~ Hastings on Hudson, March 2 Amazed at the quantity of hay whica was arriving from Canada for this terdaf started an investigation which unearthed traces of what he believes to be a huge rum runaing plot. Municipal officials, inspecting a car-load of baled hay on a New York 'Central siding, found in one bale n's Leading Hotel room has running hot and cold Ome-half block from Rallway $ and Steamboat Landings. valued at $500. Other bales are to 'Ibe broken up. Practically horseless village, Thomas H, Reynolds, village president, yes- : champagne, Seotch and other liquors | dramatic The hay was consigned to the Ex- celsior Hay and Grain company of Hastings, which does not exist. ---------------------- Ten Pages of Fun. That's what you'll get in the comie section of mext Saturday's Detroit Free Press. The comics are better than ever this time. Do not miss them. On sale at all leading news stands. : Thos. Finlay, who as buglar Sounded "Charge" for the gallant Light Brigade at Balaklava, and thus started the wild ride immortalized by Tennyson, died Monday at Drug- heda, Ireland. , Remember . Cooke's church choir ment and concert © o | Admission 25. to-night, at § o'clock,"ln S.S. hall. a_i 4 5 A special Paramount which will be presented at the Strand Tous days next week beginning Mon- a. > production: during which $1,221,491.20 spent. Divided into working days an expenditure of §7,634.32 per day, or structed, covéring over two enmy blocks, was used and more than 3,- fence,had placed in the cun that made it glow? The mystery re. r:ains unsolved, for the cup is stolen again and vanishes to the bottom of the river with the crook who tank it. In "The Light in the Dark" the cup {3 the medium of a fascinating ro- mance, "WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER" SETS NEW STANDARDS One of the outstanding achieve- ments of the picture art is the way cities everywhere have described 'When Knighthood Was In Flower." prodwcPon The following statistics wiil give n idea of the magnitude of the "When Knighthood Was In Flow- r'" was filmed in 160 working days, was { eight hours each, this represents $954.29 per.hour. One of the largest sets ever uon-| 00 actors , including 55 principals, ppeared. , * +The tilting armour used in the Wag it the Holy Grail? Or was if" pre length of 10,800; feet, "or radium that Jerusalem Mike, the [twelvé\ p00 foot reels, six film edi- tors w eX' is now in, its twenty-second week at the Criterion Theatre in New York and is has broken all previous re- cords everywhere. : RODERICK J. MACKENZIE Canadian Railroad Magnate ked five momths., "When Knighthood was in Flow- - DIES IN LOS ANGELES Was Stricken With Pneu- 'monia in an Hotel. . Los Angeles, Cal.,, March 2.--Rod- erick John MacKenzie, Canadian rail- road magnate, internationally known sportsman and owner of the pleas- anton race track near San Francisco, died suddenly in a hotel here last night. With his wife he came here about two weeks ago. She sailed for New York last Monday by way of Panama. but did not summon a doctor until, yesterday. His death is-said to have been caused by pneumonia. He took ill three days ago, If men loved to be decéived about ! their spiritual estate, they could not '& change of Turkish civilian pris- take a surer course than by taking % oners which was to have started their neighbor's word for that which & yesterday. lean, be known only from their wu} picture is from the collection of the | heart ite tn What risk is this boy taking? The answer will be found among to-day's want ads. 809090000 v oes * + * : . © Athens, March 2.--Thae Greek 4 4 cabinet announces that in view # 4 of continued deportations of # ° SUSPENDS EXCHANGE # © Pontus Greeks by the Kemalist, 4 % it bas decided to suspend ex- % 3 - > : * 0000e000000000000 Sos ly * iron, but cannot see through porcelain or paper. BES rrotron eee EAE EER EEE EE DE ER J LOWE'S SHORT CUTS TO PEACE IN IRELAND 2 Daze. Freeman's Journal--A Little Too Much For Us, It Says. ) Dublin, March 2.--Commentipg on the mission of Francis J. Lowg, sec- retary of the friends of the Irish Free State, a United States organization, who has several suggestions for es- tablishing peace and great industrial activity in Ireland, Freeman's Jour- nal declared today that Lowe's en- thusiasm 'is a little too much for us. Short cuts whereby he proposes to achieve the regeneration of Ire- land leave us, we confess, dazed and breathless. De Valera running a na- tional museum on the hill of Tara, members of flying columns sorting themselves into college classes and the désert blooming likea rose at the behest of American millionaires, are all eminently desirable things. We fear that his proposal on this head. will not commend themselves to our die-hards." A London despatch quoted a Dub- lin journalist as stating that Mr. Lowe suggested the appointment of De Valera as registrar of the univer- sity to be erected on Tara Credit for the Free State and the cessation of all executions, wo v ~ Large Deposit of Quartziie Petcrboro'. March 2.--A large ce- posit of quartzite, an ore used in the manufacture of steel, has been discovered on the farm of Henry Melville, about six miles from Have E2224 4449090000 8 has | lock, An order for 1,000 to been booked and work commeliced. About fifty man are being empoy- ed. Thirty carloads of the ore are being loaded, and will be shipped to an American steel plant at Nia ara Falls . The Ontario hind the project \ In taking revesige . man ms put mn with his enemy, but in passing it over he Is superior. Better a blush in the face than a | 8pot in the heart. | . don Dinner. "London, March, 2.--Any British {feelings that may have ben ruffled by American George Harvey's re- marks Wednesday anent the British. debt were probably soothed com- rletely by Harvey's warm references to the Prince of Wales at' the Am- erican university union dinner last night. The dinner -was in the prince's honor. Hailing Wales dé the "whit rrince," the Am@rican proposed the toast and ee that from the mo- ment the prince first visited the Un~ ited States, Americans have felt an increasing desire to acquire some proportion of proprietorship in him, i . Replying, the prince said: "When we get together like this, we bring out each other's good points and como out better Anglo-Saxons than when we went in." DAYLIGHT SAVING WORRYING QUEBEC But If Montreal Adopts It, the Ancient Capital Will Fol« low Suit. Quebec, March 2.----In a circular letter to be issued by Mayor Samson in a few days addressed to the city of Montreal and other cities and towns, official inquiry will be made as to the stand to be adopted by the other municipalities regarding the daylight saving, The prevalling opinion here is that in the event of Montreal decepting this system, Quebec will immediately fall in line though there has been already a eirong campaign started to oppose the system. 9 i - 4 TO MEET IN KINGSTON. *v p-- Brantford, March 2.--Tho Kingston Board of Education, * > # through W. M. Campbell, ] Rock | Quarty Company is said to be be-|% 1 + Is + le + # chairman, gave the Urban School' Trustees Association a hearty invitation to meet in Kingston in 1924. On vote, Kingston received a hearty vote, which was afterwards made unanimous. Cette 0000 - PPPTEP20 0490000 A -

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