THE DAIL is "GRAND TO-NIGHT at $8.15 AMERICA'S SWEETHEART COMEDY-DRAMA LOVE TEST" TTY YY YY YY YY GRAND MON, TUES. SEPT. 29& 30 | Special Engagement of the Distinguished ROBERT BRUCE MANTEL and GENEVIEVE HAMPER In Shakespearean Repertoire MONDAY--The World's Matchless Poetic Comedy, "MERCHANT OF VENICE" TmpAY_Shakerpenres RICHARD HI Prices: --50c., $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 OURTAIN AT 8.15, BEATS NOW ON SALE GRAND-WED. OCT. 1st ONE NIGHT ONLY Schwab & Kusell bring you musical comedy of distinction Direct from ; One solid year at the arl Carroll Theatre NY. : Presented witha Gast of players scidom seen avay fiom broadway Local orchestra augmented by the famous Gingham Girl' harmonists. Seat sale Monday § PRICES $2.50, $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, 50c. ai Sy f At Queen's University } The arts and science freshmen are now performing the initiation pro- gramme which had been arranged with much care by the sophomore years, The arts men are out in Peter Pan collars and a convict's number on their backs, and must keep off the sidewalks. The science men, when, they conferred with the second year men Friday allernoon, were given a run round the stadium track three times and thef sent out into the world with a big green bow tle and a paper dunce cap labelled "Bc. 28." 'These are to be worn for a week or so. Penalties for re- fusing to comply with the regula- tions generally include a shower bath or a close hair-cift. The freshmen are not taking the matter to heart. A large party of the science men paraded Princess street Friday night and filed through the Capito] Theatre, with much yell- ing. Principal Taylor 1s to address the newcomers at a service in Convoeca- tion Hall at 8.30 Sunday afternoon. The Journal has taken over as its sanctum the room in the old arts building lately occupied by Princi- pal Dyde's office. WEDDINGS. Gaitskell-Tumath. A preity wedding was solemnized on Wednesday evening, Sept. 24th, at seven o'clock, at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Stanley Fraser, Odessa, when the Rev. Mr. Huffman, Bath, united in marriage Miss Thel- ma Margaret Tumath and Ross Har- old QGaitskell of Kingston. The bride, looking very lovely rocked in A gown of robin's egg blue silk can- ton erepe and wearing a corsage bouquet of sweetheart roses and maiden hair fern, also a string of | pearls, the gift of the groom, enter- ed the parlor to the straing of the Chorus, on the 'arm of her stepfather, Mr, Stanley Fraser. The ceremony took place beneath an arch composed of beautiful autumn | foliage and flowers. The young couple were unattend- ed. 'The house was decked with pink and white asters, dahlias, baby's breath, cosmas and gladioli. { After the ceremony, the guests, who numbered forty-eight, sat down to a sumptuous wedding supper, the .| wedding cake centering the table. Among. the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Everett Brown and Mrs. Fred Rogers of Rochester, Mrs. Wm, Gaitskell of Toronto, mother of the groom, Mr. and Mrs. James McCammon and their family and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reid and their children and Miss Jennie Kav- anagha, Kingston. Many beautiful gifts testified to the esteem in which the young couple are held. Mr. and Mrs. Gaitskell intend taking up re- sidence in Kingston in the near fu- ture, A - (British Labor aims at wide: policy of nationalization, ji Athos, Porthos and Armas. AMUSEMENTS What the Press About Agents Say ROBERT B. NANTELL TELLS OF HNSELF Relates 8ad Story of Four Peers of Court of Queen Elizabeth Going Broke Mr. Robert B. Mantell, the great tragedian, who comes to the Grand Opera House presenting noxt Mon- day, "The Merchant of Venice" and storming days in Merry Od Eng- land : "It was a merry gang of happy-go- lucky vagabonds that comstituted Alice Marriott's Company. The re- pertoire of this really accomplished tragedienne was extensive, but the mainstay was 'Queen Hlizauéth.' "I had the role of Lord Howard of EfMingham. I quickly struck up an intimate friendship with Sir Francis Drake, the Bari of Essex and Francis, Lord Bacon, The roblemen became as inseparable as D'Artagnan and his three comrades, Lord Bacon was our old friend, Richard Edgar, no longer 'the great Edgar,' | pe now just an associate acter of { normal proportions. The Ear! of ll Essex was, in private life, my par- ticular chum, Frank Clements, who afterwards won distinction stage in America. Sir Francis Drake became, in the wings, plain Gerald Byre, if so romantic a name can be called plain. "These noblemen had fallen on evil days since the intriguing times of good Queen Bess, when they held all England in the hollow of their hands. Their average earnings now { were only fifteen shillings a week. But np one, geeing them in their gor- geous stage attire, would have guess- ed it. They were even more sauve and polite amd prosperous 'ooking than in the days of the Spanish Armada. Outside the theatre, the difference | was apparent. It was no uncommon sight to behold the four friends trudging along the street to our lodgings, Lord Howard with a loaf of bread under his arm, Sir Francis Drake with a joint of meat, Lord Beacon with a string of sausages, and the Earl of Essex with a bunch of onions, They themselves realized how far they had fallen in the social scale when even the majority of cheap inne closed their doors (0 peers of the realm, and often forced them to hunt for hours When they struck a new town for a place to pui up for the night. "One day the four noblemen, then playing in Hull, decided to improve their fortunes, Sir Francis Drake, whose 'head for figures' had caused him to be appointed treasurer of the quarter, lashed his brain into a fin- ancial delirium, during the course of which he came to the conclusion that he had discovered a way to 'beat the races." He announced to us so con- fidentially that he knew 'all about the horses' that he convinced us. We, accordingly, scraped all our savings together, and took a trap to the race track eight miles away. 'When we got there, we all turn- ed over our money to Bir Francis. He, with a smile of superior and su- preme confidence, bided his time, and then laid every penny on a §dead sure thing.' The horse nonchalantly strolled under the wire fifth or sixth, "The smile on Sir Francis' face vinished as quickly as #f Queen ENlzabeth had suddenly turned off the electric current of her favors. Clouds gathered on the brows of the other three noblemen but scarcely a mutter of thunder wag heard. "We were eight miles from Hull, and the evening performance was less than four hours off. There was no money in pocket to pay for a trap in advance, and nome at home to pay the driver on arrival. The four noblemen did the only thing left-- we girded up our loing and styrted for Hull after the manner of pil- grims of old. "Away we trudged across ditches and through ploughed fields, taking advantage of every short cut we could discover. Never in the days when intrigue ran the highest was Sir Francis Drake so unpopular as on that dusty afternoon of early summer. "We reached the theatre only a few minutes before time for the cur- tain, and quickly exchanged our travel-stained garments for the regal attire of the Court of Elisabeth. No. body in the audience that night sus- pected how hungry and footsore were Lord Howard of Effingham, Sir Francis Drake, Francis, Lord Bacon, and the Earl of Basex." "The Gingham Girl." "The Gingham Girl," & somewhat different mupical comedy will enter- tain our théatregoers at the Grand Opera House on Wednesday even- ing, Oct, 1st. This piece was first presented at the Earl Carroll Thea- tre, where it ran for ome solid year; it played five months in Chicago and had long runs in Boston and Phila- delphia, which is a sort of guaran- tee that we are to witness worth- while entertainment. The book is the work of Daniel Kueell a young. author who became famous throus: writing the play: it tells a pretty love story, bubbling with wholesome humor, in scefies laid in 'a quaint New England town and In New York City. The music is by Albert Von Tilzer, lyrics by Neville Fieeson, dances and ensembles' put on by Sammy Lee and the production was . 18 song mumbers, Among the songs 3 big finales and are fatroduced. ¥ ee -------- on Tuesday, "Richard IIL," recounts | the following incident of his barn-! four' staged by the celebrated director, R Edgar Micumest D ev CECIL B. DeMI i on the | | | SEE "ARL 'SEATS RESER - are: "The Twinkle in Your Eye," "You Must Learn the Latest Dances," "As Long As I Have Youn," "Tell Her While the Waltz is Play- ing," "The Wonderful Thing We Call Love," and others. The cast ig com- posed" of representative metropoli- tan players who are seldom seen away from New York theatres, in- cluding: Madeleine MacMahon, Md- die Fetherston, Francesca Hill, Flo Irwin, Jack Waldron, Lillian Young, Thomas Keogh, Dorothy LaMar, George Thom and other notable art- ists. An ensemble of sprightly sing- ing and dancing girls are an import- ant factor, "THE TEN COMMANDMENTS." "The Ten Commandments," Ceell B. De Mille's gorgeous dramatic spectacle, will begin a three day en- gagement last half of next week at the Grand Opera House. After the opening night, Thursday, two show- ings will be given daily at 3.15 and 8.15 with full musical accompani- ment by a travelling orchestra of twenty pietes. The splendid film is presented by Adolph Zukor and Jesse L. Lasky, in regular theatres only, and it will not be shown in any other theatre in_this city during the cur- rent season. Although "The Ten Command- ments" was shown for the first time only last season its fame has spread throughout the country and it is well established as the greatest triumph so far attained In the art of the photo-drama. The scenes of the his- torical introduction, many of them in color, showing the flight of the Children of Israel from pt, their safe passage through the di wa- ters of the Red Ses, and the pursuit by and destruction of Pharaoh's charloteers, surpass in splendor any Y BRITISH WHIG GRAN 3 DAYS COMMENCING THE PARTING The Miriam, the Beautiful, Frenzied Pro Prices: Matinees, Prices: Evgs., - 850c, 7 similar scenps heretofore produced. Dramaric From your chair in the theatre, 1 MIRACLE Unbelievable-- OF THE RED Chariots in Pursuit Closing Walls of ter Worshippers of the Golden Bace"anal Human Souls Bartered in ao Struggle for Pleasure Today -------- The modern story, written' by Jeanie Macpherson, is a startling and ab- sorbing melodramatic presentation of American life at the present time, In which is revealed the inevitable doom of those who set aside the an- cient laws in their pursuit of wealth and pleasure. The pictorial episodes in the modern narrative--such as the falling of 'the dome of a great cathe- dral andthe wreck of a motor boat in a storm at sea--are no less thrill- ing than the miraculous scenes in the Biblical part of the picture. The love story that is woven through these episodes of high excitement is infinitely appealing and there is much fine sentiment and delightful humor in the pictured tale. The chief roles in "The Ten Com- mandments" are played by Theodore Roberts, Rod La Rocque, Richard Dix, James Neill, Robert Edeson, Charles De Roche, Lawson Butt, Lea- Trice Joy, Nita Naldi, Estelle Taylor, Edythe Chapman, Julia Faye, Clar- ence Burton and Agnes Ayres. The musical score was arranged by Dr. Hugo Riesenfeld. "THE ARAB" RANKS WITH INGRAM PICTURES. "The Arab," the new Rex Ingram production for Metro, Opens at the Capitol Theatre, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, It is one of the greatest of In- gram's pictures, worthy in every way of the man who produced "The Four Horsemen' and "Scaramouche," and superbly acted by a cast that includes Roman Novarro and Alice Terry, « The pieture was filmed' in Algiers and Tunis, and it affords the mest convincing of all arguments why pie- tures should be ecreened on the ex- act locale of the story, instead of at Hollywood studios. For Mr. Ingram, Ramon Novarré and 'Alice Terry in "The Arab" at the = | Capitol Monday, Tuesday and { a OPERA HOUSE THURS, EVE. ADOLDH ZUKOR p¥ JESSE: L.LASKY OPECTACLE Sune Aggs Great. Flight of the, Israelites from Egypt Pharach's Army of phetess, Leading the Colf in their Oriental LLE DIRECT FROM SUCCESSFUL RUNS AT MASSEY | HALL, TORONTO, LONDON PAVILION, LONDON, ENG.--FIRST TIME OT 2 PRESENT THE IN KINGSTO! Twice Daily Thereafter At 215 0d 815 pm, THE LAW THUNDERED FROM SINAT SEA oliticians Engulfed by Motorboat Wealth and PLUS TAX, IN ADVANCE. The Intrigue of Crooked Contractors and Corrupt P The Collapse of the Great Cathedral Structure The Miraculous Escape of the Innocent Wife The Baleful Lure cf the Siren of the East The Daring Dash into a Wild Storm at Sea in an Open The Ultimate Victory of the Light, and Love's Triumph! Over All : SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ENTOUR WITH COMPANY 50c, 75¢, $1.00 Sc, $1.00, $1.50 NOTE--~The Ten Command- ments will positively not be shown again this season in Kingston. in going to the Mast, has brought back with him to the screen all of the glamorous enchantment that has beckoned to travelers through all the ages, "The Arab" gives you the Orient in all of {ts wonderful color and ex- otic life; an authentic background for a dramm that holds the sbectators tense with excitement. Ramon Novarro appears in 'the title role, as an Arab guide who falls in love with an American mission- ary's daughter, played by Alice Terry.. He learns of the Turkish plan to massacre the Christians, only after the children from the mission are being led into the desert to cer- tain death. He goes to their rescue, but, when he gets them back to the mission, the fanatical Moslems, rous- ed to fury by thelr leaders, break looge and attack the little Christian stronghold, Only a miracle can save them. But you must see the de- nouement for yourself. *'The Arab" Is a picture that nobody should miss. Novarro has the greatest oppor- tunity of his career and he seizes 1 with a- gest that sweeps all before him. There is no more fascinating actor than this young Mexican who conquered America with an insolent twirl of his monocle in "The Prison- er of Zenda," and, as "The Arab," he never looked more handsome, nor acted with greater fire and force. Miss Terry looks loveller than ever as the heroine. The blond wig that she wore In all of her previous pic- tures has been discarded and she p pears for the first time on tae screen in her natural dark-tinted bobbed hair. She rises to moments of enor- mous emotional appeal in the scene of the massacre, and she Was never more 'alluring than im her love Scenes with Mr. Novarro. Two of the ap | SPORT With The Bowlers. The games committees of Queen's Bowling Club has that in the regular rink co, Sames In which concluded in ust, Skips H. Angrove and C. Hodgins have 'each won 14 and lost 5, making a tie for Givens Trophy. The two teams been asked to play off tor the next Tuesday afternoon. The winners of groups 3 and 4 series A, regular doubles, played Friday night, the game resulting & win for H. Angrove and J. A mon, over W. M. Campbell end Mn Buckberrough, the score 7-14. ------------------ = fF St. Peter's Church, Toronto, the goens of 5 pretty Gladys Mary, Mr, and Mrs. W. J. was ried to Andrew Harte, son of and Mrs. Thomas Harte, Near Clayton, N.Y. on 22nd. Byron D. Pettit, ager five, died at the farm of bis George. He had been IN for three weeks. Five thousand acres of lend Lethbridge, Alberta, has 'been to 10 families of 76 persons South Dakota. This, 1} is anno Is only the advance of a siderable northward movement the region. = «on TiC } VOTERS' UIST, 1924 And 1 hereby cal Spon all voters 3 ke immediate beta] to wed &ny errors or omissions corrected 5 rding to law, 3 Dated at Portemouth; Optarto, 27th Any of September, 1524. wi