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hae Because of « lack of space, | no letters are printed in to- d@ay’s paper on the question, | “Does a Wife Earn Wages?” | | One page will be devoted In) tomorrow's Star to this sub- Watch for these | opinions of Seattle husbands | and wives. The author of the | best jetter will get a $25 cash prize from Manager John Ham- rich of the Colonial theatre, and will be filmed by Jacobs, the moving picture man, on | Saturday. The film will be hurriedly developed and print- ed, and shown on the Colonial | screen Sunday, coincident with | | the opening of George Ran- dolph Chester’s great film story, “Runaway June,” which is based on the “Does a Wife Earn Wages?” proposi- | tion. e ued I was one of the hundreds who saw the opening performance at the Mission theatre Wednesday after noon. A pretty little girl usher dressed in sailor costume, ushered me to my seat. There is a noticeable improve MISSION THEATRE Firet-run Pictures at popular prices. Here's today’s show: THE OLD CODE 2-Reel Drama by the Selig Company. THELOOSE CHAINS OF CHANCE Another Splendid Drama. BUNNY’S LITTLE BROTHER A Vitagraph Comedy. Entire Lower 5c Floor 10¢ 2" Fourth, Bet. Pike and Union. Friday Saturday . Sunday | ment in the place, if interior decor | ations and in the price I had to pay to the comely miss at the ticket window. Five cents entitles you te} the best seats, also to the privilege | of seeing three excellent reels. “The Old Code,” a two-reel drama, taken in the wilderness of Canada.) | [is a strong story. When the hero| and the villain fight to the death on; an island over the love of a black.| eyed beauty it was real exciting. I didn’t get quieted down again until| the hero got the girl safely away. John Bonny and Flora Finch draw laughs in “Bunny's Younger Brother.” | “The Loose Chains of Chance” ts a gripping drama involving detec | tives, rewards and crooks. | DID YOU EVER SEE A FILM! get up on your seat and yell? If you have ever bet on the ponies, | stay away from the Colonial. You| in “The Man Who Could Not Lose.” | acting, good action and good! Caryle Blackwell plays the part| of the lucky bettor, When he; cashed in on a 50 to 1 shot on an/ }load of bills, I looked at my 45 | cents and if any one had furnished the pistol, I would have ended it then end there. “Rum and Wall Paper,” one of jthose gigglish Keystone comedies, | gladdens the heart of the onlooker.| | eee | | PRETTY, BEWITCHING MARY Pickford won the hearts of a lot | of people at the Liberty Wednesday lin “Cinderella.” Mary was always ‘quite a favorite of mine, but Mary in the role of the cinder girl ts a | wonderful little person. Cinderella” is a story that has thrilled the hearts of youngsters |to your children, and your chil dren's children for years to come. More than any other fairy story, it represents the truest degrees of no bility in man and the sublimest | falth and patience in women, which | goes to prove that ft is only a fairy | tale | “Cinderella” is a knockout, Kids| At the Mission Until Saturday Night| beautiful being who used to float} ery for it, The old folks love it |The Hair of Her Head” and “Cac tus Tim’s Shop Girl,” two comedies, keep the audience in good humor. see 1! WAS WRONG. TUESDAY | {said Charlie Chaplin and Mabel Normand in “Caught tn a Cabai now playing at the Class A, were a scream. I was sadly mistaken. | They are @ roar-a riot—a knock. | lout. I took our sob artist, Fred! | Boalt, to see the film yesterday. | Boalt 1s one of those fellows, too, | who couldn't catch a joke {f you! handed it to him {n @ mouse trap. | | But in five minutes he was gur-| gling all over lke a silly school girl, and jabbing me in the sides with his walking stick | We also enjoyed Irene Hunt in| ‘The Exposure,’ a story of the| newspaper game. Graft and dicta. 1% Lower Floor 10 graphs play important roles. Brass Button that was so exciting you wanted to eqy, ts the third film on the bill. | It gets by. “THE CHRISTIAN,” AT THE jsurely would lose your reputation| Clemmer this week, is packing the] if you saw the horse racing scene theatre to the doors at nearly every performance. The people are ge The production ts good. Good) ting their money's worth, too. “The| “a. It is one of! scenery | those films that make you look to-| Christian” is fa wards the better things fn life. see “CAPTAIN SWIFT” CONTIN “ old nag and carted home an AUt0| nee a ate bp the Alaska. And) THE POOR LITTLE RICH BOY it (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper there is no reason why SHOULDN'T draw good houses. saw the film last Sunday, and as have sald before, it 1s a strong and wellacted drama “Romeo and Jullet.” is anothe funny Bray cartoon, . . At the Alhambra Unti! Sunday Night “A Woman's Way,” Essanay dra-| Money has always meant to me ma, featuring Irene Hough; “Hi Mother,” three-reel Imp drama. eee At the Clemmer All Week “The Christla drama ee The Entire STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1915. PAGE 3 at the Alhambra for four days beginning today. hundreds of candidates entered through the Seattle Star and its siste She was paid 5100 for her part, and her expenses and those of her parent paid to Chicago, where the play was filmed, and, while there, was elaborately entertained by the Essanay people. IRENE HOUGH in “A WOMAN’S WAY” T_»> This Picture Is Complete. “Latest War News"; “A Question of a Beauty com-| Clothes,” comedy; Sam and the Bully,” comedy; The Fresh Air Cure,” comedy ¢ | RESIDENCE THEATRES At the Home Until Friday “The Perils of Pauline. No. 6, two parts comedy | I Enterprise Association.) 1| “Would you rather sit in the cor- ner over here a little while, Mr Hatton? I am a bit tired. | He took me to a seat with alac-| rity and, looking out on the danc-| ers, said “Do you know, Mrs. Waverly, I never thought that peo ple with as much money as Harry and Eliene could live as simply. r S| formality, conventionality and hypocrisy! I have grown to hate | it.” | I looked at him with surprise, | because Harry had told me that, | for generations, the Hatton family for many years, and will be related At the Colonial Until Saturday Night had money and Mr. Hatton was) “The Man Who Could Not Lose,”| one of the multi-miliionaires of the | five-reel drama; “Rum and Wal Paper,” Keystone comedy At the Alaska Until Saturday Nigh’ “Capt. Swift,” drama; “Romet and Julio,” a cartoon comedy by Bray. -se "The Old Code,” two-reel drama “The Loose Chains of Chane drama; ;“Bunny's Little Brother,”| renee cing. may look "My . Tee nursery suite was as scientifically | fitted up as a hospital. My night nag A mage Feel spectal course of training in a chil Keystone, featuring Mabel Nor-| dren's hospital. My French bonne mand and Charlte Chaplin; “The Ex-| dren's hospi My at Paristenne posure,” drama; “Brass Buttons,” aocetit. In fact, I did not know Beauty drama; “French Algiers, scenic. oe At the Grand Until Saturday Nigh “The Master Key," tworreel| ay { got near him he slipped and dra-| fel) com-| “Immediately, from the bench drama; “The Gypsy Madca’ ma; “And She Never Knew, edy; “One Kid,” comedy Me ge At the Melbourne Until Saturday Night “Cast Up by the Sea,” drama “The Volwateer Burglar,” comedy }| country | “I have associated with so-called great ladies all my life,” he con t tinued, “but I don't believe I j/ever met but one womanly woman until I came here. I did not know, until I was 4 years old, that the | -|1n, dressed like the princess in the “|fairy tale, was mother. Oh, I was wonderfully well cared for,” he }that I had missed anything until one day, when I went out walking with Marie, I saw in front of me a t little boy about my own age, and | beside him, a woman rose with a jery and snatched him to her breast, lkissing him and talking to htm in a tone of voice I had never heard ; | before. | “Something burt me and I began velvet frock.’ “I held out my arms to her as 1/ boy's hand. had seen the other little boy do to | 1 shouted. the other woman The woman turned on her like a fury “What's the matter with ye? he Don't touch him, indeed! Don't ye | ¢ver known. ¢ Wondrous Melody,”| #ee, the kid is starvin’ to death for oUt of my two-part drama; “Such a Mistake,”| 4 little | come to } “For the first time in my life I A 3-Reel Feature White-haired old derelict in “She Was His Mother,” 3- reel Imp drama, proves to be the unrecognized wife of gov- ernor-elect Shamed by her appearance on the eve of his election, the governor-elect calls her a vile name and ts killed by his enraged son, who learns for the first time of the cloud on his birth. A_ court- room scene rivaling “Madame X." Violet Merser agd Hobart Henley are co-stars in this intensely interesting drama |t0 cry and Marte sald to me:|man, but I had found tn my “Cinderella,” featuring Mary Pick-| comfort me. wick provided she could have a ford 2 “‘Here, here, don't touch Master | little place where she could ‘kape’ a! | Chadwick,’ said Marte, anxiously, | Patrick in’? Come here, lamikin had been spoken to in love's voice, | DY.” I ran with a ery of Joy Into those my head on that ample breast. Marie was frightened, but I in sisted that Nora should go home| Daily good to me. father, Mmousine June Beat It! amused “Well, the matter was fixed up |after a few days, and Nora, bless | the only mother I have| ora. ing. for Mr. b “Pat,” he answered, with the! m sympathetic Irish arms. I pillowed/| first amile I had seen on his face | of dandruff; you can not have nice, since he began to tell me the story, heavy, healthy “Pat is my managing editor at the | dandruff. He went through) robs the hair with us, and threatened to have college with me and knows a lot! strength and hysterics if she did not. Fate was| more than I do. Pat keeps my faith At the door I met my|in human nature alive just getting out of his|Nora keeps house for us and makes'the hair roots famish, loosen and He was an austere us comfortable, but until Ic “ WOMAN'S WAY,” the Essanay moving picture play in which Irene Hough of Omaha was chosen as the most beautiful telephone girl in America to play one of the roles, is to be shown Miss Hough was selected by a committee from r papers over the United States It Is Not a Serial <%_Y A RIP SNORTING COMEDY “How Dad Married Off His Extravagant Daughter With- out an Expensive Wedding”; comed FATHER’S STRATEGY Victory comedy with Matt. Moore Bride of a Few Hours, She Spurned Her Husband’s Money and Ran Away! “RUNAWAY JUNE” By George Randolph Chester, Author “Get Rich Quick Wallingford” Coming Sunday to the COLONIAL stort {here I have not had much use tor | my mind somewhat and—and 4 “What fs the matter, child; you) life that he always gave me every-| women, as I have known they were |then Bill " ‘4 |must not cry; you will spoil your| thing for which I asked, ¢ | (troy bette ae “I ran to him, holding the Iittle| “Yes,” he ‘I want Nora and Pat,’| known both kinds, and that is the ‘Give me Nora and Pat.'| reason I tried to keep out of so-|if he does look on My little heart! My father looked surprised and an-|ciety since I came here. was aching to be taken up and/noyed, but when the explanations | loved and cuddied, but Marte quiet- |ly tried to wipe away my tears “I was crying so hard now that Atthe Liberty Until Saturday Night the other little boy came over to jelther vampires or parasites, |ed around from behind my back: “It’s our dance, Margie, and this ~ can't keep it from me, even me with the my finger®” (To Be Continued Tomorow.) ~ FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR OR ITCHY SCALP—25 CENT DANDE If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry, seraggy or too oily, get a 25-cent Knowlton’s Danderine at any drug. counter; apply little as directed and ten minutes after you will say this was the investment you ever made, We sincerely believe, regardless seurf|of everything else advertised, that” if you desire soft, lustrous, beauti- its very life, and if|ful air and lots of it—no dandruff scalp and no more falling hair—you must use Knowl ton’s Danderine. “The sight, had been made in excited French |and Eliene’s friend and emphatic Irish dialect he was | Nora was a widow, She| could come and be nurse to Chad-| of Eliene | crossed. has heanged| ! ; If you care for heavy hair, that My own mother went giistens with beauty and is radiant life soon after.” ir gy ry And Pat?” 1 could not help ssk-| softness and is fluffy and lustrous, atton'’s story was | so" like a play of “a poor little rich |" parte an incomparable Just one application doubles the eauty of your hair, besides it im- nediately dissolves every particle This not overcome produces a fever- Dear old|ishness and itching of the scalp; me die; then the hair falls out last Why? bottle of — If eventually— But She Couldn’t Lose the Guy With the Black VandyKel vi 4