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| “Stolen Goods” WEDNESDAY AND FOUR DAYS BLANCHE SWEET greatest dramas BY MARGARET TURNBULL Through the “Big Ditch,” by Paramount Travelogue, shows the wonders of the canal, in a trip from the Atlantic to Pacific ocean 10c FIRST and PIKE America’s supreme, youthful emo- tional star, supported by House Peters, Cleo Ridgely and Theo. Roberts, in a magnificent 5-part picturization of one of the world’s The Ski Man Washingtor Film Co ture will be seen for the last time tonight, and on Thurwe comes the mid-week change. The new feature |x to be j°The Carpet From Bagdad,” based on an Oriental theme. It will r 10c cansed his death i FIND MAN DEAD HA, Tontita, the janitor, fount SUNK BY SUBMARINE, the body when he entered the apart phe | ent to deliver women were ROME, June 9 net during a igible returning to sitting fn a chair.| women are charged with disorderly bers of the cr Mabel Normand Charies Uhaplin AT THREE OF THE FUNNIEST COMEDIANS IN CAPTIVITY—IN TILLIE’S 2x PUNCTURED ROMANCE . THE GREATEST COMEDY EVER MADE—A SIX- REEL KEYSTONE PRODUCT AT DID YOU EVER LAUGH UNTIL YOU HAD TO HOLD YOUR ACHING SIDES? IF THIS FILM DOESN’T MAKE YOU DO IT— WELL, YOU'D BETTER SEE A DOCTOR aide ieaiaiiaiacmeiieaaial WE ARE BRINGING THIS FILM BACK AT A LARGE EXPENSE AND ARE OFFERING IT TO YOU FOR THE ENORMOUS SUM OF JUST THINK OF IT! FOR i aiaaeaiceiaiaeasimiemenaaal IF YOU DON’T SEE IT—WELL, YOU’RE IN HARD LUCK. CLASS “A” THEATRE Just North of Pike Street on Third Avenue age. LONDON, June 9% m ap Quigtey formerly had offices in'g s Lady Salisbury n the Empire bullding, pedoed and sunk by a German sub marine, it was announced today he pil ana coroner are pro» ARREST SIX WOMEN ITALY LOSES AIRSHIP {ng the death of John T. Quigley, real estate dealer, who was found in his flat at the Ravenna . 1527 Terry ave., Tues raid on the Rose hotel Quigley had been dead about ington st 10 days, and w It is believed cerebral hemorrhage conduct has been tor 5 Wash having bombarded Fleume. Tuesday afternoon. The the Adriatic off Dalmatia. were made pris oners by the Austrians implies ‘at least action.” STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1915, PAGE WHAT'S ON AT THE MOVIES For val play In five Greswac, and ee Cora,” an emoti reels, b Fred Di produced by the Metro Pletures Corporation, which began today at the Clemer, has the young and gifted actress, Hmily Stev Mins na, in the title re niece of Mra with her aunt elgbt years, The title giver no intimation of the story, Which tells of trials of wirl luced to povert who rises to a prominent place the operatic world, Her prog is made with much that ap the emotions and sentiments of the picture in a wnd has played ALHAMBRA | Gladys Berendes and William Hiller, the local movie stars, con tinue to please in the Seattlemade production, mbra crowds main ur Sunday night 7 26 [LIBERTY A story covering both the globe, starting tn Ne AUNT MARY ASKS WHY GOOD. NESS IS NOT INTERESTING (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) I did not wake up very early this morning. Dick was gone when Aunt Mary came into my room and said that M had Just telephoned that Mother Waverly was coming to luncheon, and that she (Mollie) was coming right over, as she want ed to see me before | saw her mother. Aunt Mary ts not looking very well these days, and (his morning h sunken and her face was very pale. “Don't you feel well, dear Aunt Mary?" I asked. Yes, dear; I am perfectly well but Tam so tired all the time late ly. 1 guess ft is because | am get ting old, Margie, and you know I was out late last night to that fool ish musical comedy, Those boys, Dick and Jim, thought I would be shock yut I was not, I was only Aisgusted, not at the play, my dear, but at the fact that so many appar ently decent people, among whom was included last night your Aunt Mary, are Willing to spend money and time while erroneously thinking tr d themaelves amus Didn't you Mh ft at all, Aunt of the music y and one of the women were ¥ pretty, the dancing was graceful the coloring of the stage pictw to the eye, but, m e appeal was frankly por Vulgarity bidden un paean to lust nographic dera show of taste—a in the guise of lo My, Aunt Mary!” I exclaimed. “You are as smart and epigram matic as a Smart Set story And my subject is quite as ob Jectionable as most of theirs. 1 looked at her In surprise, I had| not dreamed for a minute that Aunt Mary had any idea of the smart, up- todate story that was almost al igram, on} ways a dissertation, in the eternal triangle Margie,” she continued earnest ly, “I think our drama and most of our other literature is all wrong We, or, rather, you moderners pride yourselver on the truth and so your| drama is mostly a supposed history of shattering the seventh command ment. Of course, there are a few thieves and murderers put in for good measure, but the fact remains) that if by some alchemy the sev enth command of God should have fallen out of the decalogue when Moser broke those tables of stone Mterally, instead of metaphorically, we would have had very little to read in books or to see in the thea tres today Hut, Aunt Mary, the temptation of the flesh was brought into the world in the Garden of Eden by the devil, and the world, the flesh and the devil have been inseparable ever) since.” Rut, my dear, the present gener: | ation ts coming to think there 1s nothing interesting in the world but the flesh and the devil In other words, goodness has gone out of fashion?” | asked | “Well, it has been pronounced un-| interesting, and to be uninteresting} is to be damned forever | “Why. is vice more Interesting than virtue, Margie, today? 1 think) it is because goodness is a negative! 16 and ylelding temptation| “In other words, Aunt Mary, you! think one can be good without do-| ing anything, and that you cannot be the least bit bad without doing something bad.” You've got it, Margie,” answered Aunt Mary with a smile, as she un slangy language of Dick, “We will never become ‘good’ a# a peopie un til we mak odness interesting until our great newspapers will put their finest writers and devote the most of their space to the recount-| ing of good deeds, instead of doing directly the opposite, Just this| morning the whole front page of our) morning paper was filled with the] grewsome details of the murder of a woman, and little two-year-old baby by ‘a degenerate boy of 21, while less than six paragraphs were ei to the boy of the same age| who voluntarily gave one pint of his young blood to save the life an anae mie mother to her family Isn't 1t possible to make this ac-| tion as dramatic as the first? Perhaps so, dear Aunt Mary, sald Mollie, who had just come fn, “but I'@ hate to try and be the one \to make the elty editors of any of |the newspapers wee It." (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) Jof the week at half the price charg. | #eTles consciously spoke in the somewhat | & eddie F i back to} COLONIAL 1 m shifting to Belgium America) in relate ‘ The Colonial t# er ng it Goods,” the Blanche Sweet fen ture starting today at the Liberty. |“ Age AaA tat Fighting is #1, with bombs the Of ite; seven-da bursting in the al reating | fl hows growing every d me realistic effect, In additic rT" eek's attraction | iol to beautiful Blanche Sweet in which Clara Kimball Young, t ast Includes House Peters, Cleo| former Seattle actre is the lea Scene from “in the Days of Famine,” three-part story of the North, which began Wednesday at the Mission Theodore Roberts, Syd-,ing woman. Hundreds who ido and H. B. Carpenter. |ized Miss Young tn her stock days t's part is that of a Red | > J to be found daily in the audiences, “Lola” is having its Wiese second successful run here, having CLASS A broken records at a rival house Charles Chaplin several months ago mi A oe erat Tilly's ¢ 4 GRAND R mance,” now that it has oc Daredevil stunts continue to ed the cireult of first-run t It will be shown for the r stud “The Diamond From the Sk ing The Jatest installment, ed du ing the previous exhibition adows at Sundown,” which be of the same film here gan today at the Grand, is full of Marie Dressler and Nor-| incidents that make your heart beat mand in in f the hard against your ribs., So great a Six full are Te lare the risks the members quired to tell the story. The flim| cast are fore the a bumper business on Its first! queers had insur showing here, and, with the admis policy writt » cover the play sion cut In two, the Class A e@xX-\In ajl the Installments shown to pects even greater crowds date, novel stunts have been Intro- Ni A duced which most men would hest MISSION tate to do. Yet Lottie Pickford The Mission today ts leading off | Irving ( {ts new bill with a three-reel| Charlotte Burton and Eugent drama of the Northland, written /all the chances. mimings, William Russ ri 1, by James Oliver Curwood. | alicia Every exterior which a ra is | SEATTLE a scene made while the snow is| The Seattle theatre, which has lying deep on the ground n doing business as a on ‘The story starta Jn 489. whenj picture house, ¢ Tuesday, The he“pingue raged fn the North.| management was unable to obtain Jar a young French the bigger rel uke of ad adopts a child orph vance booking the other local Twelve «, For this reason the attend has returp nce WAS poor f in The Seattle opened as Then, to bin dismay, Jan discovers | ville d motion v a rival for the girl's hand, making | about two months ago. way for ws » fine dramatic action. | ville acts were dro Dorothy ly Is the girl ___lago [LOLA] SENSATION With Beautiful Clara Kimball Young AS LOLA Apparently she died. Tier father experiments with ses be his wonderful electrical apparatus and to all appear ances she comes back to life. But there is a change in character—a difference in every action of the woman What caused the change? Was Lola really brov back to life? Was her father justified in his scientific experiments Was Lola to blame for the life she lived? We want your opinion. This is the kind of story that nails you to the seat. Added Attraction—Tom Wise in “The Magic Bottle”’—com- edy. SECOND AVE. AT JAMES ST. Just Arrived 7 Big Shipment of ORSETS Which can be worn to advantage with the New Summer models in Suits and Dresses. THE NEW EMPIRE Special 49c Medium i ANOTHER MODEL Special 79c Worth $1.00 THOMSON’S CORSETS be- CORSETS\ 2) Fons Semple Res 1 QC 98c MIDDIES The kind you usually see priced for Laced front, laced sides, sailor collar, all white gt. so serv- iceable, comfortable and se sone for summer wear. In sizes 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16 years. 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 bust. This new lot, just received, crisp and clean 98c and ready for use, each.... A Pick-Up by Our New York Buyer Women’s Top Coats $6. 98 and $7.98 s were bought at about half their actual value, so ‘that we are enabled to sell you Coats worth $12.50 and $15.00 fv $6.98 and $7.98, in snepherd checks, white chinchilla, mixtures and plain materials, in belted and ripple skirt styles and fancy collars. Just 100 to select from $1.25 - Waists-$1.25 Worth from $1.75 to $2.00 This new lot of the season’s best models has just arrived; they come in pretty, new designs, in self stripe and fancy colored stripe. Some have ruffled fronts, others plain tailored. Also new numbers in China Silk, plain and embroidered styles. Sizes 36, 38,,40, 42, 44. 39c—Untrimmed Shapes—39c Worth from $1.50 to $3.00 Be your own milliner and let our experts help you to t becoming shapes with suitable trimmings. On 39¢. 25c—Silk Hosiery—25c Worth 35¢ Pair These come in Silk Boot and Silk Lisle, with wide rter tops, double soles and high spliced heel and toe, olors, Green, Lavender, Royal, Navy, Copen, Black and White; worth Thursday, 25@ pair. These sele sale Thursda g r iP ROGRA M S| comets Sigg? Alhambra Ending Wednesday | Ye College Ending Thursday Night Black Box,” No, 11, two parts “phe Ski Man" (Gladys Berendes| “Wild Irish Rose,” two-part drami and Wm. Hiller), four reels; “The/ “Skipper Simpson's —_ Daughtery Professor's Painless Cure,” joomedy oe. | - aE ) W. OD McCormick, Aberdeen, Colonial Ending Saturday Night | kitled seven-foot cougar which hag*” “Lola” (Clara Kimball Young),/ terrorized North river country. five parts. | eee | ; a © ome Moore Ending Thursday Night “U. 8. Navy of 1915" (Lyman H. Howe feature). Liberty micing manuety Night ‘Cured to Stay Cured : Stolen Goods” (Blanche Sweet), Torturing, — grind= five parts rasping pain see Clemmer Ending Saturday Night Cora” (Emily, Stevens), five parts, eee Class A Ending Saturday Night Tilly's Punctured Romance” (Charles Chaplin, Marie Dressler and Mabel Normand), six parts: eee Mission Ending Saturday Night In the Days of Famine" (Doro thy Kelly), three parts; “To Save Him for His Wife” (hillian Walk er), comedy-drama; “Almost a le you aleamaaa |p rize Fighter” (Billy Reeves) vine fell are Grand Ending Saturday Night The Shadows at Sunrise,” No u sleep, infusing? and building upe > a strong, healthy, 7 of “The Diamond From the Sky series Animated Weekly"; “Bill's | Blighted Career” (Billy Ritchie), the spirit of stain two-part comedy; “La Monte’s strong, healthy Models > r discouraged Weal Alaska Ending Saturday Night | ; The Lure of the Mask” (Harold | ‘ lack of ‘nervy Lockwood) k tr west you to Madison Tonight Kast Lynne” (Fred Pauly and|_ Let us send you particulars regarding, SAUTIPULLY ILLUSTRATED BOOK FRE Blanche Forsyth), six parts; ‘Be. | Bivctrs-Vite, what Jt has dane for othe ware of the Dog,” comedy nem al many people who have bees . h76 | + yon may know some of them par= ee Let ua explain how Blectra- Viti RESIDENCE THEATRES nd what it will do for you, Addrem® ‘ «|The Electra-Vita Co. Home Ending Thursday | A The Black Hox,” No. 6, two . |parts; “The Rroken Toy,” vl bei ES —_"* drama; “Down On the