The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 6, 1915, Page 3

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PICKS MUVIE | - FUN-MAKERS ack Sennet, managing director io he Key Yatone comedies, is a mar | vel In his line discovering good comedy le for the fi | A come an hime ORRORROR ;* ma ked ability of ‘up his panies, and invarlably pleking the comemdy men and n m and sending them f the funnt 1 Chaplir | Sonnet writes all his scenarios and is constantly jotting down notes and bits of action dialogue. His habit of supervising every detail jend planning for every ponsible emergen han given him the nicky s of “The Master Mind jand “Nappy,” short for Napoleon, — | “ee Myrtle Steadman, who plays the It role in “The Wild Olive,” ts ting the patrons of the Lib erty. The ire in the story of a girl who falls in love with a suspect ed murderer. Delightfully thrilling and tr ends ing. Tho engagement et | |} “The Devil's Danghter da Hara, at the Colontal, ec was at make It one of the greater photoplays, The snaky Theda can always get a shudder out ere | Richard C. Travers, handsome leading man of the Essa m pany, will take th ding part in Pesanay's six-ac ire The Man Trail,” written by Henry Oyen, It is a story of the North woods | ee “The Vampire Woman” THEDA BARA ——IN THE—— n using ple for biggent Ralph W. Ince haa over a thousand extra p the past ¥ in th es in © «Vitagraph e Goddess Scenes senting a strike of miners, stag ed with startling realism and em ploying in action a machine gun that figured 5 ently in a ter Devil’s Daughter #)°°":* Eleanor Fairbanks, who was in [this city in “A Pair of Sixes,” ts the latest addition to the I | She Is playing one of the in “Tillle's T jthe latest Lubin release ER kiss is death; her love, red flame, That scorches like a white-hot brand, But luring lightning in her eyes Beckons to that forbidden land | eee Where blasted lives, like hollow skulls, are nelle. firet. Diccure Lie whitening on the sun-bit sand. per,” ree-part emotional] H ER paths are milestoned wickedly, RE ene ee ae By sunken souls that cry despair; 20, when she appears In But hers the glance that breathes delight; » teagan Hare pr dal gel Alec The Devil's Daughter, passing fair, | ’ Has wrought her spell and filled her oath; She triumphs to see her fools rot there. ine she was older than the character | she represents. HE Devil's Daughter takes cruel toll, Her blood-red lips are sugared li¢s That lull her fools in her white arms, And mock them in their parting breath, And laugh to see their fell work done, eee | “The House of the Lost Court ee first big feature on the | | | | sunt program, t® the head Itner today until Wednesday night inclusive, at the Alhambra | This five-part 7 adaptation jot Mra. C. N. Wil Jed novel is a vt rious castles. ja man sentenced years before to} As, cursing, dupes go down to death. |death for a crime with which he| | was falsely charged, and the “sleep 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M. CRAWFORD, ORGANIST FT cla shen, Mibiiivas sine ita the lead fn thia pleture, as the young American girl who, by her ply and ingenuity, clears up the whole mystery, and wins the hand 1 4 some hero, Sir Anthony Elliott | Miss Dana is supported by Ger trude McCoy, Robert Conness and 4 Dancan McRae. The “Hearst ; Selig News” pictorial {s a part of |the same program. § | ere | iPROGRAMS |Alhambra Ending Wednesday Night) COOL e,tir Changed | oy Robert Conner 8. Liberty Ending Tuesday Night “Wild Olive’ (Myrtie Stedman and Forrest 8 . At the Clemmer “The Pirth of a Nation” (Lilllan| |Gish, Mae Marsh, Miriam Cooper, | |Henry Walthall and Ralph Lewis) | eee | “ @ " Colonial Ending Saturday Night . The Devil's Daughter’ (Tiveda} or zs | Bara) 4 see salar dla + Tragedies of the Crystal Globe’ (Mabelle Trunnelle and Bigelow | ee Cherries ¥ | Mission Ending Tuesday Night | | Cooper). " eee « oun Class A Ending Tuesday Night o2%| “The Cheval Mystery” (Harry | Myers and Rosemary Theby); “The $5.00 | Boot Romance” (Bob Leonard} ihe ory [and Elle Hall). O14O 01% | At the Melbourne | “The Avenging Conscience” |(Henry Walthall, Mae Marsh and ® Blanche Sweet) | Producers Veal and @| Grand Ending Tuesday Night i @ uF Vanity” (Edna Maison and to | Wm. Clifford) The Curse of | Work” (Billie Ritchie); “The Tink 2 a “ 10 of Steubenville” (Murdock Mac to cool the air of this photo ~ ay by ea allt ir save eee | play palace. % : | Alaska Ending Tuesday Night | ° 13 The Flying Twine” (Marion and Continuous 11 a. m, to 11 os @ “0h |Madeline Fairbanks), Keystone| s8 @ os |comedy 100 @ 1.80 eee | @ 10 le . ne RESIDENCE THEATRES " —__—_—@\¢ Kelling Prices to Retailer tor i Butter, Kage and Cheese Home Ending ‘Tu @ “The Explolts of Ela ‘ Rotter two parts; “An Meal of the Hills,” «ton 2 =|{¥opart drama Jeypoor, Hindu- ioe stan,” scenic; “Police Dog," No, 6, « jeartoon comedy | FIRST AND , Endin | 4 Ye College Ending Tuesday 16%! Cleo Madison in “The Whirling 7 Disc,” two-part drama; “The Guard. i, [fan of His Flock,” two-part drama; Wednesday, for 4 Days JOHN BARRYMORE ¥ ou ’ . is All the Baby's Fault,” comedy | —in— hese sini at “THE DICTATOR” -fl)isi [°c one TP : ryyy | i (Prices paid producer) Country May and Grain Mi ° (Wholesale prices) i i ° eee 13.00 @ibo0 | ea.00 | 10.00 3.00 | 900 STAR—TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1915. PAGE 3, |To Close Out In Four Days Hutchinson to Close Up Next Saturday Night—Fixtures Are Sold —Bank Takes the Corner—Balance of the Stocks to Be Disposed of at Extraordinary Price Concessions HE Silk Neckwear All of the Suits that’s been sold dur- 8¢ll at twenty-five d Silk Ties ing the sale for a quarter : for 10c will now go for a dime. This means that will be sold at 38c. unquestioned worth that were bought to ollars have been put in one lot at fourteen sixty-five. Seattle men can buy All the Dollar Silk Ties the real twenty-five-dollar garments of and character at a “B. V. D.,” “Athletic” and kindred very real and tangible saving. lines of cool shirts and drawers will be A third group includes fifteen and closed out at 18c a garment, instead of twenty dollar suits left half a dollar! Men’s Union Suits, the open-mesh kind, will be sold at 48c a suit. EN’S Fine Shirts with soft or starched cuffs, such as were a dollar apiece, will be closed out at 58c. Some are a trifle soiled, but none are seriously hurt. over from a previou at five sixty-five. The patterns are fine. son. These we shall sell s sea-| $15 Suits for $5.65 noth- ing to brag about, but the qualities are All the $1.50 and $2.00 Fancy Shirts Most of ’em are small sizes. will be closed out at 98c apiece. HERE are of course $3.50 to $5 Silk Shirts that were many odd lots that are} GloSed . $3.00 will be cut to $1.58. too small to be advertised. Shirts French Flannel Shirts that They will be conspicuous- Today for $1.18 will all be closed out at a Tha store will be were $3.50 to $5.00 each _ ly displayed and ticketed. closed all day Tues- dollar eighteen. day as well as Monday in order to reprice Boys’ Felt Hats that were $2.00 apiece ¢VETY item, at the closing prices. will go for 38c. If occasion demands further reduc- Men’s Caps that were $1.50 and $1.00 tions, we shall make them will go for 58c each. on the spot, and during the Things HE Two Dollar Straw Hats will be P™°8™°** of the sale. sold at 68c each. There is not enough We do not believe, Must Go of that line to last more than a few hours. however, that any further The $2.50 Straw Hats concession will be needed. $2 Straws are to be sold for $1.58 The store closes Saturday night next, and all the $3.00 ones 8 advertised, for good. are to be got rid of at T must be understood that ALL SALES $1.98. ARE FINAL — for the STORE THE clothing has received the most dee QUITS. Alterations will be made as cisive cuts of all—and deserves the carefully as usual, how- least. The Suits are all new, and were ever. The tailor shop will All Sales bought for this season’s finest trade. be kept open for the pur- The regular twenty- $20 Suits dollar suits have been all All suits left for pose, as long as necessary. Final alter- put in one lot at $10.65. ations will be delivered from the tailor for $10.65 The patterns and_ shop on the third floor of this building. qualities are by long The sale ends Saturday night some odds the best shown at this price. time between 10 o’clock and midnight. By GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE eae eon befeitengen Co. Second Avenue and Union Stree | I rd her, so I just gave hera little! quieting powder and told her the | ufessiots 0 a ife doctor had ordered it. She is bugs all right.” THE DIFFERENCE TO THE nurse, “and I think that stuck-up| | 8m going to akk you, little book, WORLD A BABY’S LIFE MAY | Fairlow put her up to It. I can’t un-| Wat you think of it. I am not crazy, MAKE derstand what the superintendent ts ®* You know, but I am certainly go (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper thinking about when she lets Fair. !2& home and I am not going to Enterprise Association.) low go in there and sit all the while| have that girl wait on me another Yesterday I heard my nurse talk-|I am out, Yesterday when I came|™inute. Two or three times when} ing with another out in the hall. back Mrs, Waverly’s face was flush-|#he thought I was asleep I have | Neither one seemed to realize that/ed and her eyes were bright, and| Caught her trying to unlock the box| |1 might hear. she looked quite interested, and the) Where I keep you. She has added She told her husband she want- doctor expressly forbade her being | the vice of curiosity to her other ed to go home last night," said my| worried in any way.” | faults and I cannot have her around == —_—_—_—_—_— “But,” remonstrated the other,| ™¢- who seemed to have a little gleam| Just here Dick came in with a of common sense, “isn't it what|great bunch of flowers, looking so D. W. Griffith's they are trying to to get Mrs.) anxious and distressed that I really Supreme Achievement Waverly to take interest in some-| felt sorry for him, For the first A in thing else and soften the loss of her! time since that moment when I lost baby?” all count of life I felt sorry for him “Well, don't I try to do that? We|as well as miyself. I held out my were talking yesterday, or any way|arms to him and if you could have I was talking, for she never says|only seen his face light up! much to me, and I told her that it} “Margie, Margie,” he said in a was foolish for us to magnify our/trembling voice, “have you really ills and sorrows. ‘If we would only| come back to me?” “) . realize, I said, ‘that it will all be song te the same a hundred years hence He fairly lifted me out of my : “Do you know she got mad at| Chair into his arms as Eleanor Fair. that. ‘What do I care for a hun-|//°W came thru the door. “I beg dred years hence?’ she almost/YOUr pardon,” she sald in a stifled shrieked. “Resides, It won't be the| Volce : same. If my boy had lived think! “Come in, Eleanor,” I said. “I what {t would mean to this old| have just found out I am in the land world, either for good or ill. His/ of the living, dear, and Dick is go. Featuring Henry Walthall Mae Marsh share in shaping ts destinies, Out | Dick?” and away from the change it has Sure I am, if you want to go,” children’s children would have a|ing to take me home, aren't you, | he answered. “Will you come with me, Elea- nor?” I asked. “I'm going to let the nurse I have go and Dick and Aunt Mary think I need some one |with me for a little while. You have been more comfort to me than anybody since I came here, and I think it would be a little vacation for you if you came to me.” Eleanor Fairlow’s face became scarlet. “I don't think I can go, Margie, and besides I think it is best to stay here until I finish my | training, even if they would let me go. You see if! got a taste of homé life again I might not have the cour- age to go on.” “You poor child! You must come over to us as often as you can, Must she not, Dick?" “Sure,” said Dick, rather absent- ly. Just then the doctor and the nurse came in and busied them- selves making ar ements for me to go home—alone, with empty arms (To be continued tomorrow.) | Use Star Wants Ads tor Re sults. The Cheval Mystery ROSEMARY THEBY —And— HARRY MYERS | made in my life, the whole world is changed by ise of the death of my boy You are a foolish young) woman who does not think and the best thing you can do is not to talk to any patient you may be called upon to nurse, for you certainly will) undo all the good your purely me-| chanteal services may do, if you open your mouth to voice an opin ion that has already been mac you by some person that presuma was quite as thoughtless as your self.’ Now, what do you think of that? I tell you I was scared, I think she| lis crazy, and I was afrald she would rave on until the superintendent Blanche Sweet Thousands Were Turned Away Yesterday MELBOURNE 10c -420c SECOND WEEK Griffith’ ) Masterpiece

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