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ARR an SPR ARRAN ttn tte prin entra bmn Atense scene from “The Secret Urchard,” which opens at tne Alas three days, beginning Sunday. AUGHS Are in Abundance in Tomorrow's New Show Positively Only 3 Days to See Jane Novak and Hobart Bosworth in a gripping ecene from “A Lit tle Brother of the Rich,” Liberty, Sunday. |coLONtAL ALASKA ri “The Senior's Silver Buckle,” a} “The Secret Orchard.” with | drama, with Ed Coxen playing the, Blanche Sweet, Carlyle Blackwell, lead, ts the headliner at the Colon-| Theodore Roberts and Cleo Ridgely tal’s new show, beginning Sunday, ‘acluded in the cast, makes ite first Then comes “Shorty” Hamilton in Sppearance tn Seattle Sunday at a riproaring comedy entitied the Alaska, Shorty’s Ranch.” The Root of An Er fs another comedy and the “Mutual Weekly” fintshes the program. The balanced and should provide a lot + of fun and thrills to the movie fan #% innocent girl is visited upon the who attends the Colonial. j head of the wrongdoer in & most pragic fashion while “lovely wom- lt ols ‘un who stoops to folly” does not ALHAMBRA | becorn hopeless outcast. The second installment of “The| “The Secret Orchard” toaches | Goddess” will be shown at the Al-/ most strict moral lesson and will hambra for three days, beginning doubtless be a great drawing card. The installment of six| bad st Be | reels loses no time in getting to t! eat of the story, and Earle Wi) pd and Anita Stewart are shown | at their best The story, adapted from the novel of the same name by Gouv erneur Morris, now running tn Tho Star, deals with the possibilities of the future-—what might happen | if three men of wealth and power | stock market corner, which threa | gain contro! of the country, dupe|ens ruin and misery to thousands jthe people, and form an absolute|of his neighbors, is an appealing + Ser ype’ with themselves at the) love story. | The picture {s a real thriller | "ia thie taetaliment Tommy Bar| rom start to. fistah, aplensidty r clay (Earle Williams) has much | exciting production. Nash is sup R h trouble fn proving that he ts not| ported by a capable cast which tn- = ———————— intertor and exterior, are charm- ing. Each scene adds new laurels bill fs exceptionally well of the Lasky company. CLEMMER George Nash, the eminent dra matic star, makes his screen debut in a plet ation of Sutton Vene's romance of Wall st flelde—""The Cotton King.” teresting portrayal of a financiers herculean attempt to prevent a |insane. He wears a bearskin robe| cludes Julla Hay, Fred Truesdell, j ta Meu of the clothing which Proteseer| The Majoron! and Julla Stuart. jtaken from him by The producer has exerted him- self to provide effective settings 9 Featuring that funny cowboy coniedian, Shorty Hamilton. It’s a Western comedy 3 acts and furnishes 45 minutes of howling laughter. FIRST RUN PARAMOUNT PICTURES TONIGHT—Last Times Marguerite Clark Mme. Sarah Bernhard At the Great Actress’ | in Her Greatest Play, Magnificent game } “Helene of the North.” SUNDAY "xs “MONDAY TUESDAY Another Record-Breaking Paramount Release THE FAMOUS FILM STAR Blanche Sweet SUPPORTED BY Theodore Roberts, Carlyle Blackwell And Other Noted Players, in “THE SECRET ORCHARD” STIRRING SCENES AND TRAGIC REALITIES CONDEMNED | EULOGIZED By the Pennsylvania Board | By the Pennsylvania Court of Censors. ' of Common Pleas. Read what Judge John M. Patterson said in overruling the Board of Censors, after witnessing an exhibition of “The Secret Orchard” in his darkened court room: Hl “*THE SECRET ORCHARD’ ' TwoAct Drama That Holds You Spellbound for Thirty Minutes —AND THEN— If We Had Nothing Else on Our Program “THE ROOT F ALL EVIL” With Spottiswoode Aitken and Jennie Lee Is Your Money’s Worth. It’s a Scream. is beautiful.” “It teaches a great lesson.” | “To bar its theme of sin punished, would keep | some of the world’s greatest literature from motion- picture presentation.” “The story is in a class with ‘Faust,’ ‘The Letter,” some of t masterpiece Paramount Travelogue Wonders of South America ‘Les Miser- literature’s Crawford at the Great Pipe Organ Puts the Finishing Touches to the Above— a Great Show for the Whole Family. ables,’ scarlet and greate cei CT, COLONIAL 10cfor Adults'!,";",'°5c for Children NOTE—First Run Paramount Pictures will be shown exclusive- ly at the Alaska Theatre pending completion of the palatial new Coliseum. STAR—SATURDAY, SEPT. 11, 1915. The settings in this play, both| to the already overflowing crown) The retribution for his wrong to/ and the cotton | Interwoven with the Intensely in-| PAGE 5. One of the thrilling moments in “The Cotton King,” a romance of high finance, which comes to the Clemmer Sunday. for this powerful story succeeded admirably. eee MELBOURNE “The Moth and the Flame,” a) drama of American society, begins | | a three-day engagement at the Mel-| bourne Sunday. The Motb--Marton | Molton, a fashionable society girl— | blinded by the dazzling Edward Fletcher, defends his character {against the attacks of her friends. He proposes to her, is accepted, but when the marriage ceremony is about to be performed another herself and claime Fletcher as her own. The Moth, blinded-—her gorgeous wings singed and scorched—files | The headliner at the Mission for story is that of aw little girl cast up by the sea Into the hands of a fish erman. As the girl grows older she shows an tnherited talent for sculpture, Using the sands of the beach as her her artist bene- factor discovers her and helps her discover her parentage. A comedy, entitled “Vendetta tn & Hospital,” is a riot of laughter. LIBERTY Hobart Bosworth, Jane Novak, and Hobart Henley are numbered | among the stars who appear fin “A Little Brother of the Rich,” a story | of high society and theatrical life which comes to the Liberty Sunday The story tells of the love of a } drunkard for an actress, his refor mation, then his fall, then his rise from the depths of drink, a better | man, worthy of his actress sweet heart's love. | An automobile colliding with a |}ocomotive {« exceptionally well ex- jecuted and ts @ real thrilling piece lof work. woman, carrying a child, presents | sweet and Cart back to the safe haven of her home, saved from the devouring flame. eee MISSION | three days, Sunday, ts Corel,” a stirring drama of the sea, with Marie Walcam The! “umiPR OG RAM Alhambra Ending Tuesday Night ¢ Goddess” (Earle William and Anita Stewart), ment. eee Colonial Ending Tuesday Night “Shorty's Ranch,” comedy; “Th Senior's Silver Buckle” Coxen); “The Root of jcomedy; “Mutual Weekly.” see Alaska Ending Tuesday Night “The Secret Orchard” (Blanch ye Blac! kwell). Melbourne Ending teeadio Night “The Moth and the |drama; Pathe _ travelogue Claes A Ending Toseday Night “The Shooting of Dan Breese) ; ee Clemmer Ending Tuesday Night The Cotton King,” drama. .. Liberty Ending Tuesday Night * A Little Brother of the Rich (Hobart Bosworth) Mission Ending ‘Tuesday ee Coral” (Marie Waleamp); ” Getta in a Hospital,” comedy. eee Madieon Ending Sunday Night “A Knight of t Hart); “Shorty larem,” comedy; | (Mitte Ritchie); jeent” (third ins ‘CLUBWOMEN BOOST | DR. LILLIAN IRWIN 8. Inherits “Hello, Bill” ment). | The story was adapted from the second install- (Ea All Evil,” Flame,” McGrew” Pathe educa- Traiis” (Wm.| “Under the Cres FOR SCHOOL BOARD Dr. Lillian C, Irwin is a candidate for election to the Seattle school baard. She will be the first woman to win that position if she is elected. |™en's camp of military {nstruction Her name has been proposed by | at American lake will be a thing of novel and play of the same name | Mra. Homer H. Hill, of the Women's | the STAR’S MOVING PICTURE DEPARTMENT; WHAT'S ON AT LOCAL THEATRES A scene from the drama of American society, “The Moth and the © Flame,” beginning Sunday at the Melbourne. e e | | Ed Coxen, coming to the Colonial Sunday, in “The Senior's Silver | Buckle,” BUSINESS MEN END TRAINING By Sunday American Beauty drama. night the business past. Some of the war stu- by Joseph Medill Patterson |Good Government league, which will | |dents returned to their homes Sat- eee | support her. urday. CLASS A | Dr. Irwin, a practicing physician, Of the 100 odd business men who Edmund Breese, the famous star|at 407 Cobb building, was at one | gathered at the camp for instruc of the legitimate stage, comes to|time principal of schools, and was/tion three weeks ago, not one the Class A for three days, begin- | also a high school teacher. proved a quitter. The work was in the screen version poem, | of Dan McGrew.” | |There's lots of Northern atmos |phere, thrills and dramatie ele- | ments In thie picture. Most of the | settings are Iaid tn the North. | A Pathe educational completes! | the bill Service's famous The Shooting CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 INDIAN CHIEF ASKS IF IT’S JUST ‘SCRAP’ OF WHITE MAN PAPER | Justice, on his side. | It was Sluiskin who in 1870 guid led the first party of white meo t& the summit of Mt. Rainier. In that party were Gen. Hazard Stevens and P. B. Vantrump. He still knowe Sy inch of the country. He regards it as his country. He jlooks upon the white men as pow erful usurpers. He cannot oust them by force of arms. So he will play the game their way—with law books for guns, with lawyers for chiefs, with witnesses for braves. | eee Already the Indians of Washing ton have fought several skirmishes jin the courts for what they term |their treaty rights, They lost in Whatcom and one or two other counties Then they found a champton in U. 8. District Attorney Francis Gar recht, and they won a case in Bex |ton county. All of these were fish ing cases. Arrayed against the Indians are all the game wardens, the fish and game commissioners, the attorney | general and al] the machinery of| law of the sta, lev Now Chief Siutsktn and his braves are fishing AND hunting, | not In defiance of state law, but in| defiance of federal law, for the park is Uncle Sam's. WII Uncle Sam pick up the/ | gage? Or will he honor the “scrap | of paper” which Gov. Stevens sign |ed more than half a century ago? Sluiskin and his party are living in two lar al typees. With | the party several college-edu- | are cated girls who act as interpreters. | “We any don’t want to put you to} more trouble than fs neces sary,” the interpreters told the puz. zied rangers. “THE CHIEF PRO. POSES TO MAKE A TEST CASE.” She will run to succeed George A. Spencer, the only board membe: whose term expires this year. The election is in December. hard, even grueling at times, but rj}the students found it interesting. The officers of the regular army who served as instructors say their' THE LOST ARTICLES. — = highest hopes of the more than realized. It is likely that there will be an- other and a larger camp next year. REPORT QUAKE CLOSE T0 ROME ROMF, Sept. 11.—Acquilia was shaken by a violent earthquake last night, but no deaths have been re ported thus far. Acquilla is a city of 18,000 inhab- itants, 60 miles from Rome. camp were STAR WANT ADS WILL FIND 5 Reels of Fun t at Pike Sunday, Monday, Tuesday Only “A Little Brother of the Rich” Five reels, from the story and play. A story of the stage and society—a play within a play, featuring HOBART BOSWORTH, JANE NOVAK AND HOBART HENLEY Sunday Noon Concert 12:15 to 12:45 P. M. by W. E. MacClymont on the $35,000 Wurlitzer-Hope-Jones Unit Orchestra. TONIGHT LAST TIMES A TEXAS STEER CONTINUOUS 11 A. M. TO 11 P. M. LIBERTY 10c, Children 5c, Loges 25¢ 5 Reels of Fun