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VISIT BELGIUM &: = A ROMANCE CHAIRMAN APPEALS joo fe pathetic. That Glaus NEW YORK, Nov Ww Myrtle K. 1 will try to 1 andidat W Ave i c reat © mar | “ELEOTRIO” WEEK [iso's entices 25 cicesr|setnining ite "apo" Sy muld be con fn an address | of hearts upon her] : plectrical men met Friday | ®t & Mass moet held for him at » them all the calm and T Hi E SEATTLE STAR © OSCAR K M’GILL TICKET S CONE) OF ROYALTY - ter, They must Five Million Dollars Needed | impossible to get Mass Meeting at Labor Tem-| Wife's Mother Rebels When! to Buy Clothes for clothes past the ple Urges Support for Son-in-Law Parades His egulatt Candidate | Good Fortune ‘ Belgians DISCUSSES PLATFORM /HE’S CUT OFF PAYROLL © today 4 GRIFFITH SUPERVISED FEATURE FRON THE STAGE PLAY Starring Dorothy Gish ° xevcar"c.c° * and Wallace Reid its ‘ccrtine Farr y night the last Eats cafe and plans for “electric week,” November 29 tc wan the r She was pretty, 1 lofty poise, lots of girl as and oodles of cash, or her r Bettinger, whose 10-| nother did, which was the same activities tn school mat: | thing nin the city, fol : neo and spoke Roy k in Mr. Me. | ber naor, member d, was the first romped to the parson's with | d, after the ceremony, set-| te Bigg calle for a ted down to the task of living up aad ‘nurpery traintag|!= the THe eet ounal The ne’er completed romance of Karl (Wallace Reid), ney's paid the rent, heir-apparent to the principality of Rutania, and Kathie idadaays cuaannt, bE tame (Dorothy Gish), the niece of a Heidelberg inn-keeper, | Roy's clothes. There was nothing | because of regal customs, is the main theme. It is beau- P tifully developed and many times brings tears to the eyes. In detail it is delightful—the lonely boyhood of the prince, the carousals of the Heidelberg students and the awakening of the prince to real life and love, form the basis of the photoplay. The Motion Picture News, in reviewing it, said: ‘““A success it is, worthy indeed to be rated as a two-dollar picture.” The stage play was good, but the all-star cast, the great numbers used, the hundreds Hut Roy erred. He stepped over | to the netghbors and exhibited his 1! new sult and the nifty footwear his notherto-law had chased for That cracked the plate Lindsey's = ma didn’t} known th Ingy to «. Lind Wilton Lackaye Star of ‘‘The Pit” and “Fine Feathers,” stage successes that played here at $2 a seat, and nerves, too. | In the chill ¢ r of divorce ve | Court Friday, Roy was cut off with lout a cent. Mrs. Mary I. Engler, president of| John B. Cleveland got Into the the ceh's Wileon Marshall clutches of gamblers, That ts why Rosemary Theby league, sald, “The principles of Mr. | Oo Noreelt. and nentid for seven | iia and hundreds of added scenes, the superior 1 want to neo the /Years. Cleveland went to Auntralia, | ursery training, be-|Rhe thinks, and may be dead for |i all she knows. eee | art of the camera, make this super-fine— something that will live long in your memory. Fickle Fatty’s Fall A bathing beach comedy, by the Sennett-Triangle- Keystone tribe of fun makers In the elaborate five-part photodrama most ex< adaptation of the French novel, “Roger | La Honte’”’—a picture story that holds ' you spellbound with the dramatic in- tensity of the deeply emotional plot. The Man many who have After Robert L. Kaser abandoned fihis wife, Echo, he wrote her let-} ters, urging her to get a divoree, 4 made a fool of him t return to fae answered with a dive eee Seattle being the healthiest city r Martha E. Cunning ham's husband, EW Tay PAE TONIGHT—LAST TIME of Shame rt asi “fel “The Lamb” and ame : bi ¢ » be hired John C. Iverson, a city fireman. smith fo red away by hin wife, Lana, be CONTINUOUS—11 A. M. TO 11 P. M. FIRST AT PIKE 1f, fing to witnesses, she told Fourth, Pike and Union — othe . me dois eet thse - rr and never qd She packed up all the household furniture last June and went back to her parents, John got a divorce Continuous, 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. of ieetinecd SSION. ae Ladies’ Rest Room 800 Ground with free m tee, and Free Parce Gescking Roves o- L-I-B-E-R-T-Y MATINEES l Oc EVENINGS l be | Bessie W. Hanna's parents eup-, ial centers as if| ported their son-in-law, Stuart B. the idea were a new one. What, {f| Han not the public schoolhouse, has | surrc been the soctal center of American | getic young husband and he left for community © the early hin- | ¢ kewise bump or lod he sree route — ~ two years, Then the ings palled on the ener (Eleven to Seven P. M.) (After Seven o’Clock) Children 5c; Loges 25c Children 5c; Loges 30c Loges May Be Reserved at 50c Each com. | waste) Other divorces granted Friday of these « id Ss nts.jafterncon were and to 4 1 from an Elizabeth officialdom a right to use ¢ swnifrom F. W.; Effie Rice from only indicates the ex-| James; Helen Gallino from PhNMity have bee garet Rose Landis from Sam th Me fi Harty a ee ae aweesase “The Sins Ye Do by Two and Two You —~. Must Pay for One by One’’ —RUDYARD KIPLING More Startling Than the Stage Play Picturing the Terrible Consequences of Vice and the Physical Ruin That Follows Abuse of the Moral Law .. The Wages of Sin Are - Worse Than Death Its Smashing, Horrible Truth, Forcefully and Dramatically Yet Deli- cately Presented Thru Motion Pictures The Sins of the Parents Are ‘ aes ; 3 , , . Visited Upon the Children The H orrible Sin of Man Coursing Through i ag either apt oy hag t — His Veins Is Reflected in Innocent Women ' lon that we must take up our cudgels in a crusade against the modern problems brought to the fore by ‘Damaged Goods.’ The report that these diseases are increasing is enough to make us get busy on a campaign against them.” tenth as powerful, as convincing, as far-reaching and as helpful as this performance of ‘Damaged Goods’ must be, | would consider that | had achieved the triumph of my life.” Admission 15 Cents Phone Elliott 3092 For Daily Schedule Children Under Fourteen Years of Age Not Admitted Unless Accompanied by Parents