The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 20, 1915, Page 8

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One of the stirring sc from the gigantic historical play, “Martyrs of the Alamo,” a Triangle Fine Arts feature, which comes to the Liberty Sunday. YORK, — NEW Nov. 20.— Round table discu » of nearly «Whether the Bul! Moosers will (every civic problem k place at “be reunited with the republi- & mass meeting under auspices of Teans depends upon the latter, the Seattle Federation of W = Medill McCormick announced en's clubs held Friday night at the “today, following a conference Commercial Club with Col. Roo: It. Mrs. 8. L. W. Clark deplored the Many Bull Moosers, he said, fact that the government census Will vote for President Wilson | does not recognize the occupation rather than for Root, whom the of house ping, and declared tb “republicans appear to-be groom. (servant girl problem woul! never “Ing. Solved until such was not the in - ase “WILL HIDE THEIR SHAPES Port Commissioner Remsberg “NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—Mascu- spoke on the belt Ine ratlwa Hine curves are to be kept secret problem and D. E. Fryer, chal ar from Columbia co-eds. The facul- of th® Municipal league hulldings ty has banne outdoor practice mitory. and grounds committ |vorably of the Hanna billboard or. ‘ dinance. want gym suits for near the dor. The Most Daring Picture Ever Screened INSPIRATION Five-Act Masterpiece Picturing the Rise to Fame and Fortune of an Artist’s Model, Featuring THE AMERICAN VENUS ‘ AUDREY =: MUNSON ia The World-famous Art Model in Her { First Appearance Before the Camera. Hi This Picture Is a Triumph of the Film q Art b Miss Audrey Munson perfect forms of any of her sex in this country or Europe. Artists for whom she has posed have never been able to find her equal. Among the ‘ most noted pieces of sculpture for which she has j posed are “The Fountain of Eldorado,” “Genius of Creation,” “Ascending Night,” “The Statue if of Liberty” and the Maine Monument.” has one of the most Real Scenes From Life in an Artist’s Studio! ADDED COMEDY ATTRACTION » COLONIAL ‘ - THEATRE 4 ; One Week Only—Starting Sunday q 10c —No Advance in Admission— 10c + 7 THE SEATTLE STAR A tense moment in “Damaged Goods,” which will be con tinued for three more days at the Clemmer. BULL MOOSERS WOMEN DISCUSS FAMOUS FACES ON SCREENS NEXT > G0 TO WILSON CIVIC PROBLEMS WEEK; MARY PICKFORD IN JAP PLAY; Sunday the Colonial will show photopiays. the Mutual's “undraped star of “Inspiration ‘DAMAGED GOODS’ TO STAY 3 DAYS NEW PHOTOPLAY mILLs |"the American Venus,” will make: Nellan im "Madame Duterfiy." drama [Der screen debut at the Colon! Clemmer- ard Bennet! in “Dam- | Sunday when “Inspiration” will be dram shown Audrey Munson in “Inspire-| Audrey Munson, who posed for ctie Chaptia ta “A Night ta[tany of the figures that adorn the ‘dings at the Panama-Pacific ex Trienagle drama. “Martyrs ef | position, is the girl. With her han oven ber Wineleen encande en transplanted the and Arnold Daly in Gold Reoster goénes of the studios where she Aa Affair of Three Nations.” | cxided her fame “"Seiionrme-—Jutiue Steger a “The Mes-| The classic story of Pyamalion tor of the Howme,” drama and the statue Galatea, which ¢ Mission—J. Warr The to life. is the basin of the pla Soe at a, However, the photoplay version, in : stead of locating the scenes in LIBERTY ancient Greece, placed them In New York city Tnepiration” is a Mutoal picture, iret of what ts known an the “Martyrs of the Nati KE J, Warren Kerrigan will portray the character of the dashing pbonair Terence, soldier of for J, Warren is tune and cavalier, and just the man for the Other attractions at th N be Hi t Raw! o Level.” a drama, ar titled “Chilis and Chic Miseior CLEMMER Hecaune of the fact that the play haa proved such @ drawing card Damaged Goode” will be continued for three more days beginning jay, at the Clemmer, So much % was done during the show At draped” photoplays. The sec-|\ing of this remarkable picture that At the Liberty for three days begin will be seen shortly. many people were unable to secure ning Sunday A comedy feature tops off the) seats s a history of the war for tn # bill Damaged Goods” is the pleture s fought by the vig eg version of the go play of the themselves fr the | MISSION {same name, It is far more vital which hung heavy The Palace of Dust.” tho first] than the stage play, bec aroynd necks at that of the “New Adventures of Terence | wider asc of action condensed into five re fa O'Rourke,” will head the new bill and spirit the Mission Sun and thra This film, while highly educa eday night. The new adventures tional, is at the same » sense: be shown In three episodes tionally effective. All each adventure complete in old frontiersmen. he but ing In action to them as Croc Silent” ith, Houst come alive again on the et by Wiretens,” a “thriter” fi EOtire New pen re ereey © eres nee Triangle company, and featuring Hippodr mi Chester Conklin and Mack Swain ear | Vaudeville Show Tomorrow GREAT ACTS ALHAMBRA A new Mary Pickford will b and all next week at coa)-black ote site Added Attraction revival of By popular demand we nL lame Madan on the are continuing for SUNDAY, MONDAY and TUESDAY Butte ers ¢ offers ar yieture dramatizat excellent acting in all the important r and a series of scenic effects 4 charm and b Marshall Mary COLONIAL One of the most famous models, the girl who has been c 1 STAR MAN WILL TRY REV. BROWN AGAIN SUNDAY Hello | “Hello. Is this Rev. Hugh Elmer Brown of the Pligrim Congregation ae al church? Well, this is The Star. A Ni ht i Sh hy are: yod\the mani Whip. catis IgM i a show to my church last Sunday night If you have laughed and found it dark 1 orry at Charlie in “A N about that. But come up tomor in a Show,” you can row night and you'll find us there laugh again, because to welcome you this is the aid we'd be there, to report of our winter h talka. sunday of every other month they he some sort of special service. CHAPLIN FILM which knoet @ out t egul regular eve | re about this, you know about the Fourth of J he said, “but Weekday Matinees outsiders get confused, We'll have 5 to char it, T think < The Star man will tell all about what sort of folks attend Hugh Sundays, Holidays and Brown eburch, and what the Evenings preacher wears ang what he talks ia 10 It won't be a dry church report Cc |but will be alive with entertaining and chatty gossip about what hap. GRAND jena during the evening Who is Betty Brown? i It fell a young man a m of the fate t mth b players tells his marriage to a b while indulging in a dr and of what followed. Richard Bennett, who placed the play on the speakifi® stage, ts the star, He is supported by an all-star cast. eee GRAND Chartie Chaplin tn “A Night tr a show” will remain at the Grand thru day night hariie ha been playing to large crowds since trousers, al comic Up in the ga *, too, sreputah ry is « ruffianly is Charlie, The 4 n the two is marked » from the Chaplin film, the Grand offers an entirely new Hip podrome va day, MELBOURNE Julius Steger, the well-known legitimate star, is featured in “The Master of the House,” an Equitable picture, at the Melbourne. It is a sensational picture telling of a hus band who tires of his old-fashioned wife and attempts to graze in pastures new with disastrous re. It ts a five-act picture, the screen version of the stage play of the PRES. WILSON’S TYPEWRITER IS ANCIENT RELIC WASHINGTON, Nov, 20 Presidnet = Wixison mexsag to congRezs like thiX’s to which it looks somethixng In addition the ma chine's and shoulders ffers from The sp Intermittent par Some of the letters are vir tually mute, Others have bold black faces The yon is about as fresh and whole battle flag in a um. | The mechanism generally is de and Hmps heavily of state only under presidential goading. Wilson admits it is but he likes jt verest Mr faultless very no hyphen You couldn't get a line out of the president on chine but this one a dark-lantern and a White House has hand-ra th so long as be has developed a per sonal attachment for ft If tt is the attachment {t has any ma jimmy humorists say #0, only Cook county's sheriff was robbed of his watch in the courthouse in Chicago. Most public officials have plenty of time to lose When wriets a alphabet is badly chewed as thru the far from and he i» proud of the fact that it has typewritten not even with he poor old thing valuable Mary Pickford is the little Japanese woman at the right. She is “Cho-cho-San” in “Madame Butterfly,” coming to the Alhambra Sunday. DID CHICAGO DOCTOR DO RIGHT IN ALLOWING BABY TO DIE? STAR READERS HAVE DIFFERING OPINIONS “Inspiration,” the f Audrey Munson is the State and Perhaps National Action May Taken to Prevent Recurrence of Case; Coroner's Jury Disagrees With fe geon’s Conclusions on Baby’s Future ng case of the, vised. A board of regency seems;mon practice. It certainly has my, John Hollin-| possible, as a indorsement.—0O. J. Klawitter.” die because Some of the written The -_—— n, Dr. H. J. Star follow “My heart goes out in loving sym fical science pathy to the the babe from the “It was human kindness to the enough to say * 4 ve, The let it die, It did not suffer kind-hearted doctor who wanted to tved le th, and had it lived, what a act as his conscience dictated. I and know the depths but even that a mother of a rs love 1 think it will be all such babies die approving Haiselden's © nom sapproving ot mi ereiful to According to wo! m Chitago, as this one Ada Jordan.” could not see a child grow to ma- {t memed prop Saturday that turity in the dreadful condition of state, and perhaps national action If society Is to be favored, why that baby. to prevent another uch “death sen-\not give the doctor full permission ‘Tis well with the child; . .9 vy Pye gM st to relleve the world of such a fa) | His feet, undetiiedy oa * - te " * ’ e pathway of sin never 4 The jury, made of doctors, ther and mother as the Bollinger Hie soul had but birth, found a surgeon fully within his couple proved to be? But, no! God And budded on at Giver and Taker of life. and as ghta in refusing to onscience so directed in the gre To bloom in the Dr. Haiselden is a murd “ Y jury felt the Bollinger euch he will have to answer to his aby's life could have been saved heavenly Father—A Constant by surgery, and that there was/ Render.” SIMON WAS FIBBING nothing to as suggested by — Haimlden, that baby would) “I note with great satisfaction have wn up mentally and moral-/that Dr. Haiselden has let Mra, An-| WATTS, ( Noy, 20,—After ¥ deficient r’'s baby die, after gain-| having obtained work on the Comp- pat care should be exercised in thers consent, Thisiton road by telling the foreman a suffering, put tale of destitution and Simon Roach dropped his purse, of which popped $600 in twenti hould be followed by al! parents and physicians, I say, has- ten the day when this will be com- paid t fut jury. Any doubt of a child should d by a board, they ad-' be determ A Griffith Supervised Five-Part Frontier Drama—a Graphic Picturization of the Courageous (but Hopeless) Defense of the Alamo, Combining a Story of Thrill- ing Interest With a Historical Background Saved by Wireless \ riotous farce on the modern 21st century melodrama, with thrills and glee to each eyeful. . TONIGHT—LAST TIMES: a 6-part drama, with Frank Keenan. | Fool,” Keystone, with Eddie Foy. LIBERTY FIRST AT PIKE CONTINUOUS—11 A. M. TO 11 P. M. Children, 5c 10c aw 15C Loge Seats May Be Reserved at 50c Each “The Coward,” ‘A Favorite eee MATINEES Children, 5c Loges 25¢ EVENINGS

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