The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 8, 1916, Page 3

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3 ised STAR—SATURDAY, JAN. 8, 1916, PAGE 3. ACTRESS WILL |Colisexm Opens VIVIAN TO FLUTTER AT AMERICAN AS “BUTTERFLY ON WHEEL” PLAY HOSTESS, Tea and Cake to Be Served Miss King’s Sunday Visitors SHE WILL GIVE ADVICE Miss Anita King m Los Angeles | to assist at the ening today of | the « theatre, ts ng to have a busy tin pr apartment | at the Waal on ay | As announced day's Star the will me attle girls between | the he si4 urs ¢ A n ro ne business o hanker to come film ac tresses are invited to Miss King already half hundred and a oving P juest Girls has received a hone ing from is The affair will be a tea. Davy & Tobias, chief clerk to Hare Titus, superintendent of North ern Pacific dining car s presented Miss King, In beha the railroad, with a fruit cake the occasion, and will send a man} along with it to do the serv The Northern Pacifi department also prese to Jen fen and Herberg, managers of the Coliseum theatre, a cake weighing 250 pounds a three feet high and an exact replica the theatre [t was ¢ nd ser Saturday afternoon at the opening of the h | At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon Mayor Gill was cheduled to ¢ Mver the opening address in the| dedication th iseum butld- | ing. The mayor's + of the pro-| gram was also to introduce Miss Anita King, the Lasky-Paramount girl, who came here especially to | assist In the dedication. She is to @peak to the Coliseum audiences Saturday and Sunday noons | and evenings, giving some inside facts about the photoplay work and | art } The Russian orchestra of eight, fed by M. Gutterson, recently of| the Chicago Grand Opera Co., pre pared special music for the oc-| eanion Fannie Ward in T aed } | ] Cheat,” is the attraction offered Society is making a good deal of a function out of the opening of the “photoplay r¢ o as a & Von Herberg have designated | the Coliseum. The loge seats all been sold in advance | Jens To sare locomotive enginemen {no / wrecks, a Texan has invented ap paratus that, when a lever is pulled, drops them into heavy stee! | Caissons, at the same time shutting off steam and lying brake: SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY # | Cd } Arnold Late Frohman Star a THE MENACE OF THE An intensely inter- esting and absorbing detective mystery play in 5 acts—from the famous Mage- zine stories of ASHTON-KIRK Investigator 2nd Ave. at Seneca c yed EXGUSE ME! AT CLASS A, “SORROWS OF HAPPINESS" SHOWN ° ° With ‘The Cheat’ CHARLIE AT HIPPODROME CHAPLIN AT THEATRE +s left: (Top) Jane Grey in “Let Katy Do it.” at the Liberty (below) Arnold Daly and Louise R utter, in “The Menace of the Mute,” at the Strand; at right (top), scene from “The Butterfly on the Wheel,” at the American, with Holbrook Blinn and Vivian Martin; (middie) ene from “The Battle Cry of Peace,” at the Clemmer; (below) Fan nie Ward, in “The Cheat,” at the Coliseum ° BAT —— o\¢ ° AMERICAN COLISEUM e¢ ° In “A Butterfty on the Whee The Coliseum, the largest and which {x the feature attraction at | oa Se Tale ae the American theatre, beginning TOSt beautiful theatr ‘ Sunday, Holbrook Blinn and Vivian World, opened today with Fannie Martin are men to th greatest Ward, In “The Cheat.” a fivepart advantage. The story is of the Paramount production “The neglected wife. Her husband Is ° : ’ too absorbed in the cares of bust. “heat” {* positively thrilling, Com ness. The result is that she lends e¢dy has been Fannie Ward's forte.) shows, in this picture an ear to the love pleadings of her but st husband's friend, Collingwood, but sh yertectly able to do emotion remains true to her husband. The latter, however, misunderstands, ng Mim Ward ts a ver divorces her, but later finds out man He ta his mistake Hayakawa. Fro Before a reconciliation Is effect. expressive eyebr: The Cheat leading there are many plaver penings in the photo} great theatre fire s¢ was wri Misa W by Heecto players 7+. Hayakawa a ° ! T LIBERTY t * eee Sessue tory is mele butter grave fan » socia nces lead t Let Katy Do It,” the new Tri gle production, which dn the eee new show at the Libert nday. featuring Jaze ( Jealx with the HIPPODROME adventures of a modern Cinderella @ and he brood of adopted Charles Chap n table children. Jane G and Tully | (tho much imitated edian, will Marshall star in the y feature the motion picture part of first part of the heroine's life {s the new Hippodrome theatre pro spent on a farm up Maine 2 where she puts in her time as a headed + family drudge. company, tn A Keystone comedy ompletes ne the ba the bill The o *9 and Dar e 2) eo, singin CLEMMER 4 |talking comedians, and Ex the great play was released in New are fe York, “The Battle Cry of Peace” ts!» . t n ALHAMBRA t ° ° th Constance Collier the Interna a ay aroused # tionally noted London atar, in the Battle Cry of Peace, rol of . witt tender, strong is plete with tense dramatic inded grand idol, w t situatio b it also points it presented for the first time the psson of aredne the reen tn The T preached b Theodor onevell, Men at the Alharr beginning Secretary Daniels, et The Bat-\Sunday. The young tor of an tle Cry of Peace” was dramatized | aristocratic church denounces from by Commodore Blackton of the/the pulpit the grand opera “Zapo- United States na The pictures /rah,” and the corrupting influence show an attack on the city of NeW |exerted by the woman who sings York by a foreign foe, you are the it ‘The visit of the outraged prima eye-witness, and as the ad-'donna to his own vestry room to vances you grow in turn humiliat-/digcuss the attack then follows ed, outraged, desperate, fighting “ger ay mad o e sonia MISSION e o¢ STRAND Blood = 3 Pl open at ‘ The Menace of the Mute,” Alineee-part an 6 Pathe Gold Rooster release, In the! sorbingly interesting illus feature offered at the Strand, be-|irating the part scten plays in ginning Sunday fr ocedure Bruce, The story deals with the theft of , exnért fantiot certain valuable plans of Still i. tevine tb. Ove 4h Sag Ae marine from an Inventor, and the | professor Reichert t d rela persistent effort of his son to find) 4 » can be established thru them and bring the criminal to microscopical examination of the Ashton-Kirk a tice pe vlood Bruce and a younger broth. young man, whose hob "ler are very fond of the same girl solving of mysteries, is There are two other ires on entually finda), upon the case, and ¢ the b jas the friend of the In io peat ae tor o e rglar to be a man w ‘o hap r xed with a Were You Ever Aboard a Pullman Linge of ; The absotutel —And Had Forgot to Get Married? ee Parcel be “ Lordship” and the Lu cram ter of Kildine, an the German ocean, i a waters Is quite fresh and support fresh water creatures, but deep A PULLMAN JOYRIDE ‘own it ult the greatest oming to the Strand Theatre f of the sea an t wate ° ° ARNOLD DALY IN “MENACE OF THE MUTE” AT STRAND “THE BATTLE CRY OF PEACE’ A Submarines Battleships Dreadnaugh and Cavalry See the Aeroplan Battle in Mid-Air Come Afternoons If Possible 4 Days ONLY BEGINNING EL Machine Guns Field Artillery DAILY SCHE ° “LET KATY DO IT." WITH JANE GREY AT LIBERTY oe ° T POPULAR PRIC ts e march They saw tenpins sickening “str The Cry of Peace.” See “THE BATTLE LIOTT 3092 FOR SDULE They saw through familiar Americans lined up against saw the hand of the invading beast at the throats of women They hearkened to “the battle cry of peace.” That was the name of the production CRY OF your answer on preparedness to Senator Wesley Jones. Added Attraction FAMOUS ROYAL GUATEMALAN MARIMBA BAND PHONE eo SEATTLE CENSORS FROWN ON “SMASHING VICE TRUST ES AT CLEMMER What the Chicago Evening American says a Chicago audience saw: They saw sixteen-inch shells crash into the heart of Manhat tan island and They saw the Amer fleet de. stroyed by a Meet of t its size and many times {ts power, and efficient and amazing power 8, and a foreign foe deadly with brutal a wall its they saw a swivel gun nake ike,” and and The Battle PEACE,” then send “Tongues ° ° ANOTHER SCOOP! THE MOST SPECTACULAR AND SENSATIONAL OF ALL PHOTO SPECTACLES GREATER THAN “THE BIRTH OF A NATION” A Tremendous Dramatic Offering With a Real Plot 30,000 Soldiers 17 Aeroplanes and Seaplanes BATTLE ongmes of Mea” SEATTLE YOUTH tC” DESCRIBES WAR FEATURE AT MISSION br a tL A HIN at the All Aimar de Turenne Writes Ex- for Alumni Publication perience NCOMFORTABLE LIFE war; that 1 the oplitir Turenne, ute of the Car Field Arti university front a few eye gone n of big Vashington assertion ng on Salis terrible,” he vo single 4 day; it red f A weeks and months you can itered wet ace to ary tent pole, led from whic general er Soaked by the Rain Our tents were not proof against so frequently in the ourselves thor as far from pleat and start work: ni experience, © refer to be at the frong than start again my Ife om Plains ¢ ibes at some length ti tus Cormane Saal by the vietima bad dose g an attac the face; they © 1 gasped for breath it He se of gas t agonies enc Those Terrible Sufferings Gradual amid untold suffer ngs the lungs fill up with a sont of white secretion, which finally hokes the soldier and puts an end misery 7 this takes three @F and there are no antl jotes known The ‘gassed’ have separate hom itals; they are never put with othe | the sight of their sufferings 6 too much to be for the — ardiest soldier Th ‘ou Wa ix when, as he st was the casing ho came here espectally to struck by a SCENES THAT THRILL The city of New York is attacked by a pow- erful foreign foe. You are an eye-witness. You see the enemy approaching, the powerlessness of the city, the inadequacy of its forts and defenses. You see the havoc wrought by the enemy’s cruisers, it its airships—by its shells, shrapnel, 1 u see the most beautiful sky-line in the the metropolis of the Western York fall into the hands of the id the desecration that follows e Wall Street in flames; Washington, D. yed. You see the vivid scenes of battle, submarine torpedo attacks, and the invading hordes. »planes, s being sunk of aer i Then you are shown the way that such a calam- ty can be avoided—the one w You are shown the y to peace—the peace for which America so earnestly prays—the peace with honor. I have shown many great screen productions in my career as an exhibitor, and I give my personal guarantee that this is the greatest of them all JIM CLEMMER. CRY°o* PEACE SHOWN IN NEW YORK AT $2 NO RAISE IN PRICE Admission 15c

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