The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 29, 1916, Page 3

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STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1916. PAGE 3. OLD FAVORITES BACK IN THE PHOTOPLAYS NEXT WEEK) Theda Bar a, Fairbanks, Mary Pickfor d, Cavalieri, Marguerite Clark Are on New Bills in “The! (2) Scene (1) Douglas Fairbanks, Half-Breed,” at Libert from “Mice and Men (4) Scene t the Atham. (5) Scene from “The Dream Girl,” at the Coliseum. (6) Theda Bara, in “Under Two Flags,” at the Strand. (7) Scene from “The Shadow of Her Past,” at the Clem mer. (8) Scene from “Door steps,” at the Colonial, STRAND More than usual interest is being shown in the Theda Bara appear. ance in the leading female role in| “Under Two Flags.” This play has been a success for many years, is tense with dramatic action The leading female role is that of an Egyptian girl, who finally gives er life to save the man with whom he is in love. She rides into the hots fired at him by soldiers, and takes death while holding the par. don papers for him. ° LIBERTY Dousias Fairbanks’ latest success is “The Half-Breed,” written by Bret Harte. It will be seen at the Liberty from Sunday to Wednes- day night. A remarkable feat tn production fs embraced in this picture in the staging of a forest fire that is a real conflagration, and carries with it all the awe of such a catastrophe. “The Half-Breed” is an excep tionally good vehicle for Douglas Fairbanks’ style—the boyish manii-| ness and sparkling good humor that | has carried him on a sea of popu larity from his very first picture. “Wings and Wheels,” a two-part Keystone comedy, with Ora Carew and Harry Belmont, completes the program. ere ALHAMBRA | Altho this is not the first time | hat “Hearts Adrift” has been seen Seattle, it {s anticipated that} nds of Mary Pickford’s fol-| Owers will welcome her back in this particular production, which | starts a four days’ engagement at | the Alhambra Sunday. The plot ts everything that could be asked. A gradual development up to the ¢ max where she jumps into the crater gives the play an even bal ance of construction it will be hard to surpass. Harold Lockwood sup ports Mary in this film eee COLISEUM Saturday night will bring the clos ing exhibitions of “The World's Great Snare,” with Pauline Freder. ick, at the Coliseum. Sunday, and for four day there will be two stars, Theodore Roberts and Mae Murray, tn “The Dream Girl.” The story has to do with a little child of the slums—Mae Murray—who, believing her dissc father killed, runs away from her tene ment home. In an ash barrel she has found a dilapidated volume of “King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Tabie,” and her romantic OLONIA Sunday, Monday we Tuesday The Famous Star Florence Tumer nm DOOR- Five-Act Drama A Masterpiece Don’t Fail to See It Mutual Weekly Latest War | Pictures 10C—chitaren sc—10C |: Gare are brain pictures to rescue her. . Sir Galahad coming ising young painter Her divorce, a few years ago. from Robert Winthrop Chanler, “Sheriff Bob" Chanler, as he more popularly known, caus: great deal of interest in the peramental beauty in the Unite States than tn Fra “The Shadow of Her Past” ts said to be a very beautiful pleture CLEMMER Lina Cavalleri, or is a i “La Cavalieri, 1 t as she Was known years ago, she sang in at Paris, and whose classic is the marvel of men and the of women thruout the world, has been featured with her husband Lucien Muratore, by the Pathe company, in “The Shadow of Her Past,” to be shown Sunday at the Clemmer theatre. It is a romantic tale of an Amer. fean girl in_ Italy, when “The Follies Bergere” beauty avy eee COLONIAL Florence Turner ts featured the Colonial theatre, beginaing Sun day in “Doorsteps,” Henry Edwards who loves and is loved by @ prom-|play of that name. It is {ng story of @ boarding house slavey who becomes a leading ac thru adversity, falls back more to poverty and menial labor, There {# a most pathetic touch in the effort of the fallen idol for one more appearance be- | tress, and once where she is better known ‘hind the footlights CLASS A rhe Class A theatre will present Sunday, Monday and Tuesday a sensational domestic drama entitied ‘Gates of Divorce.” Gertrude Me Coy has the leading role, supported Alexander Gaden and Lucttle| The play deals with 4 young n ry Taft TAKESNOSTOCK IN ANY SAYS PORT DOCK CURE FOR INFANTILE safest IN CITY PARALYSIS, HE SAYS BY HERBERT QUICK ! A dispatch has reached America from Germany—pos- sibly via grapevine telegraph— that a “secret cure” for infan- tile paralysis has been worked out by a German “scientist,” who, after asking “permission eof the German government,” has dispatched the cure by the next submarine to reach Amer- ica, and that our troubles will all be over soon. If It were only true! len't. If any German scientist had found this cure, it would not be @ secret. Medical eclence has no secrets. Only quacks, char latanes and patent medicine sharks have medical secrets— and they have no value. Medical re belong dark ages. Must Give Publicity was a time when physician guarded his remedies as zealously as a beauty doctor now guards her formulae for cosmetics. For the ¢ame reason, There was nothing worth stea' in the medieval prescription, and nothing in the recipe for the cosmetics but the atmosphere of mystery was and !s worth money—to pikes deal ing with gudgeone. The finest thing in modern science is the MORAL OBLIGA- TION IMPO: » ON DOCTORS BY THEIR SYSTEM OF ETHICS to publish broadcast any discovery of benefit to the world SHORT NEWS MR. AND MRS. JACOB MILLER and three young daughters critic ally ill in Portland home from eat ing mushroc JEROME P. DARLINGTON, for nine years an Aberdeen millhand left mill Friday for Baltimore, to collect a fortune left him ANTON ANDERSON, of Mukil teo, who won second choice in the Colvill land drawings, is long shoreman SIXTY LOTS in Matanuska townsite were sold Frid for $10, 000, completin st business trans. action in government railroad town away from tidewater J, B. L. HICKERSON, clerk the United States signal cory Seattle 12 years, haw been ordr to report at San Antonio. REAPPORTIONMENT OF four] jury districts of Seattle ordered Friday by an order signed by the superior court judges NAVAL MILITIAMEN Angust 9 from Breme Cruz, returning to August THE FUNERAL of Harry Silver 12 years, haw been ordered York, will be held St morning rom Bonney-Watson parlors CHARLES HENRY STROUT, noted ator of Philadel phia, his summer golf. ing o ridge island, with his Edwin A. Strout ED WHITTEMORE Al died bound for COUNTY AUDITORS ting at Everett adopted a resolution fa foring four-year term of office ANNUAL BAPTIST summer as sembly closed Friday at Burton, with attendance of 46 delegate A SPEED limit of four miles an hour will required of autos us ing tunnel to county-city building, because fast re off a number of pipe valves Frida MAX GOLDBERG damages and a permanent tion against use of t ul Dollar Sh These things are not published to the profession alone, but to the le world. Any person may pur. chase and read any literature whi the medical profession possesses. Must Teach The Latin word “doctor” “teacher. It does not mean heal er, or physician, or mystic dealer in secret nostrums and lotions made good on the word. He ts call. But it any medical secrets. He may, and should, the untested treatment hold until in the hands of badly practitioners or of the public; when the knowledge is once an ac complished acquirement, ITS DIS. COVERER MUST TEACH THE WORLD—and he does. Cannot Be Secret but ts to the ‘onvicted of having cure for infantile paralysis, would be held guilty by the scien tists of the world of the murder of every child lost by the disease in any part of the world after his dis covery had a chance to reach the profession there. And he would be guilty But scientists do not com mit such crimes. 'f any socalled SECRET CURE for infantile paralysis is coming, IT 18 A FRAUD. The promoters of it are out after li-gotten gains, to be wrung from suffering familie too. | tary to HJ Heinz, the pickle king. will give an {lustrated lecture Sun day night {n the Plymouth Congre gational church OR. ROBERTA WIMER-FORD left Thursday for Kansas Ci where she will attend national Ow teopathic convention, of which she is president TUBERCULAR discussed Friday tending second TREATMENT physicians at day's meeting of Washington Society for Prevention 1 Relief of erculosis JAPANESE SHIPPERS charter Hill Minnesota, Friday, at a rate 000 a day, for Oriental trade AFTER 12 YEARS! service M. G. Andreades hae tb sioned and will transfer his pastor ate at the St. Spiridonus orthodox Greek-Rus church, Lake ave M. M. Poplavaky \WALUE “U” PROPERTY AT TEN MILLIONS According to “the latest report ot | state burean of Inwpection, the University of on is worth about |@ total $10,885,957 in property arly 0 of which fs rep state endowment The Metropol value $1 university campus by ed of $ Rev een pen sia 157 vi to F ot in will for attle ail Washin nta 5 $3 . sen the lands ¢ tract is 1 the 60,000. Seattle tan 940,44 at $1 The is given politan ; at nday heaviest $2,642,6 buildings. FRANK GETS STICK former head of the university lism department left. Saturd Detroit, whe he will get $4,900 a year for writ vivertising copy for the Motor Car company goes to work in the morning, he will car. ine along with hts building valuation , on boys’ ed nding brother MRS. Seward Alaskan t 6 factory dinner pail Member | tlonal er machine t of overhead journalism fraternity, little farewell dinner for ex-Pro: fessor Kane Friday night and pre ented him with the new stick and an umbrella to match When I came out here from D t few years ago the boys in |the Detroit ne office gave me ¢ raincoat,” said Frank, ants $10,000 Injunc by on Pi € ecause it a ilar name GEORGE W. PENNIMAN, secre Insurance Expert. Says Sprink- ler System Adds to Fire Protection ;RAPS UNFAIR CRITICS means fe The modern doctor of medicine has| sued § ed upon by the very basic princt tigation at ples of his education not to have! port commisston, showed the dock IT TO) | If any German scientist could be} kept secret a/cism, he | stored at the reply to recent criticiams of- ed by private dock owners and unfriendly newspapers concerning the fire menaces of the Bell at. dock and warehouse, a report ts turday by E. A. Strout, tn surance expert, following an tnves the suggestion of the to be one of the cleanest and safest back | !n Seattle. its} value is fully determined upon, #0/\ the dock and warehouse were clean | that It will not be a means of harm and the eprinkler equipment and all informed the fire apparatus were “With a few minor exceptions in good working order,” Strout said “There is probably no dock In Seattle as clean and safe, and the criticisms which ap- peared in Seattle newspapers were unfair and unwarranted.” At the time of the recent crit! @ cargo of soya bean ofl was dock, but endangered the surrounding bulidings to no great extent, it is sald The cargo meant much to Seat and the officers in charge of the dock felt justified in handling {t In order to save the businem for Seattle, rather than have ft go to San Francisco surance men deny that any at n made to withdraw mi held ¢ leving the fire by the port fequate. DR. CORSON FILES — W. H. Corson Saturday filed} candidacy for the republican) nomination for coroner King | county | Dr. Corson has been a resident King county for the paat years, and has been engaged in the practice of medicine for ten years He ts a graduate the Cooper Medical colle and was prominent in the work of the Univer sity ashington during the tim he attended that institution, ne n of the football team during p season of 1900. 1905 Dr. Corson jail phy sicilan of King county, and it serving in that capa was shot in the eye by criminal, Hildebrand, latter attempted to es. insurance p the Bell at tection red mission to be « doc of ro. com Dr of of 29 t of at c of W be was while he city that he ne when cape nerans WILL MEET the Metro | | jamboree Between 300 and 400 pastors of | different creeds from Northwestern states and Canada will meet in the First M. E, church Tuesday night for the sixth annual session of the Pacific theological confer-| ence. The meeting coast will last until day, and Rev. J. E. Crowther, new pastor of the First M. BE. church, is} expected to speak Wednesday Thurs A. 0, U. W. WILL PICNIC The annual picnic of the oO; City cars W park run No, 60. Atlantic Renton grounds A July to the plenic Stearns’ Electric Rat ond Roach Paste The Guaranteed Exterminator ly for use. Better than traps, rea In package, sie Gold’ by rewallere everywhese, n absorb. | co’ ee be ebebet 74 See ea a [sese Sete rere oes Herero rare uple who, on jand club affairs, Gee America comic and bill account of # drift apart First, a Kartoon & comedy conclude the REX If you were taken out of a found ling home by a man of culture, and thru his untiring devotion and per sonal efforts were developed into a highly educated, charming society belle, and if, when you had atta! this envis position, you we forced to choose between this man to whom you 1 everything in the world except life itself and a dashing young army officer, which would you choo That is the dile guerite Clark faces as P in B ron and Men,” at the Rex next eek. The scene of the play is laid In the South ow ama which Mar-| y MISSION The struggle of two young peo ple, marked with the stamp of criminals, to lead honest lives form the plot of “The Mark of Catn, Playing at the Mission until W |nesday night. With each reel the] principals become more inv d in fa chain of peculiar circumstances, | and a very etty climax {# left! until the last moment, with the r sult that there {# created an un-| usual amount of suspense | | | | | | A news weekly concludes the per formance. eee MUTUAL HAS NEW HOME The new home of the Mr Co, will be ready Sund building was erected at a cont of 000. The projecting room is of most modern jand uptodate To Mr. Wood, the local man- ager of the corporation, belongs the credit for planning the building which ts positively the finest on the Coast ILKES PLAYERS & Ure WT “ELEVATING A HUSBAND™ Second PALACE HIP = at Spring sy'n 10 aay 5c Frank Burton in “PAID IN FULL Hayes and Mosher, Lot LASS “A” THEATRE Third Ave. at Pike St. 5c Sunday, Monday, Tuesday “GATES OF DIVORCE” A sensational drama domestic Three-Part Gaumont featuring Gertrude McCoy Cub Comedy “THE MASQUE BALL” “Sure! You'll Laugh” Scenic See America First The Marvels of Crater Lake, Oregon Kartoon Komic pti COMING WEDNESDAY GRACE DE CARLTON and BERT DE LANEY in “THE WINDOW OF DREAMS” Producer Edwin Thanhouser \ every AABEN Tg F DOU PAULA 18 INSULTED SHE SEEKS JOB! “1 Gd pot reasilze. Jane meant by before that I'd game,’ until | then I came to ave to play afterward, the rid with her had was 1 letermin! game honestly own Way middie course. 1, however, to p but to ts possible mista) the part of the My little there 1 the n who oppo had said Don't your emotions you need most in this game, woman who is outside is thought to be judgment « din ultivate your heart home heart sank of the menager who aled me at one of our ar performance with the That girl has got it in t did not have money make a rreat actress.” sign ut teur mark I he might “Here BY THE-;the boy at the door shouted as !,/to earn her li ATRICAL MANAGER WHEN Margie, what ling me the night the and usion that when a girl was thrown out on the to make either to win or lose frie’ Your bead is what where | the legitimate as I entered the had she you'se—what'Ja_want?" IRST AT PIKE CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11 4 Days Starting Sunday GLAS FAIRBANKS —in a picturization of Bret Harte’s “In the Carquinez Woods"—to be shown under the title of The Half Breed —Wings and Wheels”—a Mack Sennett Keystone, filled with 2,000 feet of filmed fun—continuous, contagious comedy. CHILDREN 5c EVENINGS 15¢ og on the stage’ | not knowing his importance, push- ed past him, At his tone, | forgot hand on my shoulder-and the 1 was only a poor girt seeking a/er under my chin, and tiptines Job, and drew myself away with | face to his. the freezing remark: “*You want a little politeness.’ party, little girl,’ ‘I want to see Mr. more humbly He isn't in,’ was the curt | formation, as a door marked ‘Pr |vate’ opened and the very 1 jstuck his head out and shoute angrily, ‘Didn't you hear my bell Before the boy could reply, the man's eyes rested on me. At once i/a different look came {nto them | Did you want to see me? | asked I followed him into his room and he placed a chair for me. Now, my dear, what is it want? You not? he said, said in a most unpieasant manner. ou stick to me, you can write our own ticket.’ "i I jerked awa your first o vearsals,’ T asked Next June, ‘Good morning!’ But—come back here!’ 1 | then.’ ‘I did not say I could not gt you work from him. Jay pany ad 8 hi or you remember me, do you|ville engagemeat for you. “Again he touch me, but I bell, as if inadvertently. rushed in, ing at him, I got out.” (To be continued) you before in my re er 1 commended in theatrical.’ society girl wao stage? a am a |oor girl who wants Vassar college You are a rica wants to go on the No, the POPE CABLES UNITED PRESS HOPE FOR PEACE Pr © United July 29. NEW YORK 2 United Press ay following message from edict, thru the agency Gasparri “Rome. “To the United Press asso ciations, “New York, U. 8. A. “| have presented your tele- of Cardi gram to the Holy Father. His Holin is grateful for you respect and confidence In the of noved by the prayers of innocent children imploring Holy See. “He prays that the Lord Mercies, peace on this second anni versary of the terrible con: filet, shall deign to end speed. ily this awful carnage. (Signed) “CARDINAL GASPARRI.” trenslation of ¢ mitted by the pa state was made of St. on behaf of ided Cardinal t his whole sentiment of Tt message tran secretary of Manager Lavi cathedral, wlio dinal Farle “His Eminence is not at hom re-echoes the ‘ather 3y the Cardinal's direction, priests are } nying for pe y day at the altar." The message from the pope pealing for peace thru the pra bf the innocent children of world was in response to ( the TODAY ONLY Last Chance to See CHAS. CHAPLIN In His. Two-Act Comedy “THE FIREMAN” COLONIAL THEATRE w10c Children 5c 16c 7 received th Pope Bet Patrick Jar Farl hea a cab by York ess Jgram sent helfrom New |request made at |John H. Hea nal | staff correspond ment on the second the the United Press supplementing a the Vatican by | United Press for a state. anniversary of rhe cablegram requested statement to the Ameri. and thru America to war papal ja can |the world |U. S. RULES AGAINST GERMAN PRIZE SHIP e In a play everybody, young and old, wants to s NORFOLK, Va, July 29,.—Fed-| eral Judge Waddell today decided that the captured British liner Ap-} }pam should be restored to its for |mer British owners. The decision against the German prize crew rich captured the vessel and 0 t her here, The court held the German government lost all le. gal claim to the Appam and her cargo as prizes of war when Lieut Berg and his prize crew, on Febru jary 1 last, brought them into the ey | neutral waters of Hampton Roads art} with the intention of “laying up”| the |the vessel indefinitely | he pal | » hee PICTURES And a funny Bray Cartoon Comedy Miss Nanny Goat Becomes Aviator COLUMBUS, er r h ts Ms Dough after inspecting and New nd their » in “NN M July 29. H. Bliss left today for) Mas mill and re condt- | p| Gen sker the Mexico camps, excellent achuset tia here, porting tion The Hastern guardsmen with je of the heat wave “back home | perature here continues the result of rains Preparations for the court-mar. tial of Lewis O, Gardner, “slacker,” of the New Mexico militia, are be- ing made. | th read intense | The tem-| cool, as) L} Second & University 10c 5c-- Children --50 for a you will find in Star Want ° If you are looking piece of acreage, many bargains Ads. Py See ales “The man came around, but one ave come to, the right 3 moistened his tips with his tonae " ‘When begin re September!’ It was thon have to have work before Come around tomorrow \_ and I'll see if I can't get a vande-” camo forward as if to was close to his The boy and while he was swears

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