The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1916, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Tonight Only Norma almadge as the Social Secretary Soctety i ohind the scenes A real 2-reel Keystone His LyingHeart” is the title Washington super-scenic ‘The Land of Hanging Wine URLITZER U6ICAL ARVELS Thursday Louise Glaum in “The Wolf Woman” ing Smith.” STRAND—Ormi Hawley tn “Whe ads.” col min “The | ew LIBERTY | A genuine high class comedy, ad mirably constructed, and handled with skill, “The Soctal Secretary,” | is among the plays that rank in the| highest class of today. This fea-| ture, together with a hilarious com- First at Pike PARIS, Sept. 20 —The Germans rf hurled strong forces against the Sararaiy nian agatlegg north of the Somme! yfr amet last night in most violent counter | \arguerite Skirvin, a young wom ie ts ten tee frost from|on of much talent und rare beauty in toe ott 2 |who was seen with him in “The ar office this afternoon an-'Quitter,” a recent Metro feature pro event Teutons were checked duction. Others in a notable cast everywhere by French screen fire |inciude Edgar L. Davenport, How Seren Fe ene | geet “where they Truesdell, Franklin Hanna, reached Freach treaches on the H. Smiley, Paul Lawrence, northern part of the slopes James Malaidy, George Stevens, ank Lyons and Myra Brook. Mr. Barrymore will be welcomed here by ail who were fortunate in seeing |his masterly performance in “A Yellow Streak,” the Metro produc the Clemmer until ard John DAYS best five-part feature produced last year. ONLY | Pes COLONIAL 5 “Do you realize,” said Elsie Jane Wilson, as she came off the set of the Bluebird photoplay, “The Evil Women Do,” now showing at the Colonial, wearing the glittering @ Today The Sensational ies. Story trappings of a screen vampire, and hugging a large, black Persian cat, | with unfathomable green “that the vampire, ation?” | |COLISEUM Wednesday afternoon and even-| ing will bring the good-bye show-| ings of Mary Miles Minter in| “Youth's Endearing Charm,” to the Coliseum theatre, It is a high! telass, six-act film presentation that | every one who has seen it likes to an unusual degree, Miss Minter is in her teens, pretty as a picture, and clever by reason of a long stage ex perience. She plays the orphan girl right up to the handle. of the Signal-Mutual fea tures in which Helen Holmes and her company appear is “Whisper ing Smith,” a five-act film version of Frank H. Spearman's celebrated | novel, now at the Rex. The picture| js the biggest railroad screen fea-| ture ever presented | In connection with the action of| the story {t was necessary to build] a railroad trestle, which was sub sequently burned to furnish the necessar Is. A string of freight cars demolished in a realistic wr scene that is re plete with excitement. The cost of the produc was not considered by the director, whose sole desire was to turn out a five-reel picture i ippi which would do justice to the work Five Gripping of the novelist Acts oe 8 STRAND Hepp? Ormi Hawley has the difficult Fascinating part of acting young sweetheart diaina of & aging mother, and then returning to act young sweetheart again in woman who the new William Fox photodrama ae Where Love Leads,” at the Strand made her living But she stands the test w . As Marion Barstow she is influ by her wits enced by her parents to marry Sir Chateworth (Charles Craig), an English earl, altho she in love with a younger man. | Seventeen years later Marion has been neglected by Sir Rankin, who tired of her soon after the honey Rankin 10c 10c Continuous 11 to 11 INGS IN NEWS —NOTE | Barrymore is supported by} eyes, | world aren't as the screen | ments, lknows her today, is a British cre-|the movie actress with the William Fox players FILMDOM S~-GOSSIIP edy entitled “His Lying Heart,” Continuous |will be seen for the last times to 11 to 11 [night at the Liberty theatre. It Matinees ..10c sets over with a “zip,” it is new in Evenings ...15c¢| method, and it sparkled all the Children Scitime with that spint of vivacious é entertainment sadly lacking in “s 4 most screen stories 5 eee L i CLEMMER a FIRE HALTS The Upheaval,” a highly enter-| Upper—Sceme from , jtaining five-part Metro wonder-|heaval,” with Lionel GERMAN ATTA play, with Lionel Barrymore, the Clemmer. Lower—Loul OKS bites stage and screen artist, {9 coming Thursday to the |the stellar role, will be the feature |“The Wolf Woman.” 1ON With nature providing most of the settings, plus several “interiors” of great and impressive beauty, ‘The Silent Battle” has been pro. duced in a manner of the high type, and will be seen for the times tonight at the Missi J Warren Kerrigan has never done a better of acting than to this piece. Its plot portrays the strug gies of a brilliant young attorney against an hereditary enemy strong drink. Coupled with this factor there is a strong element of heart interest, involving the young jtion declared by critics to be the | siorney and two women in a tri angle intrigue. STAR— BADGER GAME I$ GOOD WHEN COIN IS FLUSH -CHIEF BECKINGHAM Police and other local author ities conjecturing Tues day on the possibility that the suspects were Chicago blackmaller may be linked directly up with the badger game successfully in Seattle several months ago, cleaning up a for operated so tune, it Is sald, before they were finally stopped Because of the very nature of the case,” said Prosecutor Lundin It In next to impossible to get a nviction Victims, nat | Will not testify No man cares to admit that his photograph been taken in a compromising, un Jeonventional situation with A young woman, particularly if he is a married man Chief of Police Beckingham said it Is quite possible that the badger |women in Chicago may be the jsame as some of th connected with the extensive rations on the Pacific Coast | "Blackmailing is one the crimes, he paid. that ‘ob ably most often committed and least often heard about. The vic tim seldom reports to the police There is probably some of it going on tr pattie at most any eason of the y r It Is a crime peculiar to Itself because the men who are looked upon wisest of the commun ity are usually the victin They would be hard to vi ze by any other means. Wh nes are good and money plenty, the black r gets his largest loot The wealthy man, with plenty of money to spend and a desire to celebrate’ {x easy prey for a pret ty girl and a man hidden closet with a camera Mike Hally said that the gang trapped by the fed eral authorities = tr Chicago cor tains at least « part of the perso nel of the former Seattle gang in the he felt certain I watched them closely until they left the cit he said The were headed East With their su cess in beating the case against them here, it is quite likely the jwould resume operations with more confidence than ever NEW DIPLOMAT IS DUE ANY DAY NOW Aimaro Sato, newly appointed Tapanese ambassador at Washing ton, D. ©, is expected in Seattle | shortly from Japen his home country last Sunday Sato is one of the most Ameri canized of the Japanese officials to be stationed in this country. He was educated in Indiana and h ved his country at London, Paris, Berlin and in Mexico and | Peru, | SERBS TAKE PEAK PARIS, Sept. 20..-The Serbians have captured the well-fortified nil east of Berna, the high est peak in the Kamakchalen after the most violent hand offictally | range tohand fighting, it was announced today | The Bulgarians resisted with} great stubbornness until they were practically wiped out, only 60 | prisoners falling into Serbian | hands. funny, people in the in the comic supple observes Mabel Van Buren All the George DuBois Proctor, the Lasky scenario writer, has taken unto himself a bunga- low, and he and his bride have settled down to a belate honeymoon during the spare moments when George can di- vorce himself from the studio. A new comedy, entitled “Maid Mad a now being produced at! the Mack Sennett-Keystone studio. | Work on the ture is nearing completion and it will be released within a short tim eee With six companies hard at work, the Lasky studio is now seeing the busiest time since the formation of the Lasky company. In spite of this rush of work, the studio general manager, Milton E. Hoffman, has 80 organized the different departments that as yet not one of the directors has under- gone a moment's delay in wait Ing for sete—c or proper ties. eee Fred Huntley, now an actor in the Willlam Fox films, was for six years a soloist in All Saints church, London, his native city. He fought in the Spanish-American war for the United States, and at the conclusion of hostilities be came a cow pun oe Claire Alexander, the diminu tive leading woman appearing with George Ovey in the popu: lar Cub comedies produced at the Horsley studios in Los Angeles, is only 17 years old, making her the youngest lead- ing woman in pictures. Pre vious to entering the studio, Miss Alexander had no exper! ence whatever, but her natural talents, winning personality and abilities quickly won her fame FILM FLAM and is expected to create consider able interest both in and out of the trade Henry B. Walthall is now on his third trip to the waters of the upper Wisconsin in pursuit of the knowing muskle. On his first trip he caught several. On the second he took his brother along to show him how it was | done, and didn't catch any. | thing. Now in order to stop the latter from laughing at his failure as a fisherman, he has | made another trip. When he | returns to the Essanay studios | preliminary work on his new | play will be complete and work of construction will commence A large number of trish rebel | prisoners have been sent to intern-| |ment camps in France. They are| to be used for road making and for other useful work in the rear of the lines Cols ‘ moon She now has as her only | 2 oe consolation her two daughters,| 1. O. Taylor, who exposed the Kathleen (lleen Hume) and Rose| film in bis camera o Dustin Far. (Pauline Curley) num in A Son of Erin,” a forth fo | Sir Rankin brings a houseful of|coming Pallas-Paramount release j disreputable guests, who drink and|has promised a surprise when thi carouse all night Marion realizes | photoplay ia thrown upon the that her daughters must not be) screen Mr Taylor has worked brought up in such an atmosphere,|out an entirely original photo: | | and hes a big scene with Sir!graphic novelty that will appear i Rankin, for the firat time in this subject, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 20, He satled from |f) other way eligible except that they war have decayed teeth, refused enlist. chances with men lacking in cour | have lost the card, and remem-/ ment in the army? Cannot the U. age, loyalty or Integrity. It is aj ber only the name of the street in &. employ dentists as well as oth- well established fact that defective which he lives. 1 wish to com- er physicians? According to the|teeth usually result in far more | municate with him on a matter of | present plan, our finest specimens serious physical weaknesses importance—not anything foolish. ee ees 1916, PAGE 3 | Starting the Season With a Display of Fabrics and Styles That I Have a Right to Be Proud of Early in the year I started plans for my Fall opening. | had to, for war conditions turned the woolen market topsy-turvy, and it looked almost impossible to get enough high-grade fabrics to carry on my big business. But money talks. My business relations of many years’ standing with the country’s biggest woolen houses helped, and I have finally assembled a stock of new serges, tweeds, cheviots and worsteds that any tailor in New York could well be proud of. While my competitors complained of rising prices, and stood still in bewilderment, I went on the market and bought early and often. The result is that | open my Fall and Winter season tomorrow with not only the biggest, but also the finest stock of woolens ever displayed by a merchant tailor in the state of Washington. WOOLENS SUPERB—WOOLENS BEAUTIFUL Ten minutes spent in my shop tomorrow will convince you of the overwhelming superiority of my big line of woolens. Great bolts of blue and black serge, medium and heavy weight, in new shades and weaves, novelty blue striped cheviots, brown silk mixed diagonals, silk striped worsteds, new shades in cheviot browns, conservative and novelty effects in plaids, blue silk and mixed hairlines, dis- tinguished pencil stripes and black unfinished worsteds are among the style features. Prices Not Advanced on Account of War I have not advanced prices on account of the war, although all the Seattle tailors who have are thoroughly justified in doing so. In my big stock of woolens are many fabrics worth as high as $35 (other tailors charge it) which I will make to your order, Suit or Overcoat, for $20. Most of my customers have to make every dollar count. I have more regular customers, more “come-backs,” than any three Seattle tailors, because I always remember that a suit must be of fabric and tailoring that will stand up under hard wear. “Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back With a Smile” Suits, just to start the Fall season off big. @ @ @ Imperial Tailoring Co. EXTRA INDUCEMENT FOR TOMORROW I am willing to forget all idea of profit, Between 7 :30 a. m. and 7 p.m. Thursday, | S$ | y Suits made to order for. . LOUIS SIDELSKY, PROPRIETOR 801 THIRD AVE., COR. COLUMBIA even take a loss on a limited number of Overcoats Made to Order, Special Tomorrrow $16.50 to withstand the hardships) young man who gave me his name Neither can take |and address and telephone number. Q.—Why are men who are every | likely of he Can you suggest any way to lo- cate him? ONE OF YOUR READERS. | recall the of physical manhood are taken into the army and most of them lost, while the snaggle-toothed, un: Q.—Will you please oblige a gir! of 15 and tell her how she can be come fleshy? FAYE. | A.—Unless you dersized men are left to continue ene the race. Other varieties of the) 4.-On arising, drink a glass of|man’s name, you will not be able “undesirable citizen,” too, would | milk or breakfast, drink cocoa|to find him in the city or tele. make fairly good soldiers, tho ajor chocolate instead of coffee. | phone directories, which would be nuisance at home. Why be 80 | Make your first meal of oatmeal or easy if you had the name. You squeamish about enlisting them? other palatable cereal, baked po-| probably know his line of business, is SATS: D'ESTAIRE. [tatoes with butter and cream,|since you wish to consult hint ry A.—This sacrifice of the best of} bread and butter, fruit, and any-|Look thru the classified lists in the country’s men {s one of the|thing containing starch or sugar.|the directories and the name may most serious of war tolls. But| Eggs, either boiled or poached will|recur to you. Possibly some of Uncle Sam, like other employers,|be good. A bit of juicy stedk or a|the persons present at the time cannot do hia work by means of| broiled chop will be found strength: | you met the man may be able to the unfit. There is no time on a /ening help you MAR battle field to correct dentition,| For luncheon, follow your own vision, or other physical imperfec-| fancy, only abstaining from tea or Q.—! am a young man of 18. 1/ ¥. tions. He must choose those most |coffee. substituting milk, and|have but a grammar school educa- | m le wate - — ——_- choosing vegetables, such as|tion, but am anxious to study law. | leas pes i spinach, peas, potatoes, egg-plant||s there any institution here that “The ix Y and green corn, in preference to| Will accept me as a pupil with my | a pa cucumbers, salads, turnips, cauli-| present qualification? HENRY. | Ari al me mn | flower, etc, All farinaceous foods} A.A full high school course, or | VV en are good for you, if you find them |its equivalent, is required for stu: | Pol |palatable. Eat freely of oatm dents of law. But any night law] of oe wheat foods, hominy, corn meal | school could so direct your course ii ‘ d fruits with cream and sugar.|that you may make up the studies Pe eta”|cheice™ For dinner, you may eat soups,|in which you are deficient. It is a4 Ip {Choice (ish, rare meat vegetables, |long pull, but the law is an a | |sauces, entrees, sweets and fruits.|tractive career and worth the ef ed Drink milk, cocoa or chocolate |fort, 1 would suggest that you in a story of this character |with your dinner talk the matter over with a law Miss Martin finds adequate A scope for her wonderful rer 1 all trying work or reading! yer of your acquaintance and fol-| by artificial light Sleep all you|low his advice. fined artistry can. Arrange your life so that |... " you will get the most rest for your | TODAY For ten days we will fit || tind and body. Don't worry about | AND UNTIL Sep eae camhirp et eet spherical || yourself, Substitute deep breath: | SATURDAY plete, for $2.60, This includes beg exercises for long weike. | a careful and accurate examina- || tion Twenty-five Q.—Will you kindly let me know | thru The Star how to make small) sweet pickles? MRS, L. AN CLA years’ expert | a ence, eight years in present lo A Pare ripe cucumbers. slice, | This means than any Woman cation, Upstairs, third floor \[/and take out the seeds, and, soak jer . who ee pate n of this ‘ them tn weak brine over hight. (store yay, conmult the ek-Govers CURRY OPTICAL C0 |Put 2 Ibs. sugar in 1 quart of vin- [scription for any disease, IRE é rl emary . Gur Fe, Bat, Nose and ‘Paroat Jegar and bring to a boil; then |Our } r, Nose Now H.C. and M, Curry throw in the cucumbers and let | (ats een ee thy waltt EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS them cook till tender, Add spices | | 3064-66 Arcade Bidg. to taste RIGHT DRUG CO. | Bring This Ad With You noe i Q—A short time ago | met a , Between Sp

Other pages from this issue: