The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 7, 1916, Page 3

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STAR—THURSDAY, DEC. 7, 1916. "iPHOTO| E PLAYS TODAY PAGE 3 PROGRAMS eery LIBERTY Lau Gish ts in f time at the Liberty for r the week. She part tn “The ( lem play. She the battles of * und to econctle her divorced mother and father, the lutter wisht & gay'young social butterfly. Lil as her ds fall a® you can see | A Koya comedy, "The Div e er'a Cures ippiien the chuckles PS) COLISEUM love, romance, pathos , Ing. At least that's w ‘ Ww i Clune theatre ¢ cn bough he ght the 2 DAYS MORE} = Admission 25c. Every buyer of a 25-cent ticket will be presented with a EMigues Sadinacn Gal Youlh NEW DIME |. (U. S. issue of 1916, direct from mint) | MISSION Valentine Grant, lale of Seattle OTAKE PLAGE "MM WITH OIL CO.! Washington late to After climbing 2,900 feet Herbert Munter, Seatt ed to abandon hits ntheatr, tor, de-| tance flight to Porti ST. LOUIS, Dee. Attorney day. General Thomas W. Gregory cor : ol ds tinued his investigation into the paignt, : charges that negroes were import Mechan 1 ‘ ed into Missouri to vote and that have made the flight }__they were intimidated in St. Louis) They will « * WA und prevented from voting ear és ey said Tho announcing that he was in RIO DE JANEIRO 7 usiness, Greg- Senora Pepa Cata e with federal t this Ko Jaome ne of herons, the bird th The attorney genera! toc erated his dental that Jeave the Wilson cabinet “come general counsel! for the G Refinery company at $50,000 ajare ob year. Attorney General Gregory obt AT PIKE |Continuous 11 to 11 “ Scene From “Ramona,” Held Over for the Rest of the Week at the Coli seum TO REPAIR CROOK [2 2: S05 1% oso sot a comes to BREMERTO Dear Miss Grey ' interest the letter from “C. N. P.” in your columns. | surely sympa Ithize with him, and, tho no one is | competent to give him advice or to »leolve his problem, | will give him the story of one who has had a | similar experience. f STRAND | have been married about two ; Prk vbr i sect sbs Tr years longer than “C. N. P.." and there are two children, 14 and 12 years old. Unilke him, | never drank or frequented saloons, and spent all my leisure time at home. in “The It sounds coming Here's to Munson The World's Greatest Mode! raday ' 1 at the Strand tn , Willtar Me They are Today Until Sunday Jan educational film follow along and she did not press the sult, and then seemed to change and want to do better, @0 | patched the thing up again. And the re sult?) Only to learn that it is no use. She will not play fair, and all my grief has been In vain | When a married woman goes away with another man, if there are no children, It may be excus able under certain circumstances, but the woman who will desert a good home and little children, to soclate with other men, while swore she would kill me. It drifted! show Ynce or twice a week, that!and department stores. LILLIAN GISH CHILDREN PAY A Modern Problem Play —and a 2-reel comedy, “The Diver's Curse.” Needless to say therc’s lots of deep stuff in this—but all smiles and snickers. ALLACE URLITZER ELODIES ASTERS she would have cared a rap about other me: It wasn’t them she was seeking; {t was that part of her existence lost when she arried you ven tho she {s all to blame, I do not think your case applies to that of “C. N. P.” You have given your wife three chances to reform, and this is his wife's first offense. I certainly think she should be given at least one chance to re-| deem herself House ra and Enid || worked hard and had a nice lit'|she accepts the support from the) Q@.—How could a girl find out It {s a tale of the West tle home almost pald for, but my | hueband she has wronged, Is sunk whether the boy she has been Peggy Hyland where Kipling’s lines "Ba wife was not Interested in her|eo low | do not think there Is any|keeping company with for six} t Is West--and never the|home, but craved excitement, at-| way to reach her. months loves her? | In the shall meet,” might be ap tended public dancee and insisted) $0 | think “C. N. P." would be AAs a rule, when a man loves | ‘6 There is considerable fight |upon her right to oclate with doing an Injustice to himself, his © Woman he tells her in Rose of the between Hart, the V rer, and|men and women of questionable family, and the wronged wife of axa 4 Peters, the Eanterner. As good ax| character, and remain eut late and |the other man to try to hide things| G1 4 pp Motion South” mew eon Doug Fairbanks | sometimes all night. any tonger. Perhaps exposure) ONakes: But Folk i \ a Triangle | Several times | caught her lying, might waken her up. Who knows? | Pictures Delicate, heart-appealing, = 2 to me about where she had been Now, Miss Grey, please tell me Who Found Them 2 flowered with genuine CLASS A y land when | spoke to her, she just what you think of my case and Are Not Drinkers | harm and feeling, “Rose & Richard Travers makoa a dash-|told me some more lies, or said it|what | should do, as | have not Seu | f the South” Is a etory of EM « Captain Jinks and Anne Mur-|was none of my business. | did! yet gotten a divorce. H. J. BAKER, Ore, Dec Folks | an exquisite sentiment, of u pretty ! Mme, Tren-| not think much of it at the time,| A.—Altho you are unconscious of | « a type too few and far be Captain Jinks, of the Horse | but later learned that she was keep: |{t, I think you are partly to blame. | focked from far and near today to tween Ma at the Class A. Loveling company with other men, tho| You are one of the m who be-| gaze upon the biggest assortment and scandal walk hand in hand. | she always denied it |ieves that when a woman has alof snakes ever beheld here since The scenes are in the early| For the sake of the children, t|/ home, enough to eat and wear and | prohibition arrived. Tho nest of | Os in New Yor which Capt. | stuck, but her conduct ruined my|some children that her life and | reptiles was unearthed near Here-| COME I nber of a political club,| business and broke my heart, and| happiness should be complet ford, Laborers digging in a road-| a A ta fead par into a|finally we lost our home, and then, cause your business cerries you | way hit a cave containing 700} EARLY M. Guterson’s 4 {th a prima donna 1\one day when | was at work shejout into the whirl of life where you| writhing serpents, bunched togeth: | ; fina irries her off to the altar, /took the oldest child and left, go-| constantly meet new faces and wit-|er for a winter siesta Famous a ing into another state. After she | ness the changing scenes upon the ~— Russian Orchestra COLONIAL |had been gone about a year, she|xreal stage of life, you cannot real-| | inside | Proarany | ruth Stoneno' ormer Kasa-|begged me to give her another|ize what it would mean to we} RED GROSS FUND | ; st say star and now one of Universal|chance, For the sake of our chil-|snatched from the footlights and Espagna Waltz Cin. leading lights, heads the cast |dren, | did, only to find that after |{mprisoned within the four wall GROWS STEADILY ne By Waldteufel n Kinkaid, Gambler,” at the Col-|she had gotten settled down in our|of heaven(?) called home. You Puppohen By Glibert inl. Ruth is a detective in this| home, she became worse than ever, | must admit that your wife loved — | ‘ ‘ , falls in love with a criminal, |even being gone from home several | you more than any other man when] The Red Cross sale conducted | 2nd and University pinches him, rescues him and mar-[nighte a week when | wae called} you were wed. What have you | Wednesday by members of the Cen- | ries him. All of whic 1ould be | out of town on business. done to keep that love alive? Cer-|tury club netted about $100 | enough for any young man, and] Then she started suit for divorce | tainly you have provided food for} Thursday the sale was being con-| hould make him a model hushand.Jand when | told her that | would|her body, but what about her|ducted by the Alpha, Sorosis and| It Hstens well file a cross complaint, asking for| spirit? Do you suppose if you had | Classic Culture clubs. The women A comedy, a comedy-drama and|the custody of both children, she|taken her to a dance or a good |are stationed in the principal ma “The Second & University Children Loge Seats .... .25c Matinees 10c Evenings 15c Children 5c Every Mother! Every Fa:her! Every Daughter! Should See City 0 Illusion” Now Playing Until Sat. Night 15c

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