The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 24, 1917, Page 3

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5 ER Neen STAR—SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1917. PAGE Renna ~~ PII PRA AAI AAA AR ARR AAA AAA AAA AAA LL PPP PPP PPP PPP LP PP PPP PPP PP NOVEL DRAMATIZED FOR FILM-—"20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THe SA* | dows a deen | 4 EL RERE E From left to right—Jane Gall ae the “nature girl,” In “Twenty |g 4 Inia ka: ticetes euaiees Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,” Liberty Sunday and week. Scene) \: Guead tavesi? trembii afte from “The Girl Philippa,” coming to the Clemmer for the second time | - , ane Auk tho dnd aha. intes Sunday, Jeanne Eagels, who plays the lead in “The World and the iciewall inca ae ttuoeaht or thas ox Woman,” Rex Sunday. Scene from “The Tiger Woman,” at the Colise. j) perience at I felt that um Sunday, Gladys Brockwell, at the Mission, in “One Toueh of Sin.” yi.” in t of th Sunday ; H most first cases in her MAY BE PASSED “=. yet | wa ink that ever agair Brig. Gen, Oscar F. Long, Brig. Gem, FUN T John P. Wisser and Col. Benj. Ale The troops, in column of ; nere were 18 par followed, 1 companies of ery, several com 7 mar , Spanish War THE PRESIDIO <:'.<'sctis: sai and #e PROGRAMS TODAY versal, at an estimated cost of 4) miggion LINERTY — mata 4 | quarter million dollars One 7 os . OOD 8 Aitred Vosbure: of ( ‘the | 1 = ing the Dark”; ¢ Hachelor's ¥ 1 ardsmen, cadet corpm al squads of city police, Stop at Church an for _ Brockwell in the le tempted to belleve any 1 CLEMMER be seen at the Mission the From the city hall the procession: OLYMPIA, Feb. 24.—The house he talked to me asx did Barnest NEW YORK, Feb. 24.—A car thel Marrymore tn The Girl Philippa.” which was! four days’ engager starting to SAN FRANCISO, Feb. 24,— up Van Ness ave. to the me ae re gn tye oe ie a ele a0, 9008 load of Columbia river smeite, shown at th Clommer Bh ont morrow | With the most Impressive mil- (|First Presbyterian church, There day reported favorably House Hill ° ad lost what mother 4 ago, will play a return en The scene itary ceremony ever seen In the casket remo from the x " ch. i] troduced by Repre: erroneou most in t purchased by long-distance tele nent, commencing Sunday, a! | little Western San Francisco, the body of « ken into the ehurelis “4 But 1 had| phone, today is on its way to Aracter and| New York, to do Its part toward the same theatre Anita Stewart Is the preached # Ke: daughters gained mong the be ture, Realism “Fighting Fred” Funston was Rev laid to rest in the National funeral sermo: tings of King cou je the operation ¢ telephones for the use of pa-|4 know! } . innocence relieving the shortage of food of this Chambers stor are always in ¢ cemetery in the Presidio to- again lifted the casket and in business houses, and | Was only a state of mind, purity and high prices here ot < uring the of the featu dance| day, beside the grave of his it to the caisson, while the long I ,ocks out the compulsory nickel-| Was a real virtue The fish were purchased by jor to and after| hall of Golden ( dand| little son, Arthur McArthur of soldiers stood at “present armay in-the-slot phones, wh the tele (Te be continued) the mayor's committee on food 1914 acted with remarks Funston, Then the c moved on phone company has foisted on the supply, of which George W. Per howing, the see | The mn booming of the min- Van Ness ave. again to tim merchants | kins is head, and it is suspected ed to its enpacity| STRAND ite-gun, the clear, bugled notes of sidio. As the procession ent What's more, it knocks out the MUNY LEAGUE TURNS | Perkins himself paid for them: nce Mary Miles Minter will headline! “taps,” aud finally the three crash-|the Presidio the band ceased pl charge which the telephone com It n, 4,000,000 ° the Sunday bill Strand ing volleys of rifle fire over the ing and a cannon boomed, At pafiy has been exacting for install DOWH BELT LINE F The Gentle Intruder grave of the ton’s beloved sol- tervals of one minute for @ pe ing private and business phones the The comedy offering is “A Snb-|dier stirred wasem of near minutes the cannon Tt sets q the limit 1 watch the distri? ng allt rine Pirate,” wit act 1 000 people ajor eral’s salute, to be charged for a public phone.| One bundre Mu has a satiefac t tex, will continue a At 10 a. m. the body of Gen Widow and Children There The bill also reduces the amount |nicipal league ut in favor urket, more will ne more days COLONIAL |Furston, which lay ¢ in the) Mrs. Funston and her three fall of the penalty which can be charg-| the pub! b line proposition Kagels fa the star of tnis Me M’ Pi t rotul a of the city hall last erless children witnessed the cert ed for non-payment of a gas bill by | while 251 voted against it in a ref . and if the play, which has met with distinct the ¢ 1 was placed on a caisson, draped moni at the cemetery. As @ a specified date, from 25 per cent/erendum pallot con by the nd, the success wherever shown, It is the ning St ta | Two regi- casket was lowered into its graves! fan epi-|}with American English hawk 8 of infantry stood at “present'a bugler sounded “taps.” Again story of a outeast who is sode in the} a huge, Mont of the of the amount of the bill to 10 per | organization Voting on the cent ill, $6 fav its passage, estiga- ture were tak rm adjacent taken the streets and given| er i My Old Duteh arms” while # soldiers carried the; minute gun boomed its salute of - 255 opposed it tion 8: to the Ba Here, with » re e makes all c completes the casket out of the building. In front’ guns. Then stepped forth @ ffi ms = RC Side fi . the a the Hiamson ¢ r ‘ The © beg r ter-| bill of the city hall the procession of|squad and three volleys crashed @ M : part on bread and tea ix the spectator given to ae rible upward struggle once more oe 9 3,000 men was formed. last far 1 |More |} lelp Needed sional luxury of me wonderful flora and fauna of the after h r her employer,/ CLASS A Bell Commands Regiments Meantime the city of San | ee Nau (ipa | bles. vottom of the sea ° MacLaren, formerly a New Gen. J. Franklin Bell, per co practically suspended busi to Make New Cits|’Scnoot chiiaren, it ts sald, are in| One of the thrilling acenes {e that |COLI@EZUM York chorus girl, plays the leading | so! commanding the two regi-|ou te pect to "Gen Funs' s mock more Taseed - of a struggle between a native pea Once more we will be di role in “Wanted—A Home. the ments of infantry, rode immediately memory. By proclamation of | With a view to accommodating | condition this winter fisher and a giant octoy in which, |to see the * and vampirish | Class A Sunday. It is @ sociological) behind the cask mayor, all city and public offic the ever-increasing number of > ous seasons afte early dead,| Theda Ba n her own domain dra of a little orphan and her} Behind his w the military band, were closed, and many b plicants for citizens’ Quigley in charge of the natu zation department, with no othe |duties save those of the ment charges that food is marine Nav-| Sunday Another le the ¢ of the diver} most dev pneumatic rifles and Here w lenizens of the sea worst As the wif veture was filmed Unt-! nobleman, she Sporadic street disorders are con- Capt lice claim to have | tilus ell in han that » will headline the bill) trials |playing a dirge. houses shut their doors seum in her latest and The Bath b Elopement" com-| Behind him was the military band| —_—_——— by The Tiger Wom pletes the program ‘honorary pallbearers in full military! Rover! is so far from being feo her at her best—or| # |Tega They were: Rear Admiral | sirable in itself, that it som of a Russian, READ STAR WANT ADS |F. ! U. 8. N., Brig. Gen. Wm.| ought to be refused, and 60 shim as a spy 96 = y'L. Seibert, Brig. Gen. R. K. Evans,|to be resigned — =: | Loss OF INNOCENCE EN- HANCES PURITY | PR mand argie,” said Paula, “ft is strange, but even my friendships I have noticed have come to me sud- denly. You remember how I met | Emma and how quickly we knew | we were for each other. It was the! same way with Alma Huntington She evidently saw in me a@ kind of democratic endence sense of equality and justice that appealed to her, and I recognized in her a certain oneness with human sorrow, human joy, human strength and human frailty which you sel-| dom find in the usual egotistical) If-centered woman. | She told me long afterward that | at first she could not believe my frankness was real. ‘You sald so many things, Paula,’ she remarked. ‘that had never come within the realm of my understanding. You} taught me a lot, dear, for you made me understand there was a great) big area in nature peopled by hu} man beings of whom I had not the} slightest knowledge | Even after my two years wit h the newspaper, I was not ready for such frank disclosure of opintons 4 sentiments as you made. You see, Paula,” she said, ‘I had grown suspicious. I never took any one at her word. I was always looking for motives Itho trying to be very truthful myself, | was always logking for untruths in others. Be- cause 1 began to believe in you, I began to hold the faith in all humanity.’ “Only a big nature, Margie, could have come to this conclusion, and {f Alma broadened thru her inti macy with me, I was comforted strengthened immeasurably by growing love and preciation of her. This 1 understood afterward, however; at the time of the tnter view I only knew I felt as tho at last I had met some one in whom I might confide, wholly knowing she would always understand. You see, Margie, up to this time hile I had made good friends in ma and Ruth and others, these had all been much older than I and they had all given me a feeling of having paseed thru the fires that were burning me at this time and come out pure gold } With Alma I felt as with myself we were still flaming and the re sult might be only the ashes of life. 1 don't know w I felt that way at the time, for you see I had only seen Alma that morning, but som how I knew she had a storf locked up behind that smiling mouth—a story which perhaps was as tragic as mine “Margie, I sometimes wonder what the mothers of girls would think and do if their daughters would really follow the advice that woman preachers in the denatured woman's magazine are always handing out—confide in mother as tho the mere fact of her being a mother makes her the proper per son to advise under all circum stances Take my darling little mother, for instance, Margie. If she had not died when the first breath of trouble reached her she would cer tainly bh gone insane if she had dreamed ic possible that her daugh er would ever run up against such roblems as I was facing. What do you suppose she would ha 1 if I had told her of that stene ed the other night on either ride of a closed door? Margie, ¥ au afraid she would have thought| A marvelous eight-reel picturization of the most celebrated novel of the ages— filmed at the bottom of the sea—off the tropical Bahama Islands. We see the characters of Jules Verne’s vivid imagination brought to life by the magic of mod- Fi ern motion pictures and enact before our eyes the dramatic incidents of “20,000 N thi 2 ilmed at the Leagues Under the Sea” and “Mysterious Island.” On the floor of the ocean we fo) ing Like It see the giant submarine in action torpedoing and sinking a ship; divers hunting; Bottom of the Sea man-eating sharks; sunken wrecks; the death struggle with an enormous octopus; on Earth the weird and wonderful life at the bottom of the ocean. It is but fitting that the Liberty, which screened the first submarine picture, should show the first and only submarine photoplay—eight reels of the most intensely interesting thrills ever photographed; costing $250,000.00 and taking two years to film. ONE SOLID WEEK, STARTING SUNDAY ~ ADMISSION, ADULTS 15c, CHILDREN 5c rr.

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