The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 19, 1917, Page 6

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Held Over HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! First Run Positively First Time Shown in Seattle. | ao IN HER MASTERPIECE Judging from the comments of patrons al! last week, this | new Mary Pickford play is the greatest typically Pickford eub- fect ever staged, replete with Pickford charm and presenting “an occasional twang at the heart strings, as well as pienty of - quaint situations. : Even “Teas of the Storm Country.” with all tts popular | favor, has failed to keep this production from being Mary Pickford’s greatest and best-liked picture play j It pleases every one, regardless of age. It is really unique im the successful manner in which it will Interest both the | child and the grown-up. Special Music Admission 15 Cents—Children 10 Cents. 7LEMMER at ubo’s Best Photoplay House | | Phone East 5196. A LOGGING camp fn miniature and mining and first ald demonstr |ttons will be features of the bie | nial Engineering Open House to be | direct | held on the U. of W. campus March IRE 1S unlimited money in 29 Washington for investment,| COUNCILMAN 0. T. ERICKSON Wheat farmers of the district | urged King county democrats Sat to invest in the motor ship urday to join the move to ma i industry in Seattle, ac-|county and state elections non to R. W. Michael, repre. | partisan. the investors. JOHN MOHLER STUDEBAKER TTLE WOMEN will atterapt |*T.. founder of the vebicle indu te the 1918 convention of| Which bears his name, is dead at Federation of Women’s clubs |"! home South Bend., Ind, @ will extend the invitation at | Years. June meeting to be held at| REUBEL H. FLEET of Aberdes: Yakima. once in the state legislature an/ TAKE YOUR old newspapers) militia officer, will leave for § Magazines to the firo stations | Diexo soon to become one of Un 28—the Seattle Day Nursery, | Sam's flyers. A, wants ‘em. Before) SOMEBODY STOLE the 28, paper in bundies of 25 logue and the Port Angeles poli rem judge is much perturbed. The ten commandments were nalled above the judge’s chair and now they are gone. CINNABAR McDONALD, famous Jin Alaska for his interest tn fis mercury deposits, froze to m the Bethel-Aniak trail. Attem to “thaw him out” failed and died raving of the quicksfiver riches he would never see MARTIN BUGGE, pioneer Novt Bend logger, met his death day night when a logging car loose and struck him as {t rush be down a long incline. STATE HOUSE officials are pre paring for an “armed neutrality Since the invasion of the capitol building by a maniac last week, the officials refuse to trust the Olyra pia police, and, are forming ‘home guard SEATTLE HAS $9,672,166.19 of park lands which cost the taxpay ers $5,124,542.49, says the annual report of the park commissioner Donations caused the difference in the figures. COL. JOHN L. HAYDEN, Coast Artillery corps, has been chosen head of the ingte West Point Alumni association, Bu- gene R. West will act as executive | secretary “CHRISTIAN SCIENCE |supreme discovery of the age,” 4e |clared John Randall Dunn, of St Louis, here yesterday. “The subj: gation of hate and greed 1s greater task than the taming electricity,” he sald. Marguerite CLARK THIS WEEK ONLY of the is the Cleveland Lineup Is About Selected iliss George Washington Bh omc. yu {ing Indian lineup for the opening Lad >.< game with Detroit, April 11 Gra ney, If.; Chapman, ss; Speaker, ef.; JOHN HAME Second and U Roth, rf; Guiato, 1b; Wamby, Children 15c Bagby or Coumbe, p. $ When a fella will ride Into Mor. gan’s gap for a girl he sure loves a LSemebot Nan of Music Mountain” was worth risking a hide for, Turner or Le Ber, ; O'Netll, Lowe Se Fo ONS IETS STAR—MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1917. DOINGS IN FILMDOM POQOCORPOVOOOODIOTOOIOIIIOA ‘NEWS—) NOTES —~GOSSIP | | pounds or more will be called @r. for love | name, Scene From “Satan's P rivate Door,” Today’s Programs LIBERTY — Mary Liberty. more days. This in th dy is well known as staged almost in ite @ striferidden inter The ing story of « to the only thr P mo having entir nation bow: Patriot” Is the pu man whose burnit Stare and Stripes tr 1 dering coals of hate, and then is restored by the nt of a golden: haired boy, who resurrects loving memortos “Maid Mad.” two-part Mack Sennett Keystone ody a together with Pathe Charteson otion “vurtieg With Gtris,” comedy. COLONTAL—A cot Hearst Keekly ee REX “Miss George Washington.” at the Rex, is one of the prettiest and daintiest vehicles Marquerite Clark has appeared in Reputed to be LIBERTY Satan's Private Door which opened at the Liberty theatre Sun day, will be presented there unt! Wednesday night. Satan's Priv Door in this case is money ruination of hundreds and hundre of people-—-what men slave for what women sell thelr souls for the rich man trying to double his| COLONIAL already amassed fortune—the p “The Dumb Girl of Porticl,” Anna man trying to earn enough to | Pavlowa’s first and only screen pic on—a substitution for the Atlas opened Sunday at the Colonial which the world revolves. ee yet in the young Jadies’ achool she won a medal for veracity. A interest runs thruout the play cee love n | ture, {Universal company, and a lavish CLEMMER “The Poor Lit R Girl,” with} Mary Pickford in the title role, at the Clemmer, {s one of the pea’ photoplays that has yet appeared in Seattle. Tho story tells of a litte girl, the daughter of rich} rents, who brings about a revolu tion in her home over {ts artsto- eratic wa and thru her hunger and companionship brings and mother to realise that the real pleasures of life are to be found in the home. G. M Anderson of “Broncho Billy” fame. 4 the picture. oe CLASS A The Chaperon” and “Sally and Napoleon,” a comedy, comprise the Class A's bill until Tuesday night Edna Mayo and Eugene O'Brien star in the first named 4:8 STRAND In “Flirting With Fair! *, when he saw man with a mustact beard, would hop over a tall fence or climb the front of a building. The reason was had hired an assassin to kill m When his girl tnrew nfm down But when she relented didn’t want to be ki His atter to away from the killer Fate,” her fathe a . COLISEUM he Pauline Freder the Coliseum, tn portrays k as “Sapho,” at pts ne play of that girl who for t th teal |sakes fame and at 84) very good MISSION deca-| poverty with her reen version of Daudet's ed romance, which hae 1 Sarah Bernha Braves Make Ready to Combat Yankees) MACON, Ga, March 19 Braves loom in the future Yankees, and this week will be de ‘voted to preparation for the elebrat er been play, is William 8. Hart's “Patriot A Quarter of a Million Dollars TO LOAN on Improved Seattle Real E or for Building Purposes ate at the LOWEST RATES OF INTEREST. NO COMMISSION. NO BONUS. For many years our executive committee has met every day, so that we are ablesto and do give prompt service on all applications for real estate loans. Your abstract and insurance papers are held in our own vaults, where they may be seen on a moment's notice. We make “straight mortgage,” annual and semi- annual payment ind monthly payment loans. Washington Savings and Loan Association 810 SECOND AVENUE Established 27 Years Assets $6,300,000 Dougins | are| The for the} PAGE 6 Cnultine “Sapho"” every nation countless star ages to come, because it is, romance. Miss Frederick’s interpretation which an artist of transcendent genius, and has been acte will be produced it and before the car the earth “Sapho” on the stage of stamps h Pauline Frederick’s First Screen Appearance of the World’s Greatest Romance “‘Sapho,’ to my mind, was an unfortunate girl rather than one who was wicked.” —Pauline Frederick. ‘be seen at the Mission theatre for! has been produced countless times in d by 1 the nera, and will remain, the ultimate visualized There is that spontaneous originality in er as | CONFESSIONS OF ae at ——@ ;‘and I could design YOU NEED EXPERIENCE TO PICK A JOB truthful, she was the very opposite,| if any enough to work out clothes. I'd love to do that. Don't think, my dear, ° And that, Margie,” sald Paula, was the thought that kept com ing into my mind whenever : |thought of leaving the company. in any 1) tage other business ling to recommend me except the/ing smart New York stand for 1 would probably have been able, as a clerk in a store, to earn at ‘o, but I can tell others ho most $8 a week to begin, A® fil) to sew ling or office clerk, J might have) «wor my dear, I don’t think learned $10 a week; aa artists’ mOd-| wontd throw up lel, 75 cents an hour. as you have for any little person: | “I thought of trying to get ® reason, and attempt some jplace as a resident governess or AN thing that does not promise id lady's companion, but I did not as well know just-how to go about it But, Ruth, I don't belleve Ba 1 told e of these things tO) nest wants me here. I think th Ruth and she said I was foolish, but) time is coming shortly when I {if 1 muat » the stage WhY | nave to go. didn t I try get a place on. it with everything he can. |woman in a smart Fifth ave. shop dropped my You wear your clothes so well Paula on you know how to sew, Paula™ hal off the stage you would hay NURSE HAD POOR HEALTH “ sutered Much Pain, Ye 900 JITNEYS Had to Work—Finally Cured by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound interrupted purpose He accused take the attent) away from him in every way po: sible. Just as if that tiny bit white lin | Obt Tama go out nursing, and fered from a female ||\trouble that caused a great | deal of soreness |} across my back and through my | abdomen. Some ic it would | be very painful after a hard day's work. 1 mM read about Ly Myidia KE. Pink-| ham's Vogetable Compound and tried {t and it has helped me wonderfully, #0 the sore. ness is all gone now, I believe Ly din Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound ts just the remedy for fo male troubles Mrs. Elizabeth John, R. D. No, 4, Toledo, Ohto. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots | and herbs, contains no narcotic or | harmful drugs, and today is regard ed as the most successful remedy for female {lls There are thou sands of voluntary testimonials on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Maas., to prove this fact For All Pain - BRITAIN TO SEND ITS a bonding company to renew the! bonds when they expire, will be Sitneyless months. The widow within bonds of 300 Sitney 1, 80 of them ending next month The recent supreme ion that the $2,600 bond is not Im of a jitney accident, each person injured, men believe, them to renew their bonds. but applies t will, jitne; ed to enable the jitneys to continu service, but operators say the have found none yet that seem practicable, RAYMOND ROBBINS service worker, tle, and the public will ichance to hear ht mspeak |xive a series of lectures under th jauspices of the University .Y, M A., beginning with an sity assembly, at 10 a, m have “The efficiency of any dra ©. P, Robbins “is known to u resulta wo obtain from ite wi are able to control pain and disease b of any proparat LONDON, March. h 19. Lloyd porge Indicated, in an an nouncement in the house of con mons today, that on Thursday h would move that the ernment congratulate the patient most often applies to something to relieve hia promptly the patient is trust in us for the other ramedies wh will offect'a permanent cure. edy whic have used i practice ta anti-kamain tal and varied are thoir usos. shave put fhem to the test on many occasian: boon disappointed. fally valuable for headaches origin, Where quinine waa They appear to prevent tho a ffecta of the quinine, Anti-kamnia tablets are also excellent Russia: government TO HOLD MILITIA 0 CHICAGO, March 19.—Musterin, in tablota give prompt reltet, and in juss. of te ane nt hort time the patient is able to go eboutasusual” Advertisement. been ordered discontinued, one would let me. I can draw and color designs ot} you | could step {nto the higher positions) than tho! I think to reach the place Tho pteture was produced by the|knew nothing well, and had noth-|o¢ q buyer or a designer in one of shops you hand was used in making the play jlittle thing that birth and breeding | neve to riso by all the steps from |the lowest work in the place. Do good a position untried Already he Is finding Last handkerchief |! « big speech, and when he| thought 1 bad ruined his scene on me of trying to on of the audienc n and lace would be no HUNT NEW BOND Unless jfitney operators can find Seattle a few expire between now and November ited to covering the entire liability make it impossible for Several plans are being consider-| TO LECTURE HERE Raymond Robbins, famous social is coming to Seat He will Cc all-univer Thursday. CONGRATULATIONS | Premier | the has | you expect to combat a man like | “‘My dear Paula,’ sald Alma, ‘if | Barnest Lawton by fair means you jwill get beautifully left.’ (To be continued) and | tieed falling to the floor, didn't try to pick it up. “"“Uniess you think a little bit bout the play and the star, I am | | otras 1 shall have to tell the man ager I cannot play with you, Miss Newton,” was his last remark.’ “The cad, the ugly cad,’ said Roth under her breath. ‘Why don't} you look around and see if you can find a place with another compan, Paolat ‘I would if I were in New York | but what can you do in Philadel phia? Besides, if 1 out of thir | job, Ruth, I am certainly going tr | m1 /tTY Something else." | “I could see, Margie, that Ruth [ heard something, and she| knew my stay was short. Fortun- | ately, I had been very saving of my money and I had about $150.) ahead. I confided my predicament to Alma Huntington and she said, ‘If I were you, I'd stay as long as It getting along toward) 1 of the season, and I don’t} think Earnest Lawton is strong enough with the management to} make them let you out before then especially as you are making good getting the notices. Dear, I wish you and Tom Pi |Fy would stop writing about me. [/ think it makes Earnest Lawton per fectly furious whenever he sees my name in the paper.’ “That won't hurt, dear Paula,’ } |comforted Alma, ‘It is these no- tices that will make the manage- ment keep you, I'll tell Tom and! we'll become your press agents. | You know how Tom hates Lawton anyway, and he will only be too glad to stir up the animus. Many an actress has been made by her press agent d few have suc ceeded vy one, she sayly But it doesn't seem quite fair, I remonstratd CLAUSSEN World’s Greatest Mezzo-Soprano Will Sing “Liebestod,” from “Tristan and Isolde” .......Waguer “Lorelei” ... 1 if | had r e mi WITH THE PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA JOHN SPARGUR, Conductor e of eat at the METROPOLITAN Tuesday Evening, March 20 Magnificent Orchestral } Program SEATS ON SALE NOW oil Popular Prices—$2.00, $150, thout $1.00, 50¢ said 8 i court decis- a y y Are Employers Responsible for the Morals of Their Under- paid Girl Em- ployes? SEE THE | BIG | SMASHING DRAMA | yi a | British gav- n Juma for its establishment of a new COMING SUNDAY ANCE 15° &

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