The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 28, 1917, Page 3

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STAR—SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1917. PAGE 3 HOST OF STARS ON SUNDAY MOVIE BILL ; |HlS STATEMAY : Charles Ray, Doug. Fairbanks, Alice Joyce, Harry Morey, Mae Marsh and Others NOT BE BONE DRY Coeccvecccvccccccce eooe oes ove * e014 : to) He 4 bur peed by referen- Telephone & Telegraph co | - ‘ . : ‘ ‘ oaed to the “aaa Stepped to the t today avor ° wi - r 1 e last leginia- the summer daylig ; 4 ‘ \ ! i 2 expected Saturday, following r ne ent t the federal in that the postal laws state in the Phone Co. Employes Would Set Clocks Up) counting department a torne Gregory Friday eetal, ) § E : a J | kee trict Attorney Allem Sarburee r . ahe oe » send him o¢ of the Washing. , ed ber pre 1 tre ! ' , amendment; it Jeff ; 7 ’ , ‘ oes not affect states Hatleships Around | GHAMBER TO HAVE 1500! 850. | Mies ih fer te her Seattle Farm Made ’ i ; : re ; c , ires vill pass bis Eva Nervous Wreek S'TIZENS?’ COUNCIL ay eanrale ta" Settarcon "Pony jnion on this nee 0 aig SAN FRANCISCO, April 28 eben snr greta é paevtreglle . = k . | a .” ter - “bone. éry a Those battleships that kept . ‘ ron * nosing around her farm near , . . ‘ Seattle got on Eva Kainney's " ica ae ; < . « . a , nerves. por t t et ‘ pant Eva, a negress, appeared inti. orga 4 ‘ Riga snl . Ma SEATTLE WINS Police ; - 3 she A) / Jud Fitzpatrick’s ge court today, charged with dis. ah at tba Seatalow abe Ln : ; : ' | aW 4 turbing the peace. She said , bou im - 7 ‘ , $ the was from Seattle, and when became 00 . +A mud _ " J asked why she left, replied There was too much stutr n the city : " going on up there, judge. | ~ be he Metre ree . ne » a to have the firs® ust couldn't stand it, and left 400 . : . . nal . ch t of the San Franeiseo Yes, indeed, all the time so . oe a j H | ve bank, according te dlers with great big guns were rh io va 2 geri rind . <. y i » | wire mation received here late going past my farm, and horses ' , , re ge olga rechin Rysig oy > ; ‘ f Daniel Kelleher, die and wagons carrying guns and t dy ¥ . . . oO or of the Seattle National bank, bullets kept going past. And ounced for Mc e \ p ms oo f been boosting for the city then on the other side, great o'clock, in th : 3 4 t t federal reserve board at big battleships kept coming of the Commercial Clat 2 c : y : 4 D.C. hat rete oe ere i ade building. This function’ jog ; Bhs ai. . is , ora de 7 Portage judge, | left.” of al , ‘ » in shown by Po! His honor dismissed the case, & \d - . : . A e In the fight to obtain after remarking that he ce sanisations bu aes Bea) Se ee 7 . th et that according to Kelle- tainly would like to see that |, 6 bites Yet of c ¥ : toning | it is not impossible that farm where battleships me "i t . . : ‘ nehes will be established’ in up so close. ose cities also. * Anxious to bri ie Lincoln high schoo! will stage 7 Po edgy ha Mier 4 ! : ‘ \ ; até: pra? ee eee The Bachelo ¢ e " ra is t roth | Re san Francisco and met with the P wt t 1 aud: | READ STAR WANT ADS | °°" " . é > * | ‘ lirectors of the federal bank there. torum, Saturday at § p. n ‘e oe” ave a Wor ‘i 7 . - A review of the hearing was sent A su ate, and : e federal board at Washington and Reading from right to left: Top—Doug Fairbanks and his pug ally then took up the 1 had a taste of struggic and it | In “In Again—Out Again,” Coliseum Sunday; Scene from “The Pinch mpaign for the bank with the ‘ | Hitter,” with Charles Ray, Liberty Sunday hington board was swore * 4 Sie whde will, Margie ' . ee Middle—Scene from “Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation,” Moore athe Ge Piaf what ‘ “7 | Sunday; Norma Taimadge, in “Fifty-Fifty,” Mission Sunday; Blanche FIGHT FOR CHILD toda Sweet, in “Her Condoned Sin,” Rex Bottom—Peggy Hyland, in “Babette,” Clemmer Sunday. FOR ONE WEEK ONLY te A | — — = | RENEWED IN COURT For the exaltation of patriotism V ® are vit d : ! i ' ; uke Wins Fair | has taken under necessity of preparedness, the n o ' 1 r : ae fe res n Sais e on 7 nent the application of Ru- ling power of self-sacrif a ; be oo ph Gerber of San Franciseo for among the women of Americ , ~psith atecgl ‘gdb earn | : . s PORTLAND CARMEN writ of habeas corpus to obtain troubled and anxious times, th! r ‘ aren } a e ‘ , ms c | adeseneteie of his seven-yearold | passioned plea ¢ pared wareia: { y . . Pies th se “ daughter, Anael Gerber, from the k at fashior A 4 : ion’s life a revelat , rath ; rig ee re ; c eons Gerber claims that ng his divore: rs. Dorot f hed bonds and wag, 4 the custody of the chil . mother, he claims, stole th® el ERTY—Wiltiam — & art harles Kay in The 1 ¢ , n \ l ~ r ; naetaticga. vee | , Jutse Drkeman of, the superior ery Wilson The | Desert ” e at the Thro’ \ " e a r mn ven te’ bench refused to recognize the de M. Cohan tn ra 4 : ne y sic yoo 2 "Wey cree of the California court. c ’ t I , adds but love and noth ut lov , a COLISEUM—Deng Valrbanks aad Ar : p M f sity 90,01 he any’s play with love, Margie ee oe ee orl na Ot ‘ ! 1 ae | PRISONER ESCAPES. b ee high MISSION —Nerima ‘Tuslem “witty tt sekly comple’ he : > oung, not ao mic - bil bed Rama Gh tie es - On the pretense of being sick, Petrova ie” ont, Robert Marron, | CLASS A | Mrs Ethel Sutherland, arrested Ftc | ave Fight.” comedy. Ma Marat In “Mer Condoned. si The ( Rue Faas day afternoon for shoplifvng, was a 00-ton wooden taken to the city hospital, from eon DeWite In “Re | COLONIAL—Marie Osborne in i jrath, will he 1 1 ship » laid by the| which she promptly e pede Soa we form an tm m a the Dragon’; “Peirte” and weekly. | 9 » Cl Sunda athlyr acific Navigation Co.,|ing her hat and coat. Seiad) Ganrabnnesch tae en ee” eS ee ee Cl cette eee ee ‘ams > yi wh . built the motorship | caught in a Second ave. depart tein to break our hearts v ships will each store with stolen goods, and men, on the other hand, | COLISEUM cu EMMER from m 5 feet, x 260 | she was taken to the jafl she o ove pla gto pro; Chief Beckingham wil . cy Hyland will be a in | #dventu th who | feet lor ‘ plained of iliness. laces at the She is ~ ot want to get an it secon: PORTLAND, Ore, idealize each other or h “Womanhood | standing all The Gory of the Nation” l= and the popular pla ‘ r love and her lover to r a a Br actec aber ba setae cig deta sea ve one out of his Womanhood” is perhaps the most wonderful of the " he will find bis great passion ts many # roen productions of recent date, a soul etirring 4 |but puerile thing that t sedom, marvelous in its realism, sree there's t ee its newness, daringly thrilling in the telling of the I ‘, “only s man | ¢: * a Y pels 186 4 n too long in the peace-loving A PICTURE eal alongs costae er cond inane, “de ca argie, you know v C ttle with tt Huns, ravaging this co That imparts Knowledge! , tr asserted Paula, he Keystone v try, despoiling its cities, Its wealth That Warns! " No woman in all the|non and Juanita anse »litn ideals and its womer That Lays the Foundation for True Americaniem! world knows the truth of it better | comed thru the brilliance of one man ; than I, Margie Waverl rof Mary Ward, the rabid| A : In this comedy- That Points the Way ‘: | (To be continued) | “Bambi” is coming. ho the “Mad Dogs of Europe” | f aged ob That Every Person in America Should See! are driven back and annihilated. | \ ’ \ a college campus, It is a wonderful story, wonder- | j C, Gardner Sullivaa, YOU WILL SEE Open reise ee ) = 7} ” ed, vi ; a ‘ tf n of detail tha Z run—with the bases the United States invaded by a powerful foe; New CLASS A 10 to 11 Deeg heap riape Be thet this elt Bea = a play that says to the i York bombed from the sky; the latest and greatest THEATRE P. ifata: kad antiprepanetions. a6 | oe. ee pe ays pular: inventions being used by the United States in our THIRD AVE. NEAR PIKE ST vocates—"Scat, and sin no more greatest war; submarines discharging torpedoes under ading roles are played b A +h play—and create @ water; mavy yards and munition factories in full naTHE vy prominent Vitagraph players. A new character in blast; Zeppelins maneuvering in action; a new inven t WILLIAMS. ¢ symphony orchestra adds to the| x “ picturedom, Instory tion, the “aerial torpedo;” a heroine of the nation CAST ? beauty of the plece 3 aft interest—heart ims kidnapped by the enemy in an aeroplane; gas attacks baie and down- as conducted on the battlefield; a whole navy de > lamar dramatic ae stroyed in a sea of burning oll and President Wilson rom ag a OSM ee ti if tion. Norma Talmadge comes to the $7 delivering an oration to a victorious nation. ; s Rareae CT prtecee ,fopien. tothe interest, thie teas Accompanied by Augmented Orchestra story laid in| Greenwich Village, | by itself. Special Musical Score the Bohemian resort of New York's artistically inclined inhabitants Miss Talmadge plays Naomi, a ™ FOUR PERFORMANCES DAILY AN Hl Al ! fre without being" burnt she| Afternoon performances begin at 2 and 3:30 : aid tha Gale Gcuibae Mids tenes | ALLACE Evening performances begin at 7:30 and 9 y a nome: Hubuy. la atte antcand ithea URLITZER PRICES—Afternoons and Evenings We wish te announces that int t comes to a happy ending ASTERS rier Remennns a 7) PIS SF. | “Teddy at the Throttle,” Mack Sennett’s Entire Lower Floor ¥ is now open for business. It REX d and Balcony Cc 30xes 50c is the cosiest eating place of Her Condoned © Sin,” an old Lisas artee| i la con eateell thrills, BAG OMROBY «+e e008 its kind In the city, We seove , Griffith picture, in which Blanche | pire ane lame ee the finest Chinese and Amer. Sweet, Mae Marsh, Robert Harron. s ican foods. Come and enjoy : Dorothy and Lillian Gish and Hen: | ;— Tonight, Last Times a dish of our delicious chop mantis i ry Walthall are starred, comes to| Hart in “The Desert Man,” and “Her te A suey and noodles. Service of ay nt the Rex Sunday | Nature Dance,” 2-reel Keystone. the highest order. a, A. The play Is staged in olden | - £: es. Blanche Sweet plays the : . h 711 Pike St med tim an : \ . few Meaney : . + lead, that of Judith, who is called | upon to wield a two-edged sword | FIRST AT PIKE—CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11—ADMISSION 15c—CHILDREN 5c¢ 108 Second Ave. S. (Near Yesler) Half Block 8. From Smith Bldg pon the neck of her lover, who tg

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