The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 2, 1917, Page 4

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STARTING TODAY Fate had no voice but the heart's im- pulse ie borne out in this powerful Sact jeature play. ANY SEAT ANY TIME |Mystery Cloaks Wild Ride of Ghost Girl | PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Aug. 2—A “Be—Class “A”—5c golden-haired girl, dressed in white | silk and wildly riding a pure white colt, was caught late at night in Ab- ington, a wealthy suburb. Frighten Jed villagers who thought her a ghost had telephoned the police to interéept her flight “Tm joyridin she told the Ab. ington police. She declared she icouldn’t retnember her name and address, and a silver card case in her pocket bore only the name ‘s- sie Melon.” Her clot were of Tich texture. She wore several valu lable rings and gave every evidence of refinement. |Blazing Cat Sets House on Fire; Oil READING, Pa, Aug. A pet eat, with its fur ablaze from a kitchen of] stove, ran thru the | house and caused a serious fire at the home of John J. Welfly here. The cat had been taking a nap inear the oll stove and overturned it. There was an explosion, and the burning oll set fire to the cat \AMUSEMENTS CHARI CHAPL IN HIS LATEST MUTUAL A REGULAR OLD-TIME CHAPLIN RIOT Fifth and Pine. Tonight Matinees Wednenday A Stirring, Vite’ “COMMON Nights 20¢ With and Saturday an Piny “CLAY” Mat Big Broadway Star The Land of Long Shadows Where Snow and Ice the Man quickest with Gun Keign Supreme. New GYPSY BRIGANDS Show Huge Lotgens; Faye and Today Lewis; Two Blondyny Toknyo Japs; Alex duo. ailoona for Child: and Wodn Afternoons, 196 AHEAR medy Cyell on. 6:20 to 11 (Pree ® and Bun, 1 ES and 9 ADULTS CHILDREN 15c Sc Loge Seats 25¢ y And Co mn & Rictous Other Acta Colonial Theatre FOURTH AVERnUs BETWEEN PIKE AND PINE RMAN Comedians 10° and TODAY Friday Sat. 200 i SIDREY DREW and Aaa MRS. Borrowing Trouble PALACE HIP) HOSPITALITY IS. | | ASKED BY STAR Make Them Feel You Are Their Friends, Says Noted | | TAKE THEM TO SHOWS Actress of Sammies Maxine Elliott, Pictures star the Goldwyn whose generous war relief work has drawn praises and thanks from the kings of England and Belgium and the president of France, makes a plea for generous treatment of the man in khaki —the common soldier. ‘Take the boys in khaki to your heart, and make pals of them,” jpleades = MI Eliott They are fighting ye dates as well as |their own t you can do for them will stil! lens than | their deserts, Go out of your way ito be kind and in your] treatment of to give them not polite: | ness that y stranger but act towards with a kindly {friendliness will let them know at once that even if you are not in line, shoulder to shoulder | with them, you with them Jin purpo To jtry, Miss to may 1 "Dx [the nc go to mov find a tad in unif you. Treat him' Giv time! It at m whether he is known to jnot! Friend or stranger him up and take him along to the show. You stand treat. The nickel or the dime you spend on him ts a small matter in itself, and remem ber, no matter how small your pay, the pay is sure to be less out of ten, it all goes jdear one who iy waiting home.” nd the courteous try only t formal 1 would extend to flay any y that your are one of the ‘voun: | pectal word soldier boys. | movie ts Nover u can » with gardit t Idtier’s enter b nent! if utter a whoop you or gather | LIBERTY (Mary Pickford) — | Mary Pickford is play! Little American,” at until Saturday. The mences previous to the outbreak of the war in 1914, A German, who lived tn Amertea until called to his regiment in Germany, ts the hero, This very fact heightens the suspense for the simple reason that {t seems a very awkward sit vation for the author to get the characters out of. This is done action cor COLISEUM (Emily Stevens) — The Slacker,” at the Collis is a patriotic play de expected to thrill the nation a clarion call t© the young of the country, men and women, to answer the ery “To arma.” It) fs a war drama without the horror) of the battlefield. From the open ing scene to the smashing climax the art of Emily Stevens, convino- | tng, forceful and finished, carries | to the heart of every American a) message that is certain to find re sponse. |REX (Jack Gardner) — Jack Gardner, the former musical comedy star, made a great hit with the Eskimos when he went to the nadian Northw film “Land of Long Shadows, at the Rex Profiting by the of Cap" Cook and ot ox plorers, Gardner of gumdrops along with ad |dition to being present an ixe th »ple w ea arcti or In d with Cocoanut Oil Fine For Washing Hair If you want to keep good condition, be yu wash it with | Most soaps and 7 poos contain too much alka jdries the makes the | brittle, and ry harmfal. Just} lain m oanut oll (which is pure and entirely greaselens), is much better th the ox pensive soap or anything else you can use for shampooing, as thi can’t possibly injure the hair Simply moisten your hair water and ru One « teaspoonfuls ¥ make an ance of ric my lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thor oughly. The lather rinses out eas | lly, and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive | oil, The hatr dries quic and evenly, and it leaves it fine and} silky, bright, fluf and easy to manage You pur hair eful what! | ia t} with | two und re t mulsified drug store. ear most cheat ® oll any very and a few ounces is enough to last every one in the family for months.—Advertisement. | REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS cocoanut It is fm order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the Hightest and strongest plate known, foos not cover the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 18 years. Gold crown $15 set of teeth (Whalebone) $8.00 $10 set of teeth Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 White crowns Gold filings . Biiver fillings Platina fillings All work guaranteed for 16 yonrn Have Impreasion taken In the morn: and get tecth same day. Bxam- ination and advice free. jee of Our Plate age Wo We Stand e ‘Test ef Time. Most of our present patrovag recommended by our early custom: ore, whone work i still giving good fatisfaction. Ask our customers who have tested our work When coming to our office, be sure you are tn the right place. Bring thie ad with you | OHI Cut - Rate | Dentists 2eT UNIVERS'TY eT. Opevaile ve leails jacts the role with force STAR—THURSDAY, AUG. 2, 1917. PAGE 4 EMILY IS SOME WEEPER! Emily Stevens (at left) soul “The Slacker,” per of the screen certainly turns foone the flood gates of her in at the Coliseum, She's the champion Eskimo dog team by a tribal chtet tain, he was further honored b having @ native baby named after him. CLEMMER (Earle Williams) — In “The Hawk,” at the Clemm whieh Earle Williams takes untisual condition to the roel two 1 ir nvented the by th tails spoul The same man who hing 1 There are The b wit man, and that he is mar uliar part of it ts that each thee roles is a sympathetic one, a clroumstance having much to do with the remarkable succens of the story as played on the legitimate tage. MISSION (Viola Dana) — The story of a beautiful girl is of Pate,” which thod of eat row men t fresh sal unian Fairbe automobile night rebar ke ht the attr ©o and a cro! own great sport : Ure night without @ slagle shot Dusty Farnum and Winifred | Kingston were executed as Amert ean spies by Germans one morning | last week, and that afternoon at tenfied a banquet given by the wanderer and &) kain or somethin told in “Threads! of which m opened iraday M To ed The tivery stable where Bill Mart ke } days arded the y by be a vant built at at Strand, ts worth more barn, where it could be se the price of admission. It nly locked up all the time the Jane and Katherine Lee, the 6 and| actor was not using it Tyearold stars, at their best. It] gives them full opportunity to ex- hibit all thetr film genius, and they | cratic earning oxpacity—something | take full advantage of It. Thin ts| like @ million « year—yet he has the first picture in which these| bee® on the hospital list for | STRAND (L Two Little Linps,” whict ned | ma ng the re Chariie Chaplin has an aristo- popular little screen children have | COUP! of weeks with a plebetan been starred. ailment —carbuncles eee COLONIAL (Beatriz Michelena)— Beatriz Miche witness stand Law,” at the A news note | fro informs the publ m Los Ang: that Crane Wi was thrown f varber (Just for ace Spict wby thought the ght on by Crane's a cut bis bair a's work on the he Unwritten | » Colonial, is among | bu most real and convincing emo-| w seen in pleture art f. an we know, is grotesque and ing, {f not ludier chelenn’s in a0 restraine from exaggeration that approaches artistic perfection ee CLASS A (Robert Warwick)— Robert Warwick has a difficnit role to enact in “The Man Wh Forgot,” at the Clans A ne part for a wonderful display of tie ability, and arwick en and power who ts becau: what hela t os in re In the new Fairbanks picture, “Down to * “Dou stunts are said r from doing a handstand on a mountain precipice, £000 feet above the sea level, to teaching a hippopotamus the fam ous Fairbanks smile Ba: * to re Bill Hart left a starring engage ment on Broadway to work in filma at $100 a week Hart's first piety was distributed identally | Bargain,” dram The story is of a foreed to begin life he forgets who he is is MUS Ban ma anew , “Jack and the Beanstalk,” el feature, is said hav 0,000 in the makir TUSEAGEDT ACTICS OF CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 WAR 3 the “ have been at front the jerman year.” For the work reducing and pushing ever air The problem was to breach those walls. Tactics change strategy remains immutable. The ancient Egyptians made the attack upon a walled city for exactly the same strategic object as Haig or Petain make their attacks. Hannibal, when he started his war against R@me by capturing Saguntum, pro ceeded as Pershing will have to proceed in France. The dif ference is one of tactics—not strategy. In ays of Egypt and Rome and Carthage the problem was to attack a walled city; now an army must attack a wa nation; walled in with human beings. The problem before the last two ¥ an outwe ars h to the r torming part bastion” ancien veral was to make a breach in| the walls and pour his archers n into t flanks of the fenders, sweep them along, and attack them in the rear. If a wall was breached, the defenders built a new wall bohind the breach, and k made sallies out to strike the attackers on th Attack at Seven Points allies’ human battering rams have seven points as shown on the accompa The a results 1 but the intact. the B acked the kaiser’s fort 2s ying sketch, with the Russia has captured the Galician fronts of Bukowina and Luts). remainder of the large Poland-Volhynian outwork remalr Russia has reduced the itish-Indian army The British-Indian army has captured the Mesopotamian front by reducing Bagdad 4. The British-Egyptian army has reached the Syrian front 5. The defenders of the Gallipoli front driven away storming party at this point 6. Sarrail’s army h fenders cling to their s 7. The Italian army breached the Carso front, but the porary second line of walls hold 8. The British-French-Belgian completely out of the Vimy, Pe and broken down a long piece of the work,” and the ond line of is endangered Caucasus front and joined hands with have the d the Salonika front, but the de. tem armies have driven the defenders Laon 1 Maronvillers fronts ills of the French-Belgian “out walls (the Hindenburg Line) v ‘ temp How Romans Did It brought up battering close to the walls of the be wall The pushing ¢ at one or two spots in the fell, thus making a “breach” in could rush. In the meantime, Pring possible to injure the egers, but wall inside Romans rams and catapults, and leged city they battered until the stones were jarred lo the wall, thru which the troops the defenders of the walls did every “bat * and to Wwder the be if the battering of the wall went on, they built a second in the shape of a half moon. This is exactly what the Teutons have done. When the outwork France and Belgium was threatened, they built the “Hindenburg behind which they retired when the outer wall was breached Strategy Remains the Same The problem before the allies is to smash thru a wall somewhere before the Germans have time to build an inside wall; or else to destroy the inside wall after the first has been breached, and thus pour into the fortress and take the defenders in rear and flank But when the ancient soldiers had built their half-moon temporary wall, it was possible for the soldiers on the old walls on either side to take tn flank the besiegors when they rushed in to assaut the second wall, The task of the allied and American troops is to push home the destruction of the “bastions,” or fronts, so that the main walls of the fortress can be attacked, by in line,” I, NOW PLAYING SLACKER} The Picture All Seattle Is Talk- ing About. You Simply Can’t Afford to Miss It § COLISEUM ‘“elL OVE SECURES HEALTH ANDyopened my eyes tn the m: HAPPINESS ping peacefully in our no I going to talk to 20k see us off, and p Dick away long as you can, k he ts asked Why, Jim, tting nxto Of course. f N don’t you th ’ right?’ I but I want him fect health.” store away in the state me a bunch o} my head. Then ave me a couple of novels and rent magazines. “Goodness, Jim, if we put all your fts in the stateroom with Dick won't be any room for me.” we'll kick of Jim's fts out, Margie,” exclaimed Dick. ou know, little book, it fs Ht e speeches like that that warm a man's heart. Dick is a perfectly lightful invalid—patent and. un- ymplaining, and he simply revels my company There {s a girl and boy bride and room tn the far end of the car and wa 1 them rather wistfully ru open door tonight before 1 went to my dinner The boy seemed perfectly obliv- us of thing but girl ride. She was a little more con ious and kept looking about to © if anyone was watching them. h exception of the youth | bride and groom every person in the car was gray- og white haired “it sill come back in Jim peded eat basket of fruit “om and nded olets as big a pro to mov- whis to like a graveyard ing West 1 heard the girl er as I passed her on my way the dining car I looked back and saw that every one in the car, with the exception f Dick and myself and the little bride and groom, was over sixty When I returned from the dining car I told Dick what I had heard the girl say, and he laughed Anyway she can't class you among the dead ones yet, Margie,” he said Tonight your hair fs an aureole of flame and you look as young and pretty as you did when we were on our first honeymoon,” “I wonder if you love me as much as that boy out there loves that girl—I wonder if it is possible to love ever again as one does in the first few months of marriage.” ‘There you go, Margie, trying to think it all out and getting all mixed up, I don't know how much that young cub loves that girl, and 1 don’t even know that I love you much as I did on that first honeymoon trip, but I do know I 14m much more dependent on you for happiness, for content, than | was then “Why, my girl, T think at this moment, if I were going out West for a long stay, and knew, when | looks Fifth at Pike—Continuous 11 to 11 Admission 15e—Children 5c rning. that they would not rest on your dear red head, I would not want t live.” I don't little book account for Dick's love-making is that out there in the ocean, when did not know whether he would v see me «again, he realized, fter all, it was a man’s wife counts. Besides, I have al known Dick has a one-track min just now he running on thy t < that leads to me I could almost wish he would never be quite well again. It ts so sweet to feel t essary to some one as Dick makes me feel I am to him. Has a new begun for d me? (To Be Continued) just under The only tand way it I all can || A Single Application Banishes Every Hair (The Modern Beauty.) Here is how any woman can easily and quickly remove objec tionable, hairy growths without possible injury to the Make a paste with some powdered dela tone and water, apply to hairy sur. face and after 2 or 3 minutes rub | off, wash the skin and the hairs are gone. This is a painless, inex pensive method and, epting where the growth is unusually ck, a single application 1s enough. You should, how r careful to get genuine delatone. | Advertisement TODAY : First Time Sho The Screen Surprise of Your Life life Dick are sold than of all other fur-bear combined. just Printers 1018 THIRD MAIN 1043 PS UNTIL UNDAY in Seattle The Biggest Littie Folks 1 the World JANE and KATHERINE ILE E The most precocious and marvelous pair of young- sters in the world. At 5 and 7 years of age they are masters of the art of screen portrayal. A — IN—— t you are as nec: j More skins of hares and rabbits Two Little Imps} A five-reel comedy drama with these super-children tn the leading roles. It’s a big story'of grown-ups, too. STRAND

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