The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 28, 1918, Page 4

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— re & Rimrock Jones Reid “Rimrock Jones”) and “His Hidden ¥ QO a Oa Rugged Story ea «Olax Rings True; War Film Wins Praise R. A. Walsh, passed ed hard and long there, ma Jentic natural Northland for their settings. uu of the Yukon” was the ure y made. It'e at the Clemm thie week. It differs from the studic made Alaska pictures, it The story deals with ebaracter of the early ¢ wife wae untrue, He make a dance hall girl out step-daughter, The girl struggles for a more wholesome life, and finds it-only to have the past revealed unjustly But everything comes out all fine in the end. Marion Cooper, who played in “The Hirth of a Naw tion,” the leading part An interesting news weekly, show ing war activities here and abroad, and QGuterson’s orchdstra, complete the bill. company of Vox with Director thru ttle They work yaing the of the Lady noenery th because a hardened, COLISEUM Most claim-jumpers tn the pictured hard hearted crea tures, with black mustaches. How in “Rimrock Jones,” now run: ning at the Coliseum, a new type is filma are as ever. Purpose,” our Sen- nett comedy, com-! prise the best bill we have had since “Nan of Music! Mountain.” introduced. This claim-jumper pretty, browneyed — stenographer, Mary Be And she ps the hero's claim? at that Of course she does it merely save the mine for “Rimrock Jones,” And beats other claimjumpers by only a few minutes. Wallace’ Reid and Ann Little are playing the leads, Beaten out of his first hold A rascally lawyer, Andrew who discovers the “apex law an Jones in determined to protect his second claim. Destitute and penniless, Jones finds his friends deserting him. He meets Mary Fortune, deaf a«tenog rapher, who helps him win his fight “His Hidden Purpose,” a Mack Sennett comedy, furnishes plenty of Maucha . eee LIBERTY From the moment the handsome Prince of Belmark, the most demo- cratic member of royalty tn Europe, laid his eyes on beautiful Marion Jorn Gime, Petrova), daughter of an American stateaman, the “movie” fans knew they were going to be married, NORTHERN PLAY REALLY MADE IN ALASKA—“LADY LOU OF YUKON” | | Fatty Arbackle, in “Out West,” at the Liberty All Week story. It shows the mettle of mankind, tented while fighting in the hell of “No Man's Land.” ‘The theme of the atory in based upon a real incident that happened in the 97th battalion of the Armert can weion with the Canadian arfny, and was written for the screen by a captain of the eame bat ‘There are a number of scones that make the thrills run up and down your spine. The battle scenes show the American troops, with American fag attached their bayonets, In the thick ef battle, Sunday audiences were enthusias- te. 8 PROGRAMS allace Meld wi | tady | MIsstON — Vrancts X. White and Mine MBieed.” STRAND—Ire M. Lowry's “For the Vreedem ef the Werld. | COLONIAL-——Alice Jeyee and Marry } Morey in “Kichard the Hraren.” | | REX d0i Hart in “The Silent Man” CLASS A — Tiryant Washbere in | | “Skanes Babe” 1} Liner Creole, Hit | in Storm, Lands Passengers Safely NEW YORK, Jan. %.—Struck in a snow storm off the Delaware capes, the Southern Pagific liner Creole, with 136 pamengers aboard, had a hole torn in her side. She was barely able to limp back jt thie port under her own steam. TWO IDEAL DINING-ROOM SPECIALS No deceptive phrases in mislead the uninformed. $ 50.00, nothing down, $100.00, nothing down, $130.00, $ 5.0@ down, Handsome Quarter-Sawed Oak Suite TERMS One price and one set of terms for all. our advertisements to $100 week, or $ 4.00 month $1.25 week, or $ 5.00 month $1.75 week, or $ 7.50 month An 8-piece Dining-room Suite in the beautiful Wil- liam and Mary design, ex- actly as pictured, as fol- lows: Buffet, 45-inch table that opens to 6 feet, five genuine leather slip - seat dining chairs and one arm chair to match. This is an exceptionally attrac t iv ite. Special— $108.50 $5.00 Now, $1.75 Weekly Quartered Oak Dining- room Suite consisting of 8 pieces, exactly as pi $ Roomy buffet, 45-inch ex- tension table that opens to 6 feet, and 6 genuine leath- er slip-seat dining chairs. May be had in either waxed or fumed finish. Very Spe- cial— $69.75 Nothing Rinne Week You save $10 to $20 when you $200.00, $10.00 down, $250.00, $12.50 down, |B | $300.00, $15.00 down, $2.50 week, or $10.00 month $3.00 week, or $12.50 month $3.50 week, or $15.00 month ‘True, she had a husband, but the e | ‘The vessel which struci¢ the Cre prince's eyes, frankly stating 38} COLONTAL | ole wae understood to have reached | love at first sight, betrayed the fact! | port under her own steam. | Pretty Alice Joyce and her co-part |that Mr. Jorn must pe some kind of FIFTH AT PIKE—CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11 20c—Children 10c é : 3 | 26D.& Wier R37 | Tax We Third and Madison MONDAY AND RPHEUM Wife of Mooney Defense Lawyer Commits Suicide SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 23.—Mrs. Isabel Lawler, wife of Attorney Law- ler, of the Mooney defense, was dead today, a suicide, having fired two shots into her own brain. Despon- dency over separation from her hus band and baby daughter is believed to have been the cause, altho at the moment of her death Lawler was in Berkeley arranging for a home for himself and wife, believing reconct)- jation was near. “I have made my own mistakes and have trifled with fate, I sup- pose,” said one of several notes she left. “At any rate my husband has been good and noble, apd has done all in hid power to have me study to make something out of my brain.|% “high society's” fads and foibles, | heart.” A neglected child's head often leads to Srente cone and catarrhal deafness stunting child- making en's mental gr ‘them scold (at no charge to you) Oa, wood year-old remedy, for threala sale fae . oo KONDO DN eaiannmal —— TT tain, and would be out of the yr the American girl's dip into cireles. And, indeed, Jorn was a German spy. After various hair raising episodes, Jorn dies by a bomb thrown by one of his own men. The machinations of German diplomacy, the “mailed fist™ In action are vividly shown in the play, “The Daughter of Peatiny.” this week at the Liberty theatre. Fatty Arbuckle in “Out West,” an absurd comedy, and the Star-Liberty Weekly, showing the mayoralty can- @idates, the Seattle muny fish mar- ket, and Camp Lewis scenes, com plete the bill. oe MISSION Francis X. Bushnan and Beverly Bayne, in the Metro comedy, “Red, White and Blue Flood,” are at the Mission today until Thursday The play contains a multitode of humorous situations, and does not depend on slapstick methods A good-natured fling is taken at some with an ultimate outcome of the recreation of the “society” girl into & being with a more human view of life. An attempt by « “soldier of other people's fortunes” to marry Helen Malloy-Smnythe (Beverly Bayne) and a love story of the two principals supply the plot. A Mr. and Mra, Sidney Drew com: edy, “The Unmarried Look,” and a Ford Educational Weekly, showing scenes at an officers’ training camp, cotaplote the bill. | . STRAND There is a play at the Strand this week that every red-blooded Amert- can ought to see. It is “The Free- dorn of the World,” a great war . ———_—— ee. } | DRINK HOT TEA | | FOR A BAD COLD | Get @ small package of Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take atablespoonful of this Hamburg Tea, put @ cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a tea cupful at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, re. lieving congestion, Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once, It in inexpensive and entirely vege- table, therefore harmless. | a Eugene Levy, Mgr. TUESDAY ONLY WM. S. HART IN mz “DAKOTA DAN” DUSTIN FARNUM BESIDES THE TRANSCONTINENTAL VAUDEVILLE 10c Any Seat in Entire Balcony Tonight. Lower Floor 20c. “NORTH OF 53” ACTS CLEMMER » NOW PLAYING long time since you've rd a tale like the story Lady Lou. LADY LOU me YUKON From Larry Evans’ popu- lar story “The Silent Lie” THE LIFE STORY OF A GIRL OF THE NORTH- BRN DANCE HALLS, GUTERSON’S: AUGMENTED RUSSIAN ORCHESTRA Overture, “Orpheus”... ++» Offenbach Berceuse, from “Jocelyn” ..+...Godard ner, Harry Morey the feature at the Colonial this week in “Richard the Brazen.” The play is timely in the fact that a big munitions factory plays an important pary Then there is also an autccnebile accidentehat le thrilling. are eee REX Wiliam §. Hart appears at the Rex tp another of hia Weetern playa, in which there is considerable gun play and a few unexpected turns in the action. In “The Silent Man.” as in some of his other film productions, Hart holds up a stage and captures a girl he later marries. the hero, “Silent Bud Marr,” he saves the girl | from the clutches of a dance hall pro- prietor who had beaten Marr out of his money thru « frameup, and was about to take his mine holdings. Marr in nasisted throeut the story by “Grubstake” Higgins, who reveals | his real identity as a United States marshal at the critical moment in a court scene. | A fair comedy rounds out the bill CLASS A Bryant Washburn fs at the Clase A, in, "Skinner's Bubble,” ene of the | poplar Skinner filme. In this pro- | duction Washburn gets into all kinds ot trouble when he takes his first flyer in a wildcat investment. Deacon. Here’s Man Shadowed Kaiser | | * Thin is Victor Morgan, editor of }the Cleveland Press, who has just returned from spending many weeks }on the German frontier, wh he | learned many startling and informa- tive things about inside conditions in Germany today His articles will appear in this pa- per. You, as a patriotic American, will want to read all of them. The first article will be published Wednesday, PORT EMBARGO IS OFF No embargo will be placed on the port of Seattle for the present, as it is believed that freight congestion can be righted without this measure bbing necessary. The decision fol lowed a conference of shipping and railroad men Saturday, brought about by the Chamber of Commerce. The shippers agreed to pool their freight and load every ship to the limit. The railroads agreed to pro: tect them against damage suits arising from contract breaches, THREE SOLDIERS MISSING AFTER ENEMY RAID DONDON, Jan, 28—Three British soldiers were missing after an enemy raid on an advanced post northeast of Langemarck yesterday evening, Mar shal Haig reported today, Around Leverguier stray hostile reconnoiter: ing partios were dispersed by fire at night, { ' t | Y. W. GETS $46,248 | Seattle responded to the call of the |Y OW. CoA | Mere than $46.248 wie raised in j the city between noon Monday and Saturday of last week, In the war Sn ee YY, Seattle's portion of the $4,000,000 fund betng raised thruout the coun- try was $40,000, MAGIC! HAVE IT ON THE DRESSER stop hurting then lift off with fingers | Just drop a little Freezone on that touchy corn, Instantly {t stops ach ing then you lift that corn right off. pain at all! Costs only a, few cents. | Corns Get @ Uny bettle of Freesone for a few cents from any drug stere. Keep it always hafdy to remove hard corns, soft corns, or corns be- tween the tors, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation. Just try it! Freezone is the sensational discov. ory of a Cincinnati genius. WQMIEN! OTHERS! DAUGHTE worn; nervous or trrital who are sub: ject to fits o' melancholy or “blues,” get your blood xamined for 3rd &Universit» You) | Heaters, Blankets, other seasonable articles ment. This store is conducted on a | —8-HOUR DAY— 9a. m. to6 p. m,, inclu Comforts, Rugs and may be added to your account any time without the usual first pay- We Invite the Accounts of All Reputable and Trustworthy Hometarnishers ~adhered-to 8-hour Saturdays. Your old ey Buck’s hase Range ‘The World's Masterpiece Pays for iteelf in fuel saved. steve taken im exchange. A.GOTTSTEIN'| REV. JONES TO PLANT FAREWELL IVY VINE! Delivering the dedicatery sermon at the First Baptist church, Harvard ave, and Seneca st, Sunday morn- ing, the Rev. Carter Helm Jones ap- peared at his final Sunday morning service before going to his new pastorate with the First Baptist church of Philadelphia. Farewell reception will be given to Dr. and Mrs. Jones Monday evening in the Whitman room of the church at 8 o'clock. At 10 o'clock Dr. Jones will plant a remembrance ivy for the B. ¥. P. U. PRIZE AUTO BOBS UP That $4,000 Girls’ War Relief auto refuses to keep out of the spotlight. Here it in again. Attorney Thomas B. MacMahon, representing its owner, City Fireman Frank Rusnak, in a divorce action, now has tt. Friday Superior Judge Jurey ordered it stored, temporarily, in the garage of George W. Miller. George wouldn't receive {t, so the judge gave temporary possession to MacMahon. Mrs. Rusnak, in her complaint for divorce, says that the auto repro- sents the total of the community property. ||Cascarets Work While You Sleep No headache, biliousness, up- set stomach or constipa- tion tomorrow | » Spend 10 cents—feel grand! To night take Cascarets to liven your liver and clean your bowels. Stop the headaches, ‘bilious spells, sour. ness, gases, coated tongue, md breath, sallowness and constipation ~Take Cascarets and enjoy tho nicest, gentlest “inside cleansing” | you ever experienced. Wake up feel jing fine, Cascarets is best cathar: tic for children, ‘Taste like candy No disappointment! Thirty million boxes of this harmless, famous cath artic are sold each year now. 1,000,000 Service Men Fail to Take a ar insurance One million men in the nation’s service have not availed themselves of the benefits of the government in- surance act. The war risk bureau, in Washington, ts writing the fami- Mes of these men asking them to urge the men to obtain policies. February 12 ts the last day on Which men who entered the service prior to October 15 may make appli- cation. A man entering the service is given 120 days in which to apply. The largest policy is for $10,0 On the payment of a little over $3.00 & month a soldier under 30 may obtain a $5,000 policy. The policy ts convertible, after the war, into any of the ordinary forms of insurance. The state defense council has been asked to urge relatives of service men to write and tell them to take out government insurance. URNITURE CO \F [Seartce's POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS BLOOD PAISUNING prong * Hamlin’s Wizard Oil a Safe First Aid Treatment 7 How often lockjaw and blood pgk soning result from the neglect of a" slight scratch or little cut! Hamlin’s Wizard Oil is a fe and effective first aid treatment. It is a powerful antiseptic and should be applied im- mediately to wounds of this kind to prevent danger of infection. It is soothing and healing and quickly drives out pain and inflam- .| mation in cases of sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, bites and stings. Just as reliable, too, for stiff neck, sore feet, cokl sores, canker sores, ear ache and Get it from druggists for 30 cents. If not satisfied, return the bottle and get your money back. Ever constipated or have sick headache? Just try: Wizard Liver Whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30 cents. Guaranteed—Advertisement. CLOSE OMAHA HOTEL FOR SELLING BOOZE OMAHA, Jan. 28.—The Millard ho- tel, containing 800 rooms, has been closed for ene year, the furniture and fixtures ordered sold for the ben- efit of the school fund, and a $300 fine assessed against the proprietors for alleged violation of the lquor laws. The hotel has been the object of a number of raids and convictions since the passage of the dry law. The owner, Rome Miller, has signified his intention of appealing the case to the supreme court WILL SHARE HER HOME WITH VICTIM OF WAR Has your boy or husband left you lonely and penniless to go to war? The Red Cross, 349 Henry build- ing, received an offer by a Seattle woman to share her home with the wife or mother of some man in the army. Particulars can be obtained at that address. SEND HIM REMINDER Representative John F. Miller to- day is in receipt of a telegram from the King County Democratic club, re- minding him of his pledge to the vot- ers of his district to stand by Presi- dent Wilson in all matters coming before congress affecting the con- duct of the war, Lodge Cafe F Cabaret—Dancing wore Largest Dry Cabaret ~ FOR LUMBARO Try Musterole. See How = Quickly It Relieves ‘ou just rub Musterolein briskty, usually the pain is gone—a pete: ‘comfort comes totakeitsplace.. Musterole is a clean, white made withoil of mustard. Use it of mustard plaster. Will not blister, ann serene Pye fn u “They will gladly tell pou whe. it gives from sore | ] ing comp: quest Swift's Pike and Ww vices tem estat closit trans Or perm the s inter a tra real |

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