The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 28, 1918, Page 3

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1—Douglas Fairbanks in “He Comes Up Smiling,” Liberty, Strand. in “The Marriage Ring, 4—Edith seum, 6—Earle Williams in “The Girl in His Devil's Double,” Rialto. 9—Norma Talmadge in LIBERTY ‘The attraction at the Liberty Sun @ay is Douglas Fairbanks in Comes Up Smiling.” “He He plays the role of Jerry Martin on the screen) |as he did on the stage in the original produ New never have had a chance to come up smiling if it had not been the Liberty 1914. Jerry ction at York, in 2—Scene From “Just for Tonight,” y in “The Silent Woman,” Mission. theatre, ‘The sweetest, dest of a loaf of is the crust. You may eat the orust of a bakery loaf and \ enjoy ite Because—No dust mor dirt has ever Teached it. It' as clean as the center of the loaf. KEEP THE HUN ON THE RUN For many weeks now the enemy has been on the run, but the best authorities agree that they have considerable fight in them and that the full force of America will have ory decisive. boys at blood, we at hor out ce has been at of the Fourth Liberty if » the vic our pa etri the big war-time advantage of the bread that's wrapped chinery measures boa paper to s hairs There's no waste whatever. And 8 dng avoids the use of string. This wonterful machine wraps 1,200 to 1,500 loaves ean hour.Saves man poweTe the front pour out must continue our tr tl a keep the Hun on the run First National Bank First Ave. at James St. Established 1882. Savings Department Open Saturday From 6 P. M. to 8 P. M. > be brought That means that while their lasting So buy Bonds Loan and help SUNDAY—FOUR DAYS ONLY EDITH STOREY in THE SILENT WOMAN A ROMANCE OF THE PINE WOODS—THE STORY OF A WOMAN WHO COULD (AND KEEP A SECRET FOURTH, PIKE AND UNION Continuous ll to 11 DID) STAR—SATURDAY SEPT. 28, 1918 he Moth,” Lite. canary. One ‘morning when Jerry) was giving Agamemnon her bath, Agumemnon took advantage of an unguarded moment and flew out of the cage. Jerry chased her into the fields and just as he caught the bird and sat down by a brook to rest, a tramp persuaded Jerry that Aga memnon had won her freedom. Jerry let her go, determining himself to stay away from his cage, and with the adoption of the hobo, Mike, Jerry Martin became a knij of the road. oe CLEMMER at Levy's Orpheum, 5—William Farnum in “Riders of the Purple Sage,” Coli- Yor Husbands Only,” 3—Enid Bennett and Jack Holt Rex. 8—Bill Hart in “The RB -- ——* | TODAY" 3 ~ prog RAMS LIBERTY porothy Dalton in “Vt Te Vearle Williams in othe | Girt in His Hou y M—Win. Farnam in “Riders of the P arle Williams comes to the Clem. | be Th: lov who, mer starting today in His House.” It is the the rich young man t nly girl,” exiles him distant land. Returning, he finds the old love dead, half his fortune stolen by a rascally lawyer and a beautiful and unknown girl mistress in his mansion, Love of the “girl in his house” develops with his unraveling of the mystery of his lost millions and of her t to his home, until with the de tion of his love, he is confronted with the knowledge that her father and the man who robbed him are the same person her since childhood a man of mystery she has ver seen, who b thief to give her wealth and position LEVY'S ORPHEUM Tom Moore will be the attraction at Levy's Orpheum for the week starting Sunday, in his latest offe: ing to the screen, “Just for Tonight many foolish things that | young men do when they fall in love | with a girl! whom they have never met, but when it comes to pulling the foolish stuff Tom Moore has them all backed off the map. In order to gain admission into her home he poses as an English lord. Things run along very smoothly un ul the wi of the real lord puts in an appearance, then the fun starts, Amid a whirlwind of action, love and mystery, Tom Moore stum. bles onto a gang of crooks who have been looting the family’s jewel box with the result that he gets the girl and at the same time gets in strong with tee family COLISEUM William Farnum is the s picturization of Zane Grey's story of the Mormons, ‘The Riders of the Purple Sage.” which is the attrac tion at the Coliseum, starting Satur day It is the story of a exas ranger who spent his life king ve! nee on the group of Mormons who had stolen his sister and carried her off to Cottonwoods on the Utah border The Lassit mighty man, of whom a friend’ ¢ claimed on one o¢ “It's siter, Jane, and when h rides like at means hel Lassiter reach ed the Withersteen estate, where his sister Millie had last b nh se It was here he met Jane, and here also that he fought a group of attle rustlers led by the mysterious Masked Rider. . ar in the man is sion, COLONIAL H. B. Warner is the star of Man,” which comes to th for four days starting Sun¢ er plays the role of Arnold L' Homme dieu, the upright t heir appar ent to the pastorate village church, who is expe n college because of his de shield a chum from disgrace. Jack O'Dale will be heard in a new program of selections on the Colonial Wurlitzer hone REX Mildred Harris is the star of Husbands Only,’ which comes to the Rex. As the story goes, convent-bred Toni had been taking vengean |Rolin Van D'Arcy for making a wreck of her heart. Her flirtation was carried on under ber own hus band’s very nose. D'Arcy spr net for her and it was ay nt 1 | would have to pay. But Samuel was a broad-minded husband amd very | much in love with his little flirtatious wife were quietly smoothed over on so things TRAND “The Marriage Rin, the new play at the Strar featuring Enid Bennett Holt, When the Mertons and her were in a hotel in Some Hugo, but her lo died. ,In the strug und Hugo over a gun, there we shot and Hugo fell to the floor left for Honolulu on the first boat On the way she met Rodney Heathe and his mother, and throwing her past from her memory, she made a mad grasp at romance, but she had a hard fight to win. . . is the title of Sunds ind Jack opens, Anne Hugo, Francisco Anne had married had long between Anne story husband San years befo! since | MISSION The Mission opens Sunday with a | picture-drama starring Edith Storey in “The Silent Woman,” a story of a clerk in a Hudson Bay trading post | known as “the angel of the lumber jacks.” Nan MacDonald was happy | looking post until John Lowery came there with his wife and child, “Nan's good- hoe me a! | Ameriean after motherless men at the | NDAY'S PROGRAMS Douglas Fairbanks Smiling Williams in “The |. Warner in “God's MISSION—Falith jlent Woman.” LITTLE—Norma Talmadge in “The Storey in “The Moth.” REX—Mildred Harris in “For Has- bands Only.” ! KRIALTO—BIM Hart in “The Devil's Donble,” ness to the child drew her into the family life of the strangers. She learned many things there, the tell | ing of which would wreck a woman's | honor and a man’s life, and when the | death of the woman left Nan free to} love the man, she still t the bury den of keeping that woman's name clean. eee LITTLE At the Little theatre, at 416 st. under the management of Jos. | Danz, the change of program for Sunday has as the feature Norma Talmadge in a of modern 0. clety life called Moth,” which is unusually well played, and a com. featuring Fatty Arbuckle. This| program remains four days | | | | Pike | story The First Sunday iN) Hart will pb Devil's Double," a W drama, and with him May Murray in ‘The Bride's Awakening At Imperial Dorothy Dalton will n “Tryout Fear. and in “The F i) oat tt Hart w n in “Over the Great Divide Bennett in “The Last the Dream Doug las F 1 “The Lamb,” an| American comedy drama, and on the] bill Mabel Normand will "| Joan of Plattsburg.” tig Four theatres, all ry, change Rialto B shows same seen in Fireman Injured Fighting Flames in Baptist Church, G. EB. Finn, fireman, of truck No. stath it Third and Pine, who sus} njuries in combatin ning fire that wroug’ 100 damage to the Swedish Bap | church, at Ninth ave. and reported in an improv-| city hor | ned tained severe the Friday ¢ tist Pine st., is on in the n was window thrown when tunable of a hose carry tream of water, the tendons and| 1 the nozzle powerful lass severing » $5,000 org damage is p insurance. “Must and Will Win,” Says Stefansson “The allies must win and will win. | The boys there’ are fighting glorious! must all in our] power to them Vilhjal mur Stefansson, Arctic at] the Chamber of Commerce members council luncheon Friday Let us crush German militarisn off the face of the earth and put a protectorate over Germany that will last at least 100 years, We should show our contempt for any one who in this hour would consent to any of the allies su for peace,” said Dr. Mark A. Matthews | n was a total loss rtially covered by ‘over We assist said explorer Surrender Is Enemy Way Out— CHICAGO. Daniels! “Nothing but | an unconditional on the part of the can end the war,” declared Secretaray of the Navy’ Jot Dani addressing the 44th convention of the association, conelud bankers to the Sept. 28 surrende central powe phus unnual ankers Daniels was cheered, He ed his address by urging tl to give their hearty support Fourth Liberty Loan Otto H. Kahn, New spoke “The Men ism and Bureaucracy York banker on » of Paternal The West Washington convention of the Women's Christian Temper ange union will hold its 35th annual meeting in Port Angeles on October 114. | earth | where | man commander from STARTING SATURDAY Four Days Only Greater Coliseum Symphonic Orchestra 30—ARTISTS—30 MARIUS BRAMBILLA Conductor Zane Grey’s famous novel of early Mormon days picturized in seven parts Fifth at Pike Continuous 11 to Admission 25c Children 10c DILL FARNUM = Bioe—> ° HE HAS RIGHT SPIRIT Charles B. Roos, an employe of Big War Display at the military. When the Harrison Dye works, subscribed frederick @ Nelson’s cos: of one man't. equipment to a $100 Liberty Bond Saturday One of the larsest lone and then multiplies it by | altho earning but $15 a week, Roos? plete exhibitions of eral million, an estimate of the| employer called up The Star to tell equipment in cost of war can be made. of the man’s patriotism. Ger- (/in the how windows of Loy omnnne = - patessonenes — = — & Nelson's department teen windows are give display. ‘The feature made into a with the use Other windo known piece of equipment used by one sees the If We Understood We Would Dig Up} and most com- and navy on display Frederick oldiers are army Seattle, i Iso rreatest Maj. } sineer store, Nine= ver to the window has typical battle of modeled can- ws contain man ) B. f Ss. en ‘ ce. They a been and are scene a cheerful (| vas at home ind fearless their best, in If the Americans realized there no necessity of war week A and every St. Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co. Firebacks, linings and repairs for all days would see each Kinds of stoves, every quota reached and fur- ) Water AAR backs coils put in and con- nected. cos this more would be fund few ‘drives’ lasting LIBERTY LOAN September 28th |Believe Confession | Wasn’t Complete the part of De Investigation on Lieutenant William B. Kent of the ttle police forec sulted in the belief that Edelstein, famou patriotic alleged to have ands of — dollars Liberty Bonds and securities, made an incomplete confession of his crimes. Several — burglaries by Kent in Vanco Edelstein frequently traced to him, Ede held in the city jail burg stolen Subscribe for your Fourth Liberty Loan Bonds through this bank. Member lar,” who is thou worth ¢ has un may be Visits in Seattle After Meeting Sub James J. Doyle, United States navy Heutenant, connected with the torpe steamship W eattle, after times in submarine Doyle Westover when that vessel was July 11, and interviewed the iin tia ceoe a lifeboat ance to you fro i companies De Federal Reserve Bank and Washington Bank Depositors’ Guatantee Fund. AND PIKE ST. over, is in the was on the sunk Ger exciting “IF I HURT YOU, DON’T PAY ME.” message of deliver- the fear that ac- rations FILL, CROWN and absolutely without s but acute absce AC rhwa eth pain in all « conditions. ‘The proposed schedule of eliminat ing all delivery of ba xceptin in inter-state commerce between 7 p uF shine’ Mik m id 6 Pp. m. Satur high-class, guaranteed nechorah » Mondays has Peet STERLING DENTISTRY | The Scandinavian American Bank Branch at Ballard Seattle, Wash. ur eity for

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