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~~ ee eT i = ———— — —_ =r BRITAINLOST | Picture Patter | FOURTH UNION [Only 125 American Ships|ciows « noto asking them to send ents to the Hollywood Red Cross Sunk by Submarines in return for it, Offeials of the chap- | terpaay that about $200 ts received If youwere a hobo, arrested for loaf- | _WAMeRnORONS ae Amer | rier : “1 &. can shipping suffered comparatively ‘* . ing, rescued by a millionaire and little at the hands of German subma| porig purke im 7 ; . . . . e © impersonates a young _ a week’s chance in his palatial e, would you improve it? WASITINGTON, March 28.--Amer rines during the war, according to 1 who is kidnaped ied b figures on allied and neutral ship |! Whe I npet Gus seaieted, Uy inerhermit in her new photoplay, “Good Gracious, Annabelle.” lomnos, made avaitble today, Only 125 American vessels were lost, as YOu SHOULD SEE compared with 2,147 British, Inton:| $ M ° ; sat sta, 5.967 tona i) Rogers’ witty comment won't nage figures wv 986,967 ton Repose 91 Me wo against Britain's 7,818,870, navy de sa tn dnevion eiens-of the 8 partment figures show Fol ‘They'll be carried each week Neutrals and some of the amaller/in an animated weekly put out by ; entente nations suffered more than | !Pary Ford. oe jthe United States, Greece lost 162/ 1, yanaas City there's a movie ex- vessels and Norway 781. ‘hibitor who thinks the censors are @ | ing .. 71,995 ers IES SORTER 6 | ance . wees B | PROGRAMS TODAY | | faced | LINERTY—Charlee Ray tn |Japan Sheriff's Son"; | Belgiui ney Drew in | | i= Pathe Weekly. | Portugal j CLEMMER—Tom Greece | West, Young Russia . i oF - | eniered plot ae > COLISHUN— Taylor Holmes ta "It" . } | Denmark ? Holland |Spain .. WOOLLY DOG ADOPTS LITTLE JACKRABBITS } le comedy. | REX—Grace Darmond Every Woman Wants”; Chaplin in “A Night in the Show,” FORT WORTH, ‘Tex, March 28,| | comedy. | = “Rachael,” a woolly poodle dog | [MTTLE—Nesimeve Bre ter |belonging to Mra, Mary Cofbert,|| Byeus “wid Geme te Asse.” |near here, is mothering seven little | | | Jackrabbits and doing the job In a | |manneér which evident!, pleases the | | colored long-eared tribe, o-* Least For Sore, Tired, Swollen Feet; for Aching, T Calloused Feet or Painful Corns---Use ‘‘Tiz!’’ “1 ose Tiz’ when my feet ache, bum or puff up. It's fine!” ome Again - Smith” fhich opens here Saturday morning. It’s a clever story—you'll like it. FRIDAY—LAST TIMES __, Frederick in “Out of the Shadow” ‘Totals, covering sinkings from Au-|bit too particular, So he stands be | gust, 1914, to November 1, 1918, are: side the projecting machin® and | Countries: Ships. Tonr whenever ho thinks there's an objec | United States ...... 125 985,967 tlonable xeene coming, he holds his Great Britain (mer. hat in front of the lens. | chant)... . 2475 7,747,936 —— Great Britain (fish Tr, | was born in Missourt |“Unele Tom's Cabin,” }ed” with road companies for several | years and finally found herself play- ing Ingenues in a amall stock com but she had her'eye on Bigger things, So she thin city at the Pantages theatre. * Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, tender feet, tired feet. | Good-bye, corns, callouses, banions Use “Tiz” and wear smaller shors Use “Tix” and forget your foot feet feel. rockers, settees and slip- and raw spota, No more shoe ticht-| “Cet a 25-cent box of “Ti” now at ‘ ness, no more limping with pain or/any druggist or department store also, await you. drawing up your face in agony.| Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad “Tis” is magical, acts right off.|feet, feet that never swell, never “Tiz” draws out all the polsonous | hurt, never get tired. Beware of exudations which puff up the feet. ' Imitations! Waiting for your shoes to be repaired —at Hougen’s—is as pleasant as LAST TIMES waiting in a hotel lobby. Ast Tin .106 Madison Street cid-Stomach Now Quickly Relieved painful attacks of indiges- , Reart-burn, beiching, disgusting Fepeating; that puffy bloated, feeling after eating, dyspep- =. TOM MOORE @0 WEST, YOUNG MAN *TOM* says they are going to have some HOME MADE FRUIT~ ED DIVINITY PUFFS on sale Saturday at.45¢ per pound; made with Egg Whites, Candied Cherries and Cane Sugar, Now, wouldn't that make you |hungry enough to go down to BLANCHARD'S at Second and dames and get a goodly supply? TOMORROW GERALDINE FARRAR IN and even heart failure can be traced directly to Acid-Stomach, Avoid these dangers—<on't tet acid-stomach wreck your health. Don’t drag out your days feeling all in, down and out, weak and ailing. Keep the vital spark flashing. Hat the things you like and digest your food in comfort. Then youl fee! fme—be fit—mentally alert—have pep and punch—the power and will to do things. ries because it absorbs the hurt} Take HATONIC and give your i ox acid in the stomach and | stomach the help to put ft in a fine, yes out the bloat and gas. You! healthy condition so that it will di Know you Imve a stomach, s0| gest your food perfectly and make pain you'll feel. Besides, it|every mouthful you eat register from more serious ail-| 100% in enriching your blood and Riicss it is a scientific fact | building up your bodily strength. iD OMACH frequently cre-| Get a big box of EATONIC TAB- its which LETS from “SHADOWS” MILTON SILLS TOM SANTSCHI P.S. Of course, PILL MODLTON can get a CHIEF NUT |BAR from TOM every day in the week and Sundays, too, The Golden Taste That it has that certain individuality which distinguishes the rare from the ordinary is one way of describing the “Just Right” flavor ef Golden West Coffee, Golden West TRE “JUST RIGHT BRAND THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1919. The Female | ‘ - | | | a “stunt” performer, Mise White * Pearl White has appeared in | many continued stories that her oa reer may be described as 4 series wortaln. makes daring leaps, can stage realistic a fistic battle as any male hero in the movies ‘This is the truth about Pearl: ried—made her first appearance the speaking stage as little Eva She pany in Stanford, Conn * * COLISEUM Taylor Holmes’ new comedy, “It's | clean comedy typo which is always welcome and sometimes hard to find. | Holmes, as Orlando Winthrop, is Bostonian, | 'US»tful role in this photoplay, that reared in a careful domestic atmos- phere, Winthrop becomes addicted misery. Ah! how comfortable your to the study of bugs to the extent the son of a wealthy that his father believes him to worthless. by his father, ‘The ranch hands do not take kind ly to his arrival and endeavor make him the butt of a number the settiement to boet. oe Lin (Char! most fi Sheriff's Son,” he plays the role Hal Rutherford, chief of the cattle rustlers, and one of the most im portant figures in the * * Pearl White’s Career Really a Series of Serials in Films There isn't anything Peart can't do—she rides, swims, shoota, She ie not mar “troup In order to show his dad what stuff he is really made of, W' throp goes West and undertakes the management of a big ranch owned jokes. He gets the drop| Having passed the national board practical on them at every turn and steals the lof censorship the film will be shown heart of the pretty school teacher of . French i# one Of the | attention for the mother and new. villaing in the films. At the Liberty this week in “Th Doug Fairbanks ETHEL CLAYTON' Pearl White, the moet popular movie serial actreas on the screen. As is @ female Doug Fairbanks. + s+ & #0 | decided one day to go into plctures— Just lke that of |, Ofdinarily history would tell that | this young stock actress was usuc- censful in her efforts, but the fact is that she was engaged at the second studio she entered. Theodore Whar- ton, then a prominent figure with Pathe, needed just such a type as Mina White, and gave her a small | role in a picture he was making. on| ‘This waa her start, and, from that in| time on, her climb up the ladder of } fame was so rapid that it wae diffi | cult to follow her. Miss White is to- day the queen of movie serials, and her latest picture, “The Lightning Raider,” is at present running in * * | STRAND * tion, in “The Marriage Price.” Miss Ferguson has a new and 6e of & young society girl who is im- poverished when her father is ruined and after he commits auicide she ts be upon ber resources for a livell- hood. in- | Manager John Hamrick announces an unusual attraction at the Rex to Saturday. “Birth” is the og | title of the picture to be shown. to all patrons over the age of 18. The picture emphasizes the neces sity of the proper medical care and o|born babe. Childbirth itself is reab of Jstically pictured. On Saturday morning a committee of Seattle physicians will witness the picture and the ladies of Seattle are Charles Ray, tn this picture, is a | invited to visit the morning matinee young man who has inherited a |free as the guests of great fear from his mother, who witnessed an attack on his father |\CLEMMER Eis splendid | before the boy‘s birth. battle to overcome his weakness » big feature the Fourth—'twixt Pike and Pine HALE HAMILTON “Johnny onthe Spot” FATTY ARBUCKLE International News —and-— Girls—Girls—Girls It’s an L-KO COMEDY ALL THE WAY amos tand COLONIA HIO=Z 4>w Mr. Hamrick. . Friday night will be the last *\ chance to see Tom Moore at the |Clemmer in “Go West, Young Man,” starting Saturday morning “Shadows,” with Geraldine Farrar starred, will be the attraction. Farrar’s new starring vehicle is laid in the Northland. As the story opens she is shown as the wife of & wealthy New York man—her Past (when she was @ dance hall girl in Alaska) entirely forgotten. The appearance of a former dance hall owner almost reveals her past, but thru clever scheming she keeps the secretly from her husband. . | COLONIAL | A young man who believes in tak- ing life easy is the character Hale Hamilton is playing at the Coloni. jin “Johnny on the Spot." His argu- ment is that all things come to him who waits, What suddenly changes him into an ardent, forceful bust ness man—ecager to cram as much into & minute as the average man Puts into a day—tis told as the story unravels, | WHEN THE DREWS | STOPPED SMILING jing on the speaking stage in “Keep Her Smiling,” lost their golden emiles when two burly policemen armed with a search warrant forced hotel in Omaha and arrested the ac tor for having liquor in his posses sion. Mi Drew was release’ but the Uquor GUARD FORESTS FROM AIR | WASHINGTON, March 28—Ex-} periments in the use of aircraft as) Julla Dean and Edwin Arden wfl| forest fire patrols will be conducted | & Bear,” which opened at the Colt finish a three days’ run at the Strand! jointly by the war department and | soum Wednesday, belongs to that /Tiday night, and Saturday morning | tne department of agriculture, it was | Elsie Ferguson will be the attrac-| eid officially teday, Mr. and Mra, Sidney Drew, appear-| their way into the Drew suite at a’ was confiscated, eee Manager John Hamrick, of the | Rex theatre, has invited the la- | | dies of Seattle to attend a free | || matinee at 10 a, m. Saturday to | | witness the firs rfofmance of | | the photodrama “Birth.” | —— ana Park Natatorium’ opens March 29th.—Advertisement, DIRECTION J SEN te VON EXTRA! A SATURDAY OPENIN | Just to give this big pleture an added day | —in that splendid Saturday, Evening Post love romance of this pretty actress with two suitors, a doughboy and a millionaire “Pettigrew’s Girl” LOCAL MOTION PICTURES Consecration ef the New - Bishop of Baker City Decoration of a Cup With the Distinguished Service Medal MACK SENNETT COMEDY PATHE NEWS WALLACE on the WURLITZER - “ —_—_ ‘REILLY'S WASH DAY Friday—Last Timies—“Ruling Passions” Pia ELSIE FERGUSO Brilliant and Talented Dramatic Star, in _ PRICE’ With a fine love story, a big cast and superb tings, which duplicate the millionaire homes Lakewood—all especially made