The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 22, 1919, Page 3

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Such a Hit That It Stays a Few Day bést picture of his season :-: s Longer “THE LOVE BURGLAR” You saw him in person at the Screen Ball—now see this fine actor in the Symphony Orchestra Coliseum’s News Service to each of them. terman General | service. BEATTY AND HAIG TO =| MAJ. HENDERSON To RECEIVE EARLDOMS| = RETURN HOME SOON LONDON, July 22.—The Times re- Maj. John M. Henderson, Seattle f ported yesterday that earidoms| physician, who went to France as ‘would be conferred on Field Marshal | chief of the surgical service of base ‘Haig and Admiral Beatty. Parlia-| hospital 118, and who has been in 4 it, according to the newspaper,|San Francisco on leave for some THE BEST THERE IS, ALWAYS 4 A] Ae a hit in screen as in printed Wallace on the Wr-rlitzer “SHE SCARCELY KNOWS WHERE HER NEXT LIMOUSINE IS COMING FROM!” A tale of big The sensational novel is just as big form. Pathe News “Will be asked to grant 100,000 pounds | time, has been assigned to the Let hospital, at the - Haig’s condition was improved, al-| Presidio, it was announced Monday. tho he has canceled his engagements | Maj. Henderson expects to resume “for several days. He has a slight | his practice in Seattle as soon as he fever. He collapsed after Saturday's | has been discharged from military | ‘Theda Bara is an accomplished linguist She speaks Hnglish, French, Italian, Russian and has lied Latin The second of the Upton Sin clair stories to be put into screen | form will be “King Cole,” a story based on mining conditions tn Colo | ra eee Clara Kimball have to pay 25,000) extra every picture she rel New York courts have decreed that this sum shall go to Louis Selanick, who held a contract with her. sex. ; i / ' ) Dy Mildred Harris Chaplin will have a Japanese tea room in connection with her dressing room at the Mayer studi Spike Robinson, prize fighter and film actor and Harold Lockwood's widow were recently married. Now Spike is stepdad to a husky nine old tad, Anna Little is the latest film | player to be seized with the “seriat | }bug.” Miss Little is to appear tn a serial produced by the Nation Film corp “Every Star Her Own Press} Agent” is the title of a book Peart} White is going to write | About $25,000 will be spent on bullding one scene, and 2,800 per-| sons will appear at one time tn a| new picture now being made by : Geraldine Farrar Dorothy Dalton’s genius again finds adequate expres- of dead sion in her latest photoplay, “Other Men’s Wives,” in which | she portrays the tale of an impoverished orphan society girl who is wholly dependent upon her wealthy associates for Canada, for forthcomt § tence, and who becomes involved in a cruel mesh of feature, “Billy Jim |cireumstances from which she eventually emerges trium- phant and with honor to herself. “Other Men's Wives” play | BLANCHE SWEET TO at the Strane until Friday night. BE STAR OF PATHE a song NEM Prorortars | Glimpses a6 Photep | NEW PHOTOPLAYS | for the production of pictures built | Fred Stone, a company have number of sc around this popular actress, who has | gp ____ | COLONIAL reached a splendid point in her | sereen achievement by her work in TODAY'S PROGRAMS | | Inevitably, sooner or later, we o | | must reap as we have sown; there is Rupert Hughes’ tragic creation, * Unpardonable Sin The Jlanche Sweet Productions is the name of the} | company and the first stories already | have been selected Miss Sweet, who is much of a stu-/ | dent, as her own a of what bet | ter pictures shoul, © in quality, nar: rative and direction, and now she is} Ba ate n ie } will be productive of even better, COLONIAL—PFrank Keenan in “Gates -— a Anite Stewart in “Mary | th Events, ape, Upon this theme tes | ass,” playing at the Colonial, is| Frank Keenan, who is the has the role of a “tin-horn | " who almost loses the love | |#nd respect of his own daughter by | | | his crooked dealings, “The Lady Bell Gaument Graphic. Keenan is given splendid support | : || Dorothy Da Again | cture Patter Ii Demonstrated in Play at Strand } Satisfactory Terms Always THe GROTE-RANKINCO OTTO F. KEGEL. President STORE HOURS FROM 9 A. M. TO 5 P. M. Solid Oak Dining Room Suite As Illustrated $49.50 4 Chairs, Table and Buffet Again the ANNEX STOR demonstrates its ability of doing the unusual —for there is more than mere price reduction to the selling of these waxed oak — Dining Room Suites. It is the presentation of quality furniture at a remarkably low price in the face of a rising furniture market—such value will be hard to duplicate in the future. Twenty suites are available at the special price quoted—$49.50 for six pieces. Grote-Rankin — Pike St. and Fifth Ave. — Grote-Rankin ‘ pictures than her previous successes. of Brass.” Mr, Keenan will «p- | DADDY LONG LEGS | ron. REX—Sylvia Bremer in “A Hoase | | ‘The Best Man”; Harold Lioyd | comedy; Bray Pictographs. | “Daddy Long Legs,” produced by | || Mantes mers is “The Hed | | Marshall Nellan and featuring Mary | CLASS Docgias Fairbanks im | | Pickford, bids fair to be one of the| | “Wild Woolly”; Educational | | greatest money makers in the his- | weed Wey: tory of the motion picture business. | AFTERNOON keeping his promise to the woman| haye netted its owners several mil- who gave up wealth and a social po-| jon dollars. sition to marry him, he continues | _ warren Kerrigan in| MAKING LARGE MONEY|CATCH MAN IN HALL; —|15-YEAR-OLD GIRL known she was at a street ¢ room of G. Johnson, Welcome hotel/and Mrs. Charles Bateman, 8115]and bareheaded. She is of very annex, Monday morning, Albert| Ninth ave. S. W., who has not been|complexion, and talks with a | AND i cation Saicialacn m| Up to date the gross receipts on thid | ity "Sout. ths halla at the een by Brown, 25, was arrested while prowl-|seen since Saturday, when it was! lisp, EVENING | immeore TF (. [Production have been $760,000. | cergt, Jonathan Bjarnason and Pa- ‘The picture was sold to the First Na-|troimen J, R. Moore and J. O. Neal. hopes fo reform him. Instead of} outlived “Daddy Long Legs” will | when searched at the police station, pockets. SUSPECT HE IS THIEF SOUGHT BY POLICE] teins sousnt by the ponies, nko was wearing a blue sul Suspected of the robbery of the} Pearl Bateman, 15, daughter of Mr. coverall trimmed in red, and was b | Anita Stewart has a very pleasing | tional Exhibitors’ circuit for $250,000| 4 a " cording to the story he told the rs ‘ TODAY role in “Mary Regan” at the Liberty |and unquestionably is the best in-| police, he Nitiven here fiom Pow: A WEDNESDAY this week. Mary’s mother marries| vestment they ever made. It {s not | tello, recently, “broke, but happy.” * Ni! THURSDAY a crook because she loves him and| improbable that before its usefulness | Ho is held on an open charge. § Pe hypodermic outfit was found in his his life, of crime. The mother dies and he Is sent to | prison, From then on the story cen | ters around Mary and her efforts to make something of herself in spite of circumstances, | Miss Stewart plays Mary. CLEMMER The men in “The Down and Out’ “Pep” club, Tom Moore's “hangout,” in his err neat ahi new photoplay, “The City of Com. rades,” at the Clemmer this week, look like respectable citizens the day after a Liberty loan drive. They} all wear buttons Some wear blue | stars, other red stars and the most } influential, because of their greater | service to the cause, gold stars. Th | blue star signifies three months’ a six | stinence from booze, the re¢ months, while the gold star means five-year ride on the water we | A special attraction at the Clem mer this week is the persona ance of Tincher. Miss also appears on the screen in a com edy, “Mary Moves In.” happens when the Tenth a compound fracture— DOROTHY And Also in Her Latest Christio Special Hit Comedy | COLISEUM Tj “The “Love Burglar” is play ing at the Coliseum. In | picture Wallace Reid appears la wealthy society idler who imper-) 9 |sonates a crook. He enters the un | derworld to find his young brother, who is or carousing party. He] finds hig brother and at the same —ALSO— time falls in love with a young girl who is in the dive. Of course things become very complicated until Wally TOM | finally admits he isn’t a crook at all, the girl confesses she is a novelist MOORE in search of material for a novel she jis writing. In the Saturday Evening Post Story by Basil King | | REX | Love, marriage and divorce—these jare the three subjects taken up by the writer of “A House Divided,” photo-dramatized by Anthony Paul | Kelly, author of “Three Faces East “THE CITY » big Broadway hit, and produc by J. Stuart Blackton | Sylvia Bremer, Herbert Rawlin-| son and Lawrence Grossmith are the OF | three players who form the triangle, beauty, youth and age, Beauty mar bd ries age—but it is youth who event C E ually wing out | MOORE False shame and baneful prudery are pilloried as the cause of our chil-| dren's downfall in Open Your Eyes,” a feature film which is proving a big awing card at the Moore this week. | This film been produced under | the supervision and with the co-oper- | ation of the United States Public Health serv It is a part of the| government's campaign against the appalling conditions and the spread ing evil of lack of sex hygiene. | ppears at the Mis a mystery play. Kerrigan has the role of a young secret service agent who is forced at the point of a gun into marriage with a girl he oa never seen before. “The Best Man” closes Tuesday night and the new show which crea Wednesday will star Vivian Martin "in “An {unocent Adventuress,” Strand Weekly. There's a play, here now, with magnificence of in- vestiture, a supeflative production, costly settings, a beautiful star and a real good analysis of what Larry Semon Comedy. NOW HERE IN Commandment sustains DALTON In Conjunction With His Latest Photo- play Success ij “Gates of Brass” --and with our NC Ocean Fliers A, fact: Ofthe15men ontheNC-1, NC-3 and NC-4, twelve took Fatimas to keep them company on that long, lonely daring flight. FATIMA —‘just enough Turkish’?

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