The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 25, 1919, Page 11

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Saturday—The Sensational Robert W. Chambers Novel of the Victim of a Secret and Loveless Marriage HIRENE CASTLE “THE FIRING LINE” Showing gorgeous New York and Palm Beach scenes. Women patrons are ad- vised, before coming, to read the three solid pages in the July Ladiés’ Home Jour- nal describing Mrs. Vernon Castle’s magnifigent gowns worn in “The Firing Line.” Friday—Last Times—Dorothy Dalton in “Other Men’s Wives” lyer’s Wife Killed |WOULD GIVE YANKEES in Plane Accident! YEAR'S EXTRA WAGES eeoeracn rend ao Man..| WASHINGTON, July 25.—Sailors, July 5 journeying from nnipeg . ‘ the Brandon fair in an airplane, | *diers and pbs 584 Mrs. Kerr and “Buster” Cross were | "urses serving during the war would Killed and Lieut. Kerr seriously in-| be allowed one year's extra pay by a jured here when their machine met) bill introduced by Senator Gronpa, an accident near here Thurs-/of North Dakota. marines | Yen, Herman, a mole may be either * a beauty spot or a blemish; it de- | pends on whether it is located on a sg | pretty girl or a mere man. think of advertis- Friday—Vivian Martin, for the last times, in “An Innocent Adventuress” | * + SATURDAY | A rip-snorting drama with stunts that will make you GEORGE WALSH * * —IN— “Putting One Over” In which the hero wakes up and imagines he’s asleep—until he has to rescue a beautiful girl! + &£ &$ & & | built in 1909 for the A.-Y-P. Ernest P, Russell on the Wuilitzer ‘CONDEMN OLD U AMPHITHEATRE Famous Structure in Use Since A. Y. P. Fair ‘The open ar amphitheatre at the University of Washington has fallen under the hammer of the condemna- tion officer of the city. Pliny J. Allen, chairman of the citizen's committee for the pageant to be given August 3, has announced, as the result of the city’s action, that the pageant will be held in Denny | field, on the university campus. The pageant was to have been held in the amphitheatre, a structure Tt has served for years as the scene of out- of-doors fetes and celebrations. Theo- dore Roosevelt and other notables have spoken from its rostrum. A Dramatic Sensation, Starring Evelyn Nesbit Thaw Charlie Chaplin AND A FAST, SNAPPY WESTERN 4th at Pike 10c dohn Dana, Mer. Week Day Matinees, THE SEATTLE STAR—-FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1919. v———— - Mary MacLaren found i wouldn't let her into the movies, at first. and amiable, no matter how tempered. “Ther right.” Mary Macfaren of the movies| started her career in the chorus of a| Winter Garden show in New York. | She smiled so prettily that every one said she should be in the movies. So she packed up and hiked away to Los Angeles. But when she got there the direc tors all wanted to make pictures, said the director, with vixens in them—vixens who bit} |their fingers and tore up the carpets | and seowled fiercely. They set up the camera and sald, | ile, Maryy’ She did, and the whole studio was illuminated as with yellow sunlight. | She Just Couldn't Then they told her to look mad. | But she couldn't do it! | |. Directors said that didn’t have to| |be taught. Any girl could do it, they said. It came natural. But when she \tried to look mad for them, and still looked sweet, they said she was| “hopeless.” So she put on her hat, smiled, and went out, humming a little song It was the m the next studio, And the one after that. And yet an other. It was the same wherever she | went. At Last She wasn’t humming any happy lit- tle song any more, and she wasn't smiling very much either when she arrived at the studio of Lois Weber, one of the few women directors at Los Angeles. She was pretty much discouraged and she looked sad. Miss Weber had an advantage over ) She Couldn’t Look Mad So They \ Nearly Ran Her Out THEATRE Positively Opens SUNDAY , t so hard to look mad they She looked sweet | hard she tried to look bad-| t vexed her so she stamped her foot, and— “Hold that expression, It’s just the other directors, who hadn't been able to make the girl look anything but sweet and sunny. She said that} since the girl could look both sunny and sad and the various sh@tes be- tween these extremes it wouldn't be necessary for her to look very mad. Besides, sirens were going out of and Miss MacLaren got her This was as the star of a alled “Shoes.”” She has been featured in many movies since then, tho she is only 19, She has yellow hair and aspires to make a tour of the world, She weighs 124 pounds and likes to read Mark Twain. cl 4 appearing in person; “Mary Moves In,” com- edy; Tom Moore in “The City ef Wallace Reld im “The ve Burglar”; “The Lady Rell * comedy; Gaumont G Constance Bianey in “Open Comrades. COLISEUM. L Your Kyes.’ STRAND—Dorothy Dalton in “Other Men’s Wives”; Strand News Week- ty. | COLONIAL —Sretye Nesbit in “Her stake.” vided. | MISSION—Vivian Martin tm “An Innocent Adventuress.” | CLAS® A — Jackie Saunders tn . LIBERTY Anita Stewart closes her engage ment at the Liberty tonight in “Mary Regan.” This play furnishes Miss Stewart with one of the strong- est roles of her career, and never once does she falter in the many big scenes. Mary Regan's rise to a social position, in spite of the ef- forts of a New York blackmailing gang, and how she wins the love of @ prominent New York man, even tho she is the daughter of a notor- ious thief, leads thru a maze of in- teresting and exciting incidents. The new show, which opens Satur- day, brings the popular young Jack Pickford in “Bill Apperson’s Boy,” the first picture in which he has appeared since his honorable dis- charge from the navy. eee CLEMMER ‘Tom Moore at the Clemmer will be followed by another Goldwyn star. “The City of Comrades" will close a week's run tonight and the new show which opens Saturday will feature Pauline Frederick in “The Fear Woman.” The triangle, as old as society {t- self, offers a number of angles of conception. In the case of “The Fear Woman,” a sorrowful, well bred young woman, Helen Winthrop, is LAST TIMES TONIGHT Tom Moore IN “THECITY OF COMRADES” A Picturization of the Saturday Evening Post Story by Basil King TOMORROW PAULINE FREDERICK IN “THE FEAR WOMAN” rown Fate into the household of oe 1 Ma @ blase married couple. ‘The author has woven the detail around Mrs. Scarr, the offender; a ne’erdo-well society “favorite,” and Helen Winthrop, with the latter as the protagonist. In saving the wife's reputation the! girl makes the big sacrifice of ruin ing her own good name. Milton Sills and Harry 8. Northrup are included in the supporting cast. eee COLISEUM Wallace Reid finishes a successful week at the Coliseum in “The Love * a comedy drama, tonight. show which opens Saturday ‘he Better Wife,” starring Clara Kimball Young, who will be more than welcome, owing to her lengthy absence from the screen. It's been some time since the last Clara | Kimball Young picture, and this star has a large following in Seattle. “The Better Wife” is an English | story, and Miss Young Do the at- tractive role of a young American | girl who visits England, falls in love | with a titled Englishman and proceeds to make him fall in love with her. eee STRAND Irene Castle returned to the screen in a picturization of the popular Rob- jert W. Chambers novel, “The Firing lLine.” Miss Castle has every oppor- | tunity to display her versatility and | linctdentally wear some beautiful | gowns in the role of Sheila Cardoss, a thoroly selfish woman who accepts | favots on every hand, giving little in return, until summoned to nurse | the loyal man whose happiness she | has nearly destroyed. ‘This picture opens at the Strand Saturday, Tonight for the last time Dorothy Dalton appears in “Other Men's Wives.” ° MOORE By popular demand, “Open Your Fiyes,” the big health campagin pro- duction, will be held over at the Moore Saturday and Sunday. This photoplay ranks as one of the best of ita kind which has yet been pro- duced, which is probably due to the splendid co-operation given the pro- ducers by the United States health service. This photoplay deals in bold and frank terms with one of the most unsavory problems of life—and at the same time includes a pretty love story. The cast of players selected to handle the roles in thia picture 1g particularty good, —SATURDAY— This athe News JACK PICKFORD Is One of the Finest Pictures We Have Ever Shown This Motion Picture Story Is GUARANTEED person who sees it. MISSION George Walsh is the star of “Put- ting One Over,” which opens at the Mission Saturday. Walsh plays a dual role. He is Horace Barney and Jack Trevor. Barney and Trevor bear such a close resemblance to one another that even their closest friends can- not tell orfe from the other. Both of these young men are in a train wreck. Barney is killed and his friends persuade Trevor to step in and assume the dead man's name in order to win a large fortune. Tonight, for the last time, little Vivian Martin will appear in “The Innocent Adventuress,” COLONIAL Evelyn Nesbit is playing the role of a little country maid who meets, falls in love and marries a young city chap, in “Her Mistake,” at the Colonial, Little Russell, the star's In Acting, Dramatic Intensity, Heart Interest, Love Romance and Everything Else It Is a Wonderful, Exceptional Offering It will take the grownups back to.their happy ‘childhood and delight every young son, also plays an important role, and gives evidence of being ® tale ented little actor. Besides the feature picture, there is a Charlie Chaplin comedy and “Kingdom Come,” a Western story. ee Let's go buy Boldt’s French Pas try. Uptown, 1414 3rd Ave; down town, 913 2nd Ave, [FREE DOCTOR Go to the RIGHT DRUG CO. 169 Washington St, and 11 First Ave And the Doctor will give you a careful examination and prescribe for yoy FREE. - If you are sick you cannot do bet- ter than take adv_.ntage of this offer, We save you money and give the best possible treatment, OORE THEATRE Positively Until Sunday Night Only It Leaves Nothing to the Imagination. Don’t Let Your Boy or Girl Grow Up and “Go It Blind”—Tell Them When Special Music by TINY BURNETT'S ORCHESTRA ’ Young “What’s What” Continuous 1 to 11 P. M. Matinees

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