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_= = THEATRE Now—the intensely dramatic story of a woman's love, Sacrifice and tragedy, beautifully costumed and Scened in distant India— zi aan! ELSIE | FERGUSON we y >," the finest theatre music in Seattle, the new STRAND ORCHESTRA S. K. Wineland, director—playing “Poet and Peas- ant” and “Opera Mirror,” afternoon and evening. go buy Boldt’s French pas; The Missouri ‘Pacific has been ae MM 3d Ave; down, | clearing its right-of-way near Bikes- 913 24 Ave. | ton, Mo. by the use of steam. An| engine with the properly equipped machine scalded all the vegetation lon the track and within five feot of jeach side, Tnuss TON: URE eliminated by weart Ruptere Su; nme Bs} trial to prove ite superior- | Now running here—a big colorful Red Book story by Peter B. Kyne, made into a stirring California forest love romance in six screen acts, with the best of stars— SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA $1 men under Brambilla, playing “The Evolution of Yankee 4 Doodle” and “My Dreamy War in Steel Industry Has Raged for 70 Years This is the first of four articles by Staff Lee J. Smits, who was sent to Pittsburg, the Amer to cover the high-spot the strike situation for] The Star and associated members of The Newspaper Enter-| prise Association. Correspondent Smits i o filing fre-| quent news art vondent| el center of| Corres al AITS rrespondent) h mark in ite career, having of 24,068 was the recognized cen steel and tre unioniam #pet [the hi ]& mombership ttaburg f the and of the from, Hetween 1880 and was strongly which has culminate strike ever called in America, began 1890 organized | Intrenched. As teel mill » established, the ation on workers was 1 by ste | at the only steel mill that ever | fully unlonized was the} Not half of the steel ed to unior 0 year Puda condu uo. re in the Pittebu ed a atrike from to May 12, 18 lab I {th The r | 2 we | 1849 | not was lost In 1857 there next year maw the first union, an diera calling themac Vulean They met on Saturday nighta and discussed their grievances over mugs of beer CALLED “ANAK AND “t NDESIRABLES” ‘The leading spirit among them was) Miles Humphreys, who was for a| long time before his death chief of the Pittsburg fire department. They were regarded then as “anarchists and “undesirables,” terms which have | lately been applied to union organts era in the steel towns, Mectings were largely secret. A national organization was formed. known as the Grand Forge, and| Miles Humphreys waa elected grand Vulean, The affairs of the organiza tion began to be made public, | During the civil war the steel tn dustry prospered and wages were high, In the adjustment period fol lowing the war, the first atrike was called. It Jasted eight months, and the unions won, They obtained rec ognition and the installation of a wage scale based on the selling price of bar. This wage scale was the foundation of wage systema now pro vailing In all tron and stee! plants. Other trades tn the tron and steel industry organized, and tn 1876 these joined hands in forming the National Amalgamated association of Iron and Steel Workers, the parent of the leading organization involved in the present strike, UNION WEAKENED BY STRI In 1882 a long and costly atrike was waged, which greatly weakened the union, but it remained in exist ence and presented the demands of the men, until 1891, it had reached well organt was a panic, and tt . nnings of the workers belon Organi: | vation came and the fron and masters came into the power which they have held ever since in the face of all resistance. nod wasn | wtee} trength waa amall, The teat at Homestead, in 1892, A ure Patter Cincinnati is to have a novelty tn the way @ picture theatre made entirely of glass, This glass th will allt on the roof Orpheum theatre, Wal was the first subt od } Louise Glaum reeently pur chased th fur coats valued at | $10,000. One coat is a very | smart seal with three separate flounces; another ts mole skin, and the third is an erm! coat for evening wear. eee Elsie Ferguson is now at work on a yachting movie called “The Count-/ ertetter." eee m Mix grabs a bull by the horns and throws !t on ite back in one of his latest western This month the Goldwyn Fim cor. poration celebrated its third anniver- | sary. The company was founded on September 8, 1916 oe Burglars. Getting J in ov | Ready for Winter |’ $,2°%" | Now that winter t# on ft» way, burglars are turning thelr attention to thelr wardrobes. ¥ William Cenan, 14204 Seventh ave, had a sult cage packed with underwear and other euch necemstities in his room. He reported to the police that some one had entered jand removed the sult case and ite contents, A Kruckow, 302 Second ave. 8. reported a similar theft Proprietors of the Red Front Shoe store, First) |ave. and Pine st., notified the police that a pair of shoes had been stolen |from thelr doorway at 3 o'clock in Dorothy Phillips will next appear written by her husband, ar. see | Mark Twain's “A Connecticut Yan Arth will be © at King } adapted to the screen by the Fox Film corperation with Tom Mix in the leading role TO WRITE SCENARIOS FOR GOLDWYN CO. ‘» Court” writer, who collaborated with George | Broadhurst on “The Crimson Alibi,”} has been engaged to write scenarios tor the Goldwyn corporation. Cohen is the author of 400 short | stories and four nove A number short st Need $16,000,000 for Russ Rails) American or German capjtal will] develop Russian transportation and | of the two American capital in in-| finitely preferred, Paul Umboff, of | the university extension, told an aud- | lence comprising members of the| Bern Transportation and Russian clubs|®ble yard of this most fertile soll is Monday Ruseda needs $16,000,000 at | cu! ated, and the man who owns once to develop her railways ‘nd|an acte is independent. Tho per waterways, Umhoff asserted. manent population ta 20,000, but — os 20,000 visitors from Canada and DRAMATIC TEACHER jally. Mermuda wan settied tn 1633 | WILL READ “KINDLING”| fieiusn’ em oldest parliament in the pire next to that sitting Maron! Olson, a member of the| at Westminster. @ramatic faculty of the Cornish! Schoo) of Music, will make his first! public appearance here Tuesday evening in, the auditorium of that | school. He wil! read Charles Ken-| yon's biggest drama, “Kindling.”|| This is the second of a series of} artists’ recitals to be given this sea-| son at the Cornish school, and open| to the public. H.C.L. DOESN’ T BOTHER PEOPLE OF BERMUDA! HAMILTON, Bermuda, Sept. 23. High cost of living doesn’t worry ada very much, Every avail “Tat's go eat at ‘oldt’s—uptown, | 14 34 Ave.; downtown, 913 eusicd The rattles of a rattlesnake are but “@ number of small bones on the tall no loosely fastened together that they made a clinking noise when | shaken, DON'T BE WITHOUT | SLOAN’S LINIM.NT Keep It Handy—It Knows No Equal | in Relieving Pains and Aches LOAN'S LINIMENT has been sold for 38 years. Today, It is more popular than ever, There can be but one answer—it produces results. Applied without rubbing, it pene- trates to the afflicted part, bringing relief from rheumatic twinges,| sciatica, sore, stiff, strained muscles, | lame back, and other exterior pains and sprains and the result of ex- posure, It leaves no mussiness,| stain, clogged pores. Get a large bottle greater economy. Keep it handy for use| when needed, Your druggist has it, | ER Three sizes— 700, $1.40 [Harry Morey The Man Who Wo for To Quickly Remove ‘Ugly Hairs From Face (Beauty Notes) Beauty-destroying hairs are soon banished from the skin with the aid of a delatone paste, made by mixing some water with a little plain pow- dered delatons. This is spread upon the hairy surface for two or thre minutes, then rubbed off and the skin washed to remove the remaining atone. This simple treatment ban- ishes every trace of hair and leaves the skin without a blemish. Caution should be used to be certain that it | is delatone you buy.—~Advertisement, | | pery-fingere of magazines are now running his) | |forms bim that he ts tn |mang and the fight which | otare, . | to | MISSION Elsie Ferguson Has Exceptional Role in Thrilling Play at Strand Elsie “The Witness power, which is Miss Ferguson ha screen career, as Stella drink-crazed husband Ballantyne instantly killed. lows, is equally dramatic The action of the Glimpses now picture ¢ LIBERTY Priscila Dean will soon be fame a the “cham girl crook.” makes such captivating little « crook { today, at she is appearing in hb” her « crook play. She has the role of Gerti Jones, known to the habitants of the underworld as “Chatterbox,” be cause of her peculiar habit of talk ing excited. Gegio is involved in a pretty Mt tle romance with Jimmy Hartigan, also @ crook. Jimmy serves time for & crime Gertie commit Ger tie helped him escape from prison they then both decide to “go the Libe Pretty and tratcht.” “Pretty Smooth” closes Wednesday's show will Anita Stewart In “Human eee feature Desire.” cou uM Wallace Reid stages a fintio ba: Ge tn “The Valley of the Giants,” Octavus Roy Cohen, the 2$-yearold|.+ ene Coliseum this week, which ‘| ations arise when VI, right after almost equal to the scrap he put) up when portraying the role of the! blacksmith in Griffith's “Birth of a/ Nation,” which was one of the features of the big production ly appears as a returns to the CG 4s to dimcover that some has ut down the giant ich marked his dear old grave. He immediately up the guilty man and in for a good fellow happens to be 2, the bully of the follows ts wins out, red cul red {fornia prit mother's bunts full of thrilia Wally jof course, eee REX “The Bramble Bush,” to do with a group of crafty po’ a love affair. Pretty Corinne h, one of Vitagraph's newest plays the lead. Sho is seen 48 m young Southern girl who goes Washington, D. C, to make her wn ving. Her personality and strong will power carry her thru many evil situations onto the road of happiness, This picture clos Wednesday brings the melodrama, “Checkers.” at the pretty Rex girl, clans and Grit big racetrack Alice Brady is playing role of twin sisters the dual Ferguson, as she appears in the opening scene of for the Defense,” howing at the Strand this week. one of the most dramatic roles of her| Ballantyne. jshown trying to wrench a revolver from the hand of her In the struggle it is discharged and of Photo urrent to herself whenever she gets| tontght.| | lumberman | tonight. | “His Bridal’ An Established Reputation for Offering the Best Pictures Tonight—Your final chance to see the Bayard Veiller crook drama that all your friends have seen— PRISCILLA DEAN —IN— “PRETTY SMOOTH” * * & | | Starting | Wednesday | ANITA STEWART ming ee: 2 HUMAN ) DESIRE’ Story of A Girl Who ved Babies and A ~_ Wife Who Didn't a Dainty and Peti a picture of exceptional, In one scene she is Her murder trial, which for) laid in England and India. ines TODAY'S PROGRAMS COLISKUM—Wallace Keid in “The | Valley of the Giants”; Montgomery | eed Rock in “Vamps and Variety,” comedy; Coliseum News c MMEB—Dengies | Fairbanks ] is Majesty, the American,” ond week, || Quaint and different from Anita Stewart’s previous photoplays—the scenes open in Italy amd transfer to America. LIBERTY —Prisclila Dean in “Pretty fmooth”; Briggs comic; Liberty Weekly. | STRAND——Pisie Ferguecn in “The Witness for the Detewsey”; “Bott * WALLACE on the WURLITZER PATHE NEWS + + & & & | _ Money,” Harold Lioyd comedy. | | BEX — Corinne Griffith in “The bie Hash.” | COLONIAL—Anita Stewart In “Twe || Women”; “A Lica Special,” com- edy MISSION—Alice Dirady “Tis Briday Night”; Harold Lieve com. | cits A—Menle Bartecnte m| |i “Patriotiem”; Strand comedy; Ciarietic comedy. %~ —* Night” at the Mission. Vi, one of [the sisters, i full of Ife and mis jehief, while Tiny, the other sister, }is quiet and sedate. Comedy situ The total value ef minerals pro- duced in 1918 in the United States waa about $5,526,000,000. Revenue Man Is Held for Trial TACOMA, Sept. 23-—James EH.) | Read, deputy collector of internal) revenues, was held for a hearing be| runs/fore the federal grand jury October ric It after a hearing before U. 8. Com-| missioner F. B. Brockway here. ad is charged with extortion. It/ is claimed he collected $200 from| Mrs. Phoebe Merrill, 70, of Olympia, in whose home he f# said to have lof Robin Cameron, a lovely young|found nome home-made beer. He was || «iri who turns over ber big home/arrested in Aberdeen, Wash. in Scotland to the allies to be used|—— as a base hospital. Beesie Batris cale plays the role of Robin. eee her own wedding ceremony, laway with Tiny's beau. The ture has plenty of “pep.” . There's ncifishness tm every one some form or degree; 1t-sght coles ie beat alone, Whoever it may be CLASS A | “Patriotiem,” at the Class A jwar way. It telis of the r ina mance h more SUIT, COAT, DRESS T. ‘LORENCE UPSTAIRS ‘TORE, Seco: and Unica, CLEMMER No aqui | vaudeville OENTISTS THIRD AND UNION err Fe. k-change artist on the} stage had anything on Doug Fairbanks when he waa mak ing “His Majosty, the American,” in jwhich he ts playing at the Clemmer | In order to save time, he actually had three t working buay. While one ret of scenes was being photographed two other wore being prepared, and he would leap to a new company as qui as he finished with Th own read hus crews sets! = ‘WEDNESDAY _ GREATEST REX THEATRE with their men, were to keep Doug before the camera lens. each | Constance Binney is appearing tn 29 East” on th ge evenings and acting before . jthe day time Jon a screen Susan.” Mrs. Fiske played it at thp opera house ia Clev version of “Erstwhile Charlie’ r Wife o Dratis Une at Dodging Custard Pies! To films, su rrestions Mra, Mildred of friends Harris that aplin jhappy to do so when Charlie ceases slinging custard ples and break She'd rather take chances with him as a dramatic in lishea, as a comedian, ON, REMORSE! ng THOROUGHBRE AND HIGH LIFE INTERMINGLED W¥WTH A BASIC DRAMA OF HUMAN EMOTIONS Te | rasta lene . REGULAR PRICES Adults - + - Children Loge Seats 25¢ lle oo & Charlie \ 6 Chapluv ) | | the Chaplins appear in the same has replied that she will be most actor el