The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 7, 1919, Page 10

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Now—The big 7-act vivid drama of love and high finance—laid in the Northwest, in Chile and on Wall Street— NOLVES f the NIGHT; A play that works out precisely as the finest fancy could imagine. phony Orchestra—31 Artists under _ Reginald Dunn Coliseum’s News Service Fourth Ave. Seattle DOUBLE BILL STARRING: BESSIE ~ BARRISCALE in her latest picture Landing Field for Seattle Is Urged By Lt. Col Hartz Lieut. Col. R. 8. Hartz, tin com- mand of the “around the rim” Mar-/ tin bombing machine making 4 tour of the United States in the tn- terests of aviatio addressed gathering of local aviation enthust- asts Monday. After the luncheon he boarded hie plane at Auburn and arrived at Portland before dark Monday evening. Col. Hartz came to Seattle urge upon the people the necessity of acquiring without delay a tand- jing field for airplanes which should be on the direct route of the transcontinental mail line. “The cities of the West have co- loperated wonderfully well.” he said ‘There is hardly a city between here and Chicago that has not a| |tield large enough for present to jneeds, and Seattle cannot afford to! |be without one.” | Dr. William Daniel Moriarity of the University. of Washington ad dregsed the Hundred Per Cent club in ithe Masonic club Tuesday noon on }"High Wages and Unit Cost.” Now -— Eve Picks the Apple and the Modern Pays the Penalty No Advance in Prices. }sloal show to th Robert Warwick Heads Cast in Picturization of Popular Novel News. | | CLEMMER — Nasimova tn | | Meat”) News Pletortals | COLISEUM Faroum Wolves of i Semon comedy STRAND. Where Strand Weekly Tom Markey in * i} | Kart Meteaife in “The | Baby Mario Osborne im | rie'e Reand LIBERTY Bill Ruswell has his hands full at the Liberty thin week In "Six Feet | Four.” He not only has to defeat a gang of crooks, but the sheriff of his home town as well To make matters worms, the gan fastens all ite crimes mil, =Not until he} traps the sheriff does he his Innocenc | | The photopiay is adapted from Jackson Gregory's novel of the same | name. on prove | CLEMMER | From the chorus of a cheap mu night court—from the night court to a home of wealth —from being a nameless waif to be} coming the wife of a celebrated au-| |thor—this is what Nazimova, the} great Russian actress, experiences in | |The Brat,” her own adaptation of | Maude Fulton's stage play which is | | showing at the Clemmer (his week, | eee | | REX | | “The Curse of Eve" is showing aty } his wee! inn in the |the Rex this week. It begion In the red-blooded story of romance into the present with modern|@reat Western Rockies. Robert Warwick, as he appears in “Told in the Hills,” a and adventure, filmed in the It’s from Marah Ellis Ryan's great story centering around two young| novel, and every character in the story is faithfully portrayed | folks, a girl and a man. The story does not deal with a| olblical subject tho the subtitle of} the picture play is “A Story of Eve and Her Modern Sister Enid Markey plays Eve and Be win Coxen is Adam. ee on the screen. MISSION Tom Mix’s picture, “Rough Rid jing Romance,” at the Mission this | week, is filled with daring stunts ‘The discovery of a rich vein of ore| tie ‘on horseback gallops up and! in @ man's mining claim is general:| gown @ steep stairway; later he| ly viewed as @ fine stroke Of £004 | swings himself onto a train by first uck. But to Bruce Andrews, in |jassoing the train. "Wolves of the Night,” it brings the| rom performs these stunts to | Worst sort of ill-luck. He loses hi8| ave a lovely young princess and | Property and his wife, narrowly ©® | ner royal father from an angry mob. capes death, and become Insan Bey iN S ane he doesn't stay insane, and th: jhangs the theme of the pr COLONIAL |which is showing at the Colisoum| A fistic encounter between ¢ this weit, thero and the villain is the main Bill Farnum plays role of|feature of “The Battler,* which i Bruce Andrews. jthe attraction at the Colonial this ° |week. The fight occurs in a ring CLASS A |which has been installed tn the H. B. Irving, who ie starring at|home of a wealthy New York man. the Class A in “The Lyons Mail," a/ It ia supposed to be a friendly ex colorful romance, ts the wom Of tht | ss }iate Sir Henry Irving. The action RHEUMATIC PAINS ot the “The Lyons Mail" takes |place in the gay city of Paris |hundred or fo years ago. | peat COLISEUM the ee AT LESS MEAT HAVE DISAPPEARED IF BACK HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flush Pew liane’ Pink Pills Full Kidneys if Bladder bothers | Credit for Her you—Drink lots of water | Recovery } pias “I developed rheumatism following exposure to a storm, while I was in % badly run<lown condition,” Noye, of No, 3076 West ave, Denver, Colo. “I had severe pains from the tips of my fingers to the region of my he My hands swelled and there wos 4 constant numbness in my fi My logs swelled and the joints be came inflamed and threbbed with pain. Sometimes the pains ajmont romt disappeared but returned wit creased fury. My back ached almost constantly and I became very nervous “t had heard of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for years and decided to give the remedy ‘ In a week I felt somewhat better and was so enc aged that I continued the t Slowly the ewelling left my nd en the pain dis | peared well no have keen apy nd feel better than I have in a great many years, Dr. William: Pink Pills proved the very remedy I needed and I have recom mended them to my frien Dr, Williams’ Pink F Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; | by af druggists or a a delightful effervescent | Dr. Williama Me ne Co., Bchene drink which millions | tady, N. Y nt of price, and women take now and|cents per box or six boxes for $2 then to keep the kidneys and uri-| Write for the free booklet, “Buildin; organs an, thus avoiding | Up the Blood,” containing a spec ous kidney disea chapter on rheumatism. | Eating meat regularly eventually | |produces kidney trouble in form or other, says a well-known because the urle acid in kidneys, wet all sorts of dis- back and kidney region; rheu revere he {pation, torpid bladder and uri- nome saye j authority, meat excites the jcome overworked jelog up and ca tress, misery in the matic twinges, Jacta stomach, liver, sleeploseness, Inary irritation The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren't acting right, it er bothers you, get about four of Jad Salts from any good take yonful in water before breakfast days and kidneys act fine. from . rt particularly he con! or a tables a glass a tria for a fe will ther salts your This * the actd juice, combined v has been used for generations to flush clogged kid- neys and stimulate them to normal activity also to neutralize § the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus bladder dis- orders. famous ot, a ending Is water on rece nary This Week SUPREME AND INFLAMMATION are ‘nota | t from the | This Laugh '| Has Ticklish Job Ann Little, Wanda Hawley, Eileen Percy, Tom Forman! and Monte Blue are the players who help to unfold the story. This picture is playing at the Strand this week. |hibition but the bout de }m real battle and the villain is laid out. | LITTLE Charlie Chaplin “expresses him- |neit” in the new aesthetic dances which are quite the thing in the; most artistic circles in “Sunnyside,” FOURTH NEAR PIKE. By the time you’ve seen a man on horseback lasso the ventilator of a train going 30 miles an hour, and climb aboard— And seen him ride a horse up six flights of fire escape at top speed— You've seen something! But that’s only a small part of what you see in the best picture in Seattle this week, now here — “Rough Riding Romance” i Better Hurry Down—You'll See All Your Friends aid Neighbors on the his latest comedy, which ts showiNg, at the Little. around amid Graped beauties Charile prances a bevy of scantily This i one of the { scenes in the whole photo clure Patter| = Charles Ray is working on a new picture called “Rack to the | Farm." In this story, Ray, | young recruit, after a flying visit to “Gay Paree,” returns to his | heme town to dazzle his fellow. citizens with his Intimate knowl. edge of life a» it is lived on the boulevards, | see Alice Joyce is at work on a movie jtitled “Pride | cee | | “Dombey and Son,” Dickens by by Charles has been made intoa movie Triangle eee | William Farnum gallops a horse down a mountain side in ane scene of “The Last of the Duanes.” eee Wyndham Stand The Mirnc of by Cosmo tn the Love story | Lita Lee will play opposite Wallace m-| Reid in his coming prdfuction. | “Hawthorne of U. 8. A” Sergt. Alvin ©, Yorke, the world’s greatest soldier, as he | has been called, is the latest ar rival in the motion picture fold. He has signed with a Chicago producing company, ee Violet Heming, who | title role in “verywoman,” rived in y ¥ Coast stud Heming bh | “Three has ar ‘ork from the West} of the corporation. Miss rewumed her role in Faces East" on Broadway, see Harry T. Morey has been with the Vitagraph Film Co. ten years. NAZIMOVA In her own version of Maude Fulton’s celebrated stage play “THE BRAT” In which a famous author finds his inspiration in “the brat,” a girl of the slums and chorus, GUTERSON’S AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA CELLO SOLO “Mazurka” Played by Here is a close-up of Mack sen |nett, the laugh king, He is still a |young man, on the right side of 40, a | successful actor who never acts any 1" The growth of the business of making laughs has turned him into a big executive, Sennett has probably succeeded in bringing more grins and snickers to American faces than any other man, living or dead, The famous wits and Jesters of the past had to make one king laugh; Sennett has millions whose risibilities must be tickled, His to make highbroks, ly girls and college pro fessors all laugh at the same joke, It's some job, but Sennett gets away with it, filming! playing the! low: | Way Here Outing-Chester Scenic—Russell on the Wurlitzer—Harold Lloyd Comedy ger THIEVES BUSY thw: gi thieves raided two hen | in the southern end of the aty y Monday, obtaining a grand total i ao exe producers. Patrick, 537 27th ave. 8., ee the loss of four white hens/ and a yellow one. A few minutes after Patrick had made his tearful report, Mra. 8, Stein, 201 24th ave S., reported the loss of two hens, She neglected to describe their color. FRIEND DID MRS. SLATER A GREAT FAVOR, SHE SAYS On Advice of Neighbor She Took Tanlac and Change Is Wonderful I shall always be thankful to the friend who reo i Tan- lac to me, for it has about made a new woman out of me,” saya Mrs. | Margaret R. Slater, 64 years old, { 615 Bright Street, Seattle, Wash., ‘in speaking of the remarkable change which she says bas come in her health since she began to take | Tanlac For the last two years I've had stomach troubles and the like which made me almost unable to about and I was getting so I couldn't do my housework and had to help myself aroufd with, a cane. jl was weak and all tired out and |had no appetite to speak of and jwhen I would eat a little of some- |thing it wouldn't agree with me, “| would have splitting head- aches and such bad pains in my hips that I couldn't get around at 1. My nerves seemed to be af- ‘ected nd nights I couldn't get enough to give me any rest worth anything, “I guess that I tried a dozen ait- ferent medicines in the hope of getting better but none of them did me any good, One day one of |my friends told me how she and jher husband had been put on thetr jfeet by Ta decided to |make one 1 I began to feel better at on ‘or T wanted to jeat everything I could get hold of land none of the things that I ate Jhurt me any more, Why, I do my washing and troning have only taken n't have that terrible diz- y more and my h better that I can go to bed and get a good night's rest like I used to, I've laid my cane away and I don’t think I will have to use ft any more soon and I has gained eleven pounds so I certainly can recommend Tanlac to any one who suffers like I did.” Taniac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di- rection of a special Tanlac represen- tative.Advertisement get some now Soothe tired nerves for restful sleep. At night apply BAUME | on the- forchead and back of neck. | Keep a tube handy ‘Thee. Leeming & Coy, N. Yo even} three bot- | nerves are} ANALGESIQUE| BENGUE MAN FOUND HANGING | FROM TREE IDENTIFIED H ‘The body of the man found hang- ing from @ tree near Renton Satur- day has been identified as Gust Swan- | son, employe of the Rentoh car shops. He had been living with E. | |W. Eissakson in Renton, and had | acted queer recently, He is unmar-| ried and is survived by two sisters— Hilda Peterson of Elizabeth, N. J., and Anna Witkpan of Okna, Sweden. | OMciais believe he committed suicide. ASKFORendGET ‘ orlick’s; | ‘Maited od Milk Pe fret DENTISTS THIRD AND UNION | An Established Reputation for Offering the Best Pictures Now—the picture that it took six months to make—a corking, vivid Western play— “The Six- part Super Special AmericanDrama If it were not something big, unique, excep- tional, it would not be here! It’s real life unrolled before you! | Wallace on the Wurlitzer Mack Sennett Comedy"

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