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das he ARs Oh, Girls, One Dollar Buys Chance to Marry Handsome Wallace Reid Two Women in One Fair Body As the other, she appealed to the good man’s profligate brother. Home of 100% Pictures Home of the Pathe Who wants a husband for a dollar? Young, strong and handsome. Has no bad habits and will eat any- thing. Guaranteed to stay home nights. : : : child, shrinking, abashed, from the arish lights and Broadway's wild night e Sashes. ” y Which was her true self? Bidding in “The Market of Souls,” which brother The other a lure to evil. Spirit of the : won? palaces of joy. Laughing her siren’s laugh. Dancing her dupes along the road to ruin. Come in tonight and see Wally raffle himself off, with 300,000 tickets out! It’s convulsing every Come and see! ideo dtew Vow tale audience . : . : : : , : gayest revel. See her on a New Year’s Eve, in the most sensational cafe scene ever filmed. NE of them sweet and modest as a | | As one of these women, this girl was all that a good man wanted her to be. DOROTHY DALTON IF YOU HOLD THIS TICKET Wally Reid, who gtves a spirited performance of the |chance-taking hero in “The Lottery Man,” a comedy-drama, | which opened at the Liberty Sunday. | | eee eee Would you pay a dollar! draws the lucky hunt chance to win handsome | 9 e Reid for a husband? Of) falts in love with a § he's happily married and baa/ cap the climax, a h ja ttle Wallace, Jr., and it's only in| draws the [his latest Paramount picture, which opened at tha Liberty 8 that | he offers unusual opportunity to the ladies. And 300,000 of them |Jump at the chancet | Mr. Reid the role of breezy | Jack Wright, who being young, good looking, in debt and jobless, starts | torials. & lottery with himself the prize, of | Oliver G. Wallac fering to marry the woman who Wurlitzer proved pc for ff) i] Too late! eedings he tty girl, To mely old maid upon. op these rash pr Now filling this theatre to the | doors. The Liberty bill also includes Mack nnett’s latest comedy, “Up in Alf's toom,” and the Pathe News pic winning How Wally gets out of this fur nishes a good bit of hilarious com ody nday has * 8 * concert on the hare Symphony Orchestra—31 artists under Reginald Dunn, playing “Madam Butterfly” and Drigo’s “Reconciliation” bs ta Carlyle, the young wife of the | STRAND millionaire, and stepmother to his| Jack Pickford is giving Strand worthless son patrons a real treat this week by his COLISEUM “A Root Garden Rough House” ts|clever interpretation of oe A new twint to the old story of the|the ttle of the domedy on the bill. | Splvens in “In Wrong,” a story of | jcountry girl who goes to New York ne o “ e) Johnny is desperately in love with Market o “joula i which Desothy ee Rex is showing Dorothy Phil-| Milly, the village belle. Milly likes Dimples” Dalton is starring at the lips’ big feature picture, “Paid in Ad | Johnny, too, but when a city chap News Pictoriate, Coliseum. | vance.” comes to town, Johnny sort of loses LIBERTY—Wallace Keld tn “The || Mies Dalton plays the role of a girl) A forced decision between two bit out. To make matters worse, the cattery, Man’) Mnek Sennett com, | |from upstate New York, who bas ter evils is a situation that confronts | chap from the city saves Milly from ee ee | |beon trained as a nurse and goos|Joan Gray (Mine Phillips), daughter/ drowning, and right then and there BAS Dereiny Phillipe te “Paid tm | /to the big city to follow her pegtes of 4 Canadian fur trapper, after|he is the hero of the village. This mane ton : che has bae@ lured from her -home|is more than Johnny can stand, s0| In New York she meets two broth-|to the distant town of Dawson City,/he packs his grip and leaves town. ere—one a “rounder,” the other a| Klondike, by Gold Dust Barker, oWD-| Things look bad for the boy when Seek Guarantors. H Boy Murdered; ‘ for Music Season Monday Reviews Police Declare Death Suicide | Two hundred guarantors for the r , a se Seattle Symphony Orchestra, to in- TODAYS FROGRAMS } sure & successful season, are being eee nel teeters lars doen te | sought by Manager C. E. White, 448] | Henry building. Concerta this win-| | . an ter will be held in Meany Hall, at the university, it is planned. SWITCH PLEDGE PINS ON CHEMISTRY FROSH Fraternity brothers at the Unt YORK, Oct. 20.—The police His hands were tied behind his today that John W.)back with ropes and his legs were | 21, committed suicide; his}bound. A piece of ollcloth covered were equally certain he|his head and was secured about his d neck with a short plece of rope. A bottle containing a virulent poison was found nearby, but there were no burns about his face to indicate he had swallowed any. A preliminary examination devel- oped the boy had been strangled ‘boy's body, clad in woman's gingham house dress, stockings, corsets and found last night on of his power boat near his Can be eliminated Lundberg Rupture wort. free trial to prove te oes ty. " A. LUNDBERG ©o, 1101 Third Ave. off College Point. T a ‘14 ed ND MONDAY NIGHT University of Washing- ton toe Bh yeaa Night, at t it college com- edy-drama in seasons— George Walsh Stroke” Actually taken at Yale and showing the Yale- Harvard varsity race of June 20. Comé™arly on account of the crowds. RUSSELL ON THE WURLITZER versity of Washington turned de- tectives Monday in an effort to un rave] the mystery of who wrt dozen coate hanging |room outside the chemical tory. WORK WENT HARD WITH HIM, STATES J). H. BALDWIN | Sharp Pains in Stomach Made It Hard for Boilermaker to Stoop and Bend labora. “Cramps would almost tie me in | knots before I tried ‘Tanlae for my troubles,” said J. H. Baldwin, 2322 Elliott Ave.,, Seattle, Wash., the other day, in speaking of his re markable change in health. For 20 | years Mr. Baldwin has been a boiler maker and is employed in one of Seattle's largest boiler shops. ‘When aman has suffered for | four years with stomdch trouble like I had," continued Mr. “Baldwin, “it's |a pleasure to speak of the medicine which stopped it all. Everything I [ate disagreed with me and I really | didn’t care whether I ate anything or not, for if I did eat I would have | the worst sort of griping and cramp- |ing pains all day. Most of the time | as would form on my stomach and | cause me to bloat up and press up | in my chest and make it hard for me | to get a full breath. Sometimes while I was at work I woulda have cramps |in my stomach which would almost double me up, and I was always bothered when I tried to bend or stoop over. It all made me nervous and restless and I couldn't get enough sleep to keep me feeling strong, and would just le in bed and kick around for several hours every night. This condition kept up and I was losing weight right along and getting generally run down. t “YT hed spoke well of Tanlac, I commenced to Improve right away and was soon in good health again and I can ent anything I want now and it never hurts me at all, Those shooting pains don’t worry me any more and since the gas has quit forming in my stomach the pains have gone out ot my chest and I am breathing comfortably again, I surely feel fine now and have put on several pounds ot weight while my nerves are just like steel and I sleep like a rock at night. I just tell you that my bene- fits from Taniac have been far greater than I thought they would be and I believe that these benefits are permanent.” Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di rection of a special Tanlac represen tative.—Advertisement, e Week"; “A Meet Garden Bough- Howes,” comedy eage Terlch ta “The } Merrr Pellers Kiet ta “One Mary Moves In, comedy, | LITTLR-—"The Romance of Seattle,” loral movies; Mill Farnum in “The | r" at | | *- Whoever said “there's nothing new under the sun” is all wrong. The photoplay at the Clemmer this week disproves the old saying. It's a “filauaical-comedy.” Albert Capellant, the noted French director, to whom ia attributed a considerable portion of credit for having gained for Na simova her success as @ screen luminary, originated the idea of pre senting @ musical comedy upon the screen, “Oh, Boy!" the popular musical comedy, is shown on the Clemmer screen. June Caprice, a delightful | little star, and Creighton Hale play the leading roles, In pieturizing “Oh, Boy?’ Capel lani has followed closely the book of | the original stage production. The| musical comedy idea of the picture is| carried out even to the extent of in troducing a complete chorus of girls.) The cast includes Keefe, Ben | Taggert, Maurice Flynn | (better known as “Lefty” Flynn, thi famous Yale football player) and| Flora Finch, the comedienne, first became popular as the Bunny's leading woman, Guterson's orchestra is heard to! splendid advantage, playing selec. | tions from “Oh, Boy!” thruout the showing of the film. cee late John LITTLE The Little is showing a double bill this week. “The Romance of Seat tle,” by popular demand, is being held over a few days more, and the new pleture which started Sunday features Bill Farnum in “The Plun. derer.” “The Plunderer” num picture—full plenty of romance, Jack Sullivan, local attorney, is the hero of the Seattlemade picture, The Romance of Seattle,” Dune Towne ts tie heruls Cesperacoes atiecnpt to blow up the hemne Of a Ms. Atherton (played by James D. Hoge) and Jack arrives just in time to foil their plans. In this manner he wins the heart and hand of Atherton's pretty daughter. er) a typical Far- of battles and a0. Two CLASS A Love, hate, polities and graft all figure prominently in “One Against Many,” the photoplay starring Anita King at the Class A. Miss King plays Enid Wells, a girl who leaves home rather than be forced into mar- riage with @ man she hates. Away from home Enid finds that her troubles are just beginning. She has many unpleasant experiences while searching for work and is later imprisoned as the result of a “frame: Thru the aid of Horace Stone, with tv who | * |real man. Forthwith her exciting ad-|er of a rough dance hall. | Ventures commence. How she event-| Barker on a visit to Canada, var jually finds happiness with the man attracted by Joan's beauty. He of- she loves, of other haa| ret her a position as a nurse and me {told her father an expert fur bur 4.) waa needed in the community. | Joan's father dles during the long The girl then learns she soldier's death forma the plot of the photoplay. A particularly bright spot in the Journey. lecomeny of the production ie the Now |has been tricked. Barker forces her | Year's eve ‘scene in one of New (to choose between himself or the | York's biegest cabarets ldance hall mob, and in despair the | Miss Dalton is splendid in the Kirl auctions herself off to the high: leading role and the rest of the cast |¢#t bidder. is good. Jim Blood, a derelict, wins her. Larry Semon, the Vitagarph |The rest of the film is devoted to comedian, appears in “Do Drop In,” |Jim's regeneration and the downfall a lively comedy. of Gold Dust Barker. The Coliseum, orchestra, under the| William Stowell plays Jim and Lon |direction of Reginald Dunn, offers |Chaney plays Barker |the «rand selection trom Puccini's | Madam Dutterfly,” and Drigo’ Now— Dorothy Phillips COLONIAL ' James Olive Cur- How much of an allowance ts right and proper for the son of a wealthy wood’s Famous Story of the man in college? This question fur. nishes one of the high lights in “The Wreck,” at the Colonial this week. Sanford Carlyle, the wealthy man of the story, played by Harry Ty. Morey, proves one of those hard h led ~business men who believe | their sons should be strictly re | strained in money matters. ‘This be- | Hef costs his son's honor and leads! to many other tragic resulta. ! nN picture is full of surprises and , closes with a thrilling climax. The crashing of two enormous locomo: | yes at top speed, head-on, is just a@ part of this climax, Anita Stewart plays the role of | North. a “ONLY ONE THING BREAKS MY COLD! Es “That's Dr. King’s New Dis- covery for fifty years a cold-breaker” OTHING but sustained quality and unfailing . effectiveness can arouse such enthusiasm, Nothing but sure relief from stub- born old colds and onrushing new ones, grippe, throat-tearing coughs, a6 D popular aud otendard veccedy day. Fifty years old and always reliable. Good for the whole family, A bottle in the medicine cabinet means a #hortlived cold or cough. 60c and $1.20. All druggixts, Regular Bowels Is Health Rowels that move spasmodically— free one day and stubborn the next should be healthfully regulated by Dr. King's New Life Pills, In this way you keep the impurities of waste”! matter from circulating through the system by cleansing the bowels thor: oughly and promoting the proper flow of bile. Mild, comfortable, yet always reli- able, Dr. King’s New Life Pills work with precision without the constipa The dramatic story of a girl who was snowed in at a lawless mining camp and had to make a great de cision, Positively fo Advance _ In Prices whom she is in love, she eventually secures her release, tion results of violent purgatiyes, 260 as usual at all druggists | is learned that the village bank | was robbed just the day before his departure. Here follows a series of erciting scenes, which include a thriliing chase between Johnny and the shertff's posse. Not until the final reel do we learn | that Johnny is innocent of robbery |and that the city chap ts not quite |the hero the town folk believed him to be. , Marguerite La Motte plays Milly. This week's comedy is a Mutt and Jeff animated, entitled, “After the Ball.” The Strand orchestra renders Rossini's “Wiliam Tell” overture, eee MISSION “The Winning Stroke,” in which {George Walsh is appearing at the Mission this week, is making a great hit. The picture is filled with action, the majority of which takes place on and around the Yale cam- pus, | Walsh plays the role of Buck Simmons, the plucky, lucky, love able hero athlete of the Yale racing lerew. In college pranks and stunts jof agility and strength, in beating |the schemes of an intriguer, in win- ning the heart of a pretty girl, and finally as Yale stroke in the big boat race, Walsh gives a fine im- personation. He wins the race despite his jealous rival, who, on a moving yacht, holds a pistol leveled at him ready to shoot if he wins. | Walsh dives into the river as the |shot is fired, and his subsequent | |trouncing of the villain forms a dra- | matic climax to the picture. | | Monday night will be “U, of W. and College Night.” Lo f W ui is } tae aT 1s fit a NOW HERE! ANITA STEWART ANITA STEWART in scene from Vitagraph’s “THE WRECK”