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NOW—a_pho- toplay = replete with electrify- ing thrills of the man-hunt e LAST ofthe DUANES : © » | DIRECTION JENSEN & VON Hi Where the public knows t¢ » weed shows in veys trhunibhand novel ared blooded story ot tense American lite A dashing romance of Texas with a charming love story wa e: 24 ¥F SS Pathe News fallace on the Wurlitzer, Playing ‘My Isle of Golden Dreams’ te . Edwards’ Olive Tablets are Will Lecture on GMD BREATH s. Edwards’ Olive Tablets | Get at the Cause and | : Remove It Edwards’ Olive Tablets, for calomel, act gently on | and positively do People afflicted with find quick relief through them Symphony Music The Cornish School of Music has engaged Walter Anthony, music critic of this city, to deliver a series of public lectures on the music to be played at the regular symphony concerts thix season. The addresses will be offered on Wednesday eve- nings in the auditorium of the Cor- nish school, preceding the Friday [night concerts, and each will addressed to the music that will be heard that week. The first lecture Wednesday eve- will consider Beethoven's Symphony, which will be | | | | ning Seventh the Symphony night From Italy"’ orchestra on Friday the | bad will be reviewed | Thirty-two new poisons have been discovered ty the recent munitions compound mixed with olive researches In the United States. _ They and liver, natural action, clearing the | and purifying the entire sys- ‘They do that which calomel | 1, q constitutional disease act gently but firmly on Catarrh stimulating Years of ‘Without any of the bad after | use have proven the curative value ‘Take one or two every for a week and note the pleas- 10e and 25¢ a box. of the constitutional remedy, Hood's Sarsaparilia, in the treatment of this |com Jaint. Sold and recommended by druggists everywhere. be | ESCAPES DEATH MIRACULOUSLY |Street Car Passes Over the Body of Girl jtracks at Westlake ave |was torn up, | Elotae terra | rible deat | She at Roy # Faith Palmer, $, 191 Saturday afternoon. child was struck by a Wallingfor Also Charpentier’s ‘Scenes |\“"" 9% she attempted to cross the The was coming from street behind a standing car. Wallingford car the opposite direction. The girl was knocked down. fender passed over her, lentire car, “ out Practically ali of the girl's clothin: | Was torn from her body. Pp |by Mrs. Francesca nurse living at the Mrs. Mardeniea, who was ger on the Wallingford car panied the girl to the Mardentea. Seward fore she reached the hospit Because the pavement between the was saved from a ter- is suffering Monday from a |the featured offering by the Seattle | broken nose and a bruised body, The The as did the crushing her. She was ed up at the rear end of the car hote! a passen accom city hospital. |The girl regained consciousness be- THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1919. “The Miracle Man,” at Strand, Is Clever, Heart-Appealing Picture ’ Betty Compson and Thomas Meighan, clever players, who |portray two of the leading roles in George Loane Tucker's The Miracle Men,” which is the attraction at the Strand \this week. Miss Compson is here shown as “Ros and Meighan as “Tom Burke.” . “The Miracle Man,” George Loane proceeds for himself and bis pals. |Tucker’s production, being shown at | Rowe, “The Dope” and “The Fro On thelr journey to the patriarch's the ctrund: this, week, | village “the Free” makes une of fully his ability to throw his body out of ture of crooked lives made straight, | joint, and attracts the attention of of sordid ives made bright by the| Richard King, a wealthy man trav wholesome sway of the country antl|eting with his invalid sister, “The an oki man’s trust in men. Inter-| Frog” tella King he is going to the |preted by a clever cast, the photo-| Miracle Man to be cured, ng is play is far above ordinary feature | inspired to seek help from the same! pictures, source for hin sister | ‘The story centers around a white] From here on follows a atrange| jhaired patriarch of the hills, who i#|/turn in the lives of the crooks, due credited with power to heal the aick|to their association with the Miracle land crippled. News of his prowess|Man. Together they face a brighter| reaches Tom Burke, leader of a band | future. of crooks in New York. He conceives| The Strand orchestra. |the idea of using the healer for com-| direction of Wineland, plays a mercial purposes, and taking the! did accompaniment to the picture. in a wonder inspiring picture, It is a plo CLEMMER x | Romance and the glamor of beau-| toided by tiful girls contribute an exotic set- |p, ng to “Lombardi, Ltd.," in which.! Alice Lake has the role of Norah as Tito Lombardi, an eccentric Ital | giake, Lombardi's pretty little austat jan gown designer (Bert Lytell), bas lant, Juanita Hansen is Lombard! one of the best roles of his tareer.|tickie fiancee. Then there is a be In bis Fifth Avenue dressmaking | of feminine loveliness as omtablinhment, where society women | tion of her loyalty and loye is told! in @ fascinating comedy-drama, un-| thone master craftsmen, rederic and Fanny Hatton y manne. | Quins, fashionable shoppers, etc come for the silken creations, Lom|” Altogether, “Lombard, Lid, bard! dreams his dreams, and makes | most successful photoplay. lis tender love to @ girl who proves! A feature of Guterson’s musical false to him |program is Euge ux'n nolo Aesthetic and generous, his bust-| number, “Shubert’s Serenade play ness slowly goes to ruin, almost, be-/ ed on an English horn. The concert caune of his faith in men and women.| number by the entire orchestra, ia How his sweet and pretty little assist:|Taies from the Vienna Woods,” by ant, Norah, eventually comes to bis! straus rescue afd awakens him to realiza | . LIBERTY Mado an outlaw against his will, Buck Duane roams the Texas hills, |traiied by the Texas rangers, for jyears, Taunted by the village bully |that he wan afraid to walk thru the wn, Duane comes to the village, }and when he come face to face with | bis accuser, who says he in afraid, |drawa his gun only in welf-d jand Kills hig arxatiant | Buck ts forced to hit for the hills | because of the new order of things. After a time, he mets up with a |gang of Texas outlaws, but being a jtman he refusex to join their kind, Jand wanders on alone. In the power of the gang is Jenny Lee, whose par-| enta were killed by the Buck falls in with rescues her at he with ee Here’s the Best Fun im Seattle This Week VIVIAN a outlaws. | Jenny and} can't go back] because he} Here for just a few days longer—the sensa- tional drama that shows Turkish harem prac- tices and slave market victims—the cruct- fixion of sixteen Armenian Christian girls and the escape of one, Aurora Mardiganian, who tells her two years’ unspeakable exper- iences among the Kurds in this extraordinary picture— Showing Turkish soldiers raiding an English mission and carrying Armenian girls away into slavery—the Kurd slave markets—the girls tied to horses at night to prevent their escape. Nevera picture like this before. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Under Reginald Dunn of William Waters, a! stern, cold-blooded business man. He }summons her and tells her it is ——* | don office : ‘sail ‘* PROGRAMS To Help Nature Shed COLISKUM—Aurora Mardiganian in COL attraction at the has the unusual distinction of having |necessary for business reasons for him to pose during the next few weeks as a man engaged to be mar- ried. He offers her the post of “his | official fiancee” far a money consid- Jeration. Pressed for funds, she con- |wents, Many complications ensue, in \cluding the coming on the scene of {|a former lover, Water's embarras. REX—Hereld |sing gay dog uncle, and the arrival ae |of a charming French girl, between MISMION—Vivien Martin ta” jwhom and Waters an understanding | “Auction of Seats.” Mert Lyte in “Lom- + rece Semntey Cor | reot Topies. LIBERTY-—William Farnum in “Th: of the Duancs”; Happy Hool- animated comedy; Pathe | News STHAND—George Loane production, “The M with all-star enst. Met Tucker's Man,” | Wyight’s “The the Hille,” second Official Fiancee”; Seenie Pictorial | (evidently exists. COLONIAL — Mabel Normand in The two officially engaged persons all in love, and then it all comes out} & fons.” | happily. LITTLE—Bianche Bates and Hobart | | Meoworth in “The Iorder Legion.” | | Superb scenic effects combined |with a simple «tory of direct appeal |to man’s primal emotions make “The Shepherd of the Hits,” now playing in its second week at the Rex, one of the most fascinating photoplays that *°9 Beap brought to | Seattle in many a day x SEUM ‘Auction of Souls,” the photoplay Coliseum this week, 4 leading woman who actually enact ed the original scenes which the mo- tion pictures reproduced. Mi 5 . S Aurora Mardiganian, the girl w! Harold Bell Wright, the author, verlooked nothing to make the has the leading role, was persuaded | °V*" to Boog ign ond Just ‘what she | Photopiay an absorbing reproduction jot i in the Oxarka Even to a Personally passed thru in Armenia) rise. “encounter rivaling the classic |bout in Rex Beach's “The Spqilers,” At the opening of the story we see . oray 7 Ghesard Miss Mardiganian, an attractive Ar-|&* been included in Lap. Jof the Hulls.” menian girl, being wooed by a Turk « , Ni ce or whom ahe hae no use,|, But above and beyond the “scrap the the massacre of the Ar. |'* simple story of love and hate} | on for its wanderful merit a Bad Complexion Beauty devotees are enthusiastic o the beautifying qualities of mercolized wax. Nothing discovered within recent years accomplishes #0 mueb, so quickly, without harm, at such small expense. The princioas ony with ad of hid~ it removes it works in ha physiological laws, Ini ing complexion defects, them. It actually takes off the aged, faded, sallow, , freckled oF blotchy surface skin—kently, grad- ually, causing no inconvenience, It is nature's way of renewing com- plexions. When the natural process is re= |tarded because of deficient circulas tien oF nerve tone, mercolized wa. comes to the rescue and hastens th: skin shedding. The new complex= ion which appears is a youthful, healthy, exquisitely be u've never tried mere tiful, eo of it at thi night like cold washing it off in the morn= Advertisement |drug st cream, |ing Second and Last Week HAROLD BELL WRIGHT’S and,jealousy, which has for its back: | } by the Turks under erat the eubitmity of the Onerles ings, he is charged with every crime|# ment with the Ger-lictore it was marred by the en |that fs committed tn the district. |™ these scenes, the! ance of sordid railroads and other | Finally, of the women of his|Turks slay Aurora's father, mother, | marks of civilisation jtown is murdered, and Duane {#|brothers and sisters, | charged with the crime. He is seen} The girl then goes thru an untold |Story near the village and pursued by the|*uccession of horrible scenes, excapes| Peafneas in women is due to their | rangers. He makes @ thrilling escape |from the Turks, is captured by the |fajiure to practice the art of listen of but comes back to give himself up|Wild Kurds of the desert, sold as | ing, | when .be learns that he ix charged|#lave, put in a harem, takes refuge ithe with murdering a.woman. How he is| With rg oo 0 ee amen te | given his chance to earn “his pardon|the relief of the audience), is saved bf Jotning the Texas Rengere ana|by the British, who send’ her to Ozarks cleaning up the mountain gang, is| America the big climax to a strong picture. | Of course, at the end of the one Jenny Lee plays a part William Farnum portrays the role! of Buck Duane in “The Last of the! Duanes,” showing at the Liberty thin| week. Jenny Lee ix played by Louise} Lovely A Happy Hgoligan animated and the Liberty Weekly complete the! bill 4 COLONIAL | Mabel Normand continues to draw Shepherd Ing in a hilarious circus comedy | The romance of GIRLS [ the Ne plot concerns an orphaned ff Tito Lombardi, AND circus waif, known as the “Jinx” a temperamental GOWNS Miss Norman), because she has sup male modiste. GALORE! LTD.” plight, her ignorance and awkward. celebrated Oliver Morosco ars capture, During his wander.|™ “JINX” Solves Problem of Coal Strike There is one man in Seattle who! taking the coal strike seriously | He is the unidentified thiet who! |! stealing con! from the basement jof John Dunn's home at 917 Plum.| | mer had his basement} filled last v The pile began to my nish the side window thru which the al was shoveled. | The pe watch the by Rural va ” WAT JINX WAN - Joyously the “Jinx” sails on her merry jinx- way, spreading laugh- ter and fun for every- one—that is, everyone who can get in— f Registered Denstis Out of the high rent dis sonal service and moderate ing enable me to Ge to any dentist, come to me and from his figure, with careful, painiess methods and personal attention. Dr. J. Brown's New Office ORPHEUM BUILDING Third and Madisoa. at wn tericvsly dim on «XNIf, near the per- en asked window. to MISSION A novel situation, rich in funmak- | ing possibilities, is set forth in Vivian | artin's new photoplay, “His Official iancee,” now at the Mission Miss Martin has the stenographer employed in story. prominent | | mae ha a Misfortunes come in pairs for the man whose opponent holds three of a kind of a! | i the Lon role Phone Etiiott Seattle Advertising Service and Purchasing Company 1264 Empire Bldg. Distributors of Rogers Silverware, Coats and Suits for Gentlemen 2107 «XNIPy, «XNIEy, ommunity and erring: |ness, and her kindly heart plunge | ag |the “Jinx” into #tuations which are decidedly amusin; When the cireus fe nee he almost bankrupt show, the inx,” because she feels responsible for the catastrophe, tries to keep the performance going taking the |place of the serpentine dancer. To ” seo the “Jinx” try to dance in the |costume of the serpentine artist, ts lone of the funniest seenes in the i NORMAND 4 We purchase for you and ex- tend credit Ik strike and IN ‘JINX’ Just a Few Days More Real Bargains in Silverware For this week only NEVER AGAIN THESE PRICES From the Hattons. stage success by the BERT LYTELL With Juanita Hansen and Alice Lake Our Prices for this show Adults ............35¢ Children ..,.......11¢ Loge Seats ........50¢ Including War Tax | show All the way thru the picture many Their make-believe funny litle incidents of circus life are well until others take it Bi) qiiin Landis, Wlorence as See tnt A and little Frankle Lee, en things begin to ohtid ‘actor. 8 N 2—26-pl pappent ‘ ee pecial No, 4452—26plece set ds Community Silver, Bridal Wreath And she runs away! pattern, $12.50, . Special No, 4545—%-dor, Knives, C pattern, $7.20, tall and Specials, Special No, 4292—26-plece set Community Stiver, Patricia pat- tern, regular $35.00, mow $31.80. Special No. 4347--26-plece set Rogers 1847, Old Colony pattern, $27.25. ask to see these includos Carpenter the clever GUTERSON’S ORCHESTRA “Tales From the Vienna Woods” ( ) ENGLISH HORN SOLO “Shubert's Serenade” played by NE DEVAUX An instrument new to the Pacific Coast Russell on the Wurlitzer rua