The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 26, 1919, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

D ‘ Ay 11, 1, 3, 5, 7,9 The Acknowledged Masterpiece of D. W. GRIFFITH The Art Sensation of the Civilized World— | Broken s1Blossoms see this wonderful motion New York, Boston and Chicago paid $2 per seat to picture. Come to one of. the matinees if possible—all performances are com- plete. AFTERNOONS Sle +-2e We ie NIGHTS, AFTER 6 Lower floér and lower balcony Upper balcony Children Loge neat . All prices plus whr tax Strand Augmented Orchestra | Under S. K. Wineland, playing the Thomas overture, | “Raymond.” Wineland, Rogovoy and Lehman, playing a “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice” EN ENTOMBED FOR 12 were getting queer until we ard the water inthe diamond |% hole,” says a letter sent up thru @ pipe by P. P. Grant and Emil Sayko, now ertombed in the | Hunter mine for 12 days. ) Crews are blasting a path of .. te the imprisoned men. fat it will be several days before they are reached. d |11 YEARLING HORSES _ DAYS SEND UP MESSAGE, MULLAN, Iaho, Nov. 26.—“Our! ARE SOLD FOR $19,200 ow YORK, Nov, 26 me. sold by J. W. MacGowan Mount Sterling, Ky. brought $19,200 late yesterday, at the Old Glory horse sale in Madison Square Garden The top price was paid by W. 1H Cans, New York, for Belvue. D. G MeDonald, Pittsburg, paid $5,200 for three yearlings. Other buyers were M. L. Childs and W. D. Creighton, Omaha, Neb. + Tonight, Thursday and Friday— NORMA TALMADGE —the best-loved dramatic actress on the screen celebrat- ed novel, “By Right of Con- quest,” called “THE ISLE OF CONQUEST”. The startling story of a young girl forced to marry a society Brute by a scheming mother, and a shipwreck and another man. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 81 Artists under Reginald Dunn, playing “J] Guarany” Vivian Hart in Songs Bleven| | THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOV. 26, 1919. 3ROKEN BLOSSOMS” TELLS | * W. GRIFFITH, moviedom's pace ‘e maker, has set a new mark for | hin newest picture, | "Bro! ma,” which is the at traction at the Strand this week This picture contains none of the lcrowd spectacies for which he has lbeen noted 4 in the past. There are n contains only | and the! characters ceur away from world And it js a tragedy, absolute and uncompromising At the end the three are dead. It's New - Here ix a new story, utterly unlike * * * ” TODAPS TROGRAMS LIBERTY—James Oliver Curwood's P "Resk to Ged's Country”; Mack in “Twin Tew COLONIAL—Frask Mayo tn “A Lit- the Brother of the Bich.” LITTLE — Aadrey CLASS A—Jane Grey in “ De It.” | couasECM Natalie Talmadge makes her debut at the Coliseum this week in “The Natalie is the |isle of Conquest.” youngest of the three Talmadge sis | ters and looks a good deal like sister | Norma. “The Isle of Conquest” is version of “By Right of ¢ and shows Norma Talmadge as a Goung society girl, who because ot marriage, becomes 4 How she is eventually an unhappy man hater won by a woman-hi several exciting r | shipwreck is realixtically pictured. MRS. M. ROZELLE HAD SUFFERED SINCE CHILDHOOD She Had Been Needing All of Her Life. “Tanlac has over se of ste ht bothered me ever enild, Mrs. Minnie Rozelle who lives at Renton, Wanh | “For years and years, I just don't lknow h many, I have red fre mplication trouble will ever know what I continued M little that I at ause I knew there ome a chronic le that ha since I was a through,” ed t a few the 1 ar, M terrible mping » much gas form p against hardly get m and 1 sharp pains in k and under my riba, I had rheumatism in my feet and limbs feet would swell up so bad that It was hard for me to drag myself abs 1 was con he I was so ly keep from times, and I was too ever get a night's re I tried ever and just or bites be have » end to to it and 1 and my screaming restles or sleep, so many different treatments, but it I tried the worse looked Mike 1 to get relief medicines mine w imended it to #, “| people and horses: A nereen tales which’ al ways have a happy ending. Broken s na” is a story of the London |aubworld which was The [Chink and the Child” when first pub lished in Thomas Burke's collection “Limehouse }the ordinary named f short stories called Sigh ts. ‘The three leading characters are a prize fighter, his child, and a Chinese poet When the fighter loses a fight lor for other reasons is low if spirits, |he beats the child The Chinese poet has come to Lon don, where he down in the slume of 1 day nettles rehoune he child * Mer ween the * * * CLE | Spiritualism plays an important | part The Thirteenth Chait Rayard Vetller's mystery play which in d in her home. urs, There either crime, tho resent upon both oc been no wii pee like mystery you'll revel in this Velller which keeps the spectators in suspense until the very climax story LABERTY One of the welrd scenes in “Rack God’ ” the photoplay by rwood, showing at week, ix @ midnight nee on board a ship frozen with The women are Eskimo squaws who were brought from a trading post to dance with the ali i ‘Their clumny, in thelr native dances are tho amusing ore. grotenque an much r alah, a master of big pro duetions, di 4 the photoplay which stare his and talented © The a young girl who up amid racing She falls in with'a southern youth who forrakes pretty wife, Miriam deals with has been brought oper ve | her when goanips tells him she has a pant } 1 | fin ite thin she saves him from cial ruin by racing his horse to | victory, after Je “ of a plot which would made him a Pp r cast includes Mrx ett and Eric Mayne have frrother of the F pening at the story 1} Patterson Tribune ine Adams written by owner of the Chi stars Frank Mayo Sherry | MISSION Pretty star of little the Mae Murray {s show Pawns,” now playing at the Mis Miss Murray plays Violet White young girl who marries Bo <« that pments » that the fellow marries her for her money Then fate takes a hand and the story is given a most unusual end ing | “A LUCKY DOG” | » had | il you before | my first und the ing fe came been My appetite back now tr the first in years I can ¢at just anything 1 want without troubled with indigestion or cramping f left my limba and the pains in my my ribs. My and I am not constipation and a thing of the past sleep as sound as a morning comes 1 and I give all the happy condition time being « or rheumatism has feet and so ha back and under nerves are steady, troubled with headaches are with ehiid end simply feel fine Ait for Tantac.” Tanlac i# sold in § Drug Stores under t | rection of a special Ta | tative ~Advertisement pains me, 1 when my ttle by Bartell nal di represen | FOX SUNSHine ‘Thot 0 giris | wo | mors of the and | fox Sunshine Comedy pet, ‘These young x the finest swim yn and are noted, James K.| TRAGIC STORY} beauty and purity of soul reflected in her face, awaken in him the po@try that the slums had almost killed. ittle e finds her tn a takes her to ‘ike and state of ¢ vd robes her ir n with flowers Tragic Climax Feared learns that she Ration of the Chinese. os to the house, his room decks the is in In a rage wrecks the room where he finds her and takes her back to his own quar — to death. The n with grief hunts © and shoots him to « her Lillian ald Crimp Barthelmens the Chinese | WHEN MEALS HIT BACK : } ; ‘ ' ” . “Pape's Diapepsin’’ instantly Ends Indigestion, Sourness, Stomach Acidity bila. the Richard lumps causing you pain? sour tburn? undigested Is your ‘stomach or have you fatu Then take Pape's on Ax You eat a tablet or # Diapepsin all that dys pepsla, indigestion and stomach dis tress caused by acidity ends. These pleasant, harm tablets of Pape's Dis er fail to ke sick t hs feel fine once, and ery little at drug stores Don-| “A terrified shriek—and Daisy’s overburdened heart momentarily stops beating. Bent’s terrible plan has succeeded.” That’s the stuff! Look who wrote it—WILKIE COLLINS. Today’s new play is full of delicious creeps! It’s his “Woman in White.” RUSSELL ON THE WURLITZER OWN : FOURTH NEAR PIKE He oe | CLASS A A railroad collision, a dynamite ex osion, Mexican raids, and a hand nand encounter with border ban. dita are among the exciting incidents | in “Let Katy Do It,” the new show Blood-Iron Phosphate Makes Thin Folks Fat Or Money Back food « any 50 « directed better nerves steadier: mn better, and your vim talit don't sleep vigor and y than doubled, or n several pounds re flesh, you can y back for the ask trial of Blood-tron nothing have y ne and ' Phosphate w NO HOPE OF RELIEF Unless Old-Time, Obsolete Treatment Is Discarded The coming winter offers, little hope to the victim of Catarrh. In fact very short- ly you will begin to once more know the real annoying and disagreeable features of the diseases which always make their appearance with cold, raw and windy weather. Doubtless during the mild summer months you have en- |joyed some relief from the | dis because there is al- ways less inflammation of the membranes during the sum- mer, but do not make the | mistake of thinking that your |Catarrh is gone, for the very first raw, damp, wintry -day, \the delicate linings of the ;membranes_ will begin to jagain become irritated and | sore, the air passages will be- \gin to clog up, and soon you will find that your old enemy is still with you, with a \fiendish intention of making {the winter as full of discom- \fort as ‘ever. | What p you going to do about it? If you have had the disease for any length of time, the chances are that remedies to convince you that this method of treatment. Are you going to drag through another’ winter hawking, and spitting, and \spraying constantly in an ef- {fort to unclog the stopped-up air passages so that you can ‘get your breath for awhile, knowing that these accumu- lations will immediately re- you have used enough local | there is no cure for you in| FOR CATARRH VICTIMS. !appear—or are you going to discard this makeshift treat-| |ment, and use a little intelli- |gence in an effort to get rid of this disease that is such an annoyance and a constant | handicap You must accept the teach- ings of science, which shows that to get rid of any disease, you must treat it at its source, you must direct your efforts toward removing its cause, instead of being satis- fied with slight tempoyary relief from its You must rout out from your blood the ‘millions of tiny germs which cause Catarrh, so that there can be no more inflammation of the nose and | throat, and choked up nas passages that make breath- jing difficult and painful. S. S. S., the fine old blood remedy, has given splendid results in the treatment of Catarrh, and you will be de- lighted with its effect in your case, It so purifies and cleanses the blood, that dis- ease germs are eradicated, |hence when the germs of your Catarrh are eliminated from the blood, you are on the right road to permanent riddance from Go to your drug store, and get a bottle of S. S. S. today and begin the real rational | treatment that will give real | results. | If you will write our med-| tical department, we will take {pleasure in giving of your own particular case. Address Chief Medical viser, | Atlanta, Ga. i) | which opens at the Class A today the featured players try. town, 913 2d ave. symptoms.) the disease. | instruc: | \tions regarding the treatment | Ad-| 153 Swift, Laboratory, : When your head feels like a basket of broken © bottles—you need Jane Grey and Tully Marshall are Let's ko buy Boldt’s French pas- Uptown, 1414 3d ave; down me eveacienieiea and thus irritates the rest of the body, — — ad Dolores, the beautiful Canadian swimming maid, and the famous wolf-dog, “Wapi, the Killer,” in— ‘ “BACK TO GOD'S COUNTRY” A red-blooded wonder drama of Alaska’s ice and snow—made in the Arctic Circle—16 varieties of wild animals. Best of all, a big cast illuminating one of the most virile love romances imaginable— lots of thrills and every one a new one. Wallace on the Wurlitzer, playing “Let the Rest of the World Roll By” Pathe News Mack Sennett Comedy Afternoons loge seats 4c. ren, 10c any time, After 6:30, 31e; loge seats d4e, All prices plus tax Always the Best for The Liberty Guest

Other pages from this issue: