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Tonight and Tuesday Only A compact comedy- drama dealing with womar love and man’s strength ETHEL CLAYTON —a_ convincing yal of a woman d—but you can’t to see the novel of it all. i on the Wurlitzer 'LEAGUE WANTS 5,000 MEMBERS Lieut. Ralph Lutz Will Be Speaker Tuesday Noon members by the is the slogan | adopted by the} of Seattle, under way Five thousand st of the next year hat has Munteipal and] how to earry | 4 Bg ting ans ar ut this " who as officer Captain Plummer mma of company L.| trad Infantry went to France with| zation, and since return:| States has been director for th has been re pu director by th League | At the next weekly meeting of} © league, to be held at Meves’| feteria Tuesday noon, Prof, Ralph Luts of the University of Wash will speak on the political nomic conditions in Europe Lute, formerly a Meutenant tn 40th divisio: was afterward a» the army intelligence | France and from there the firet army mat) was detailed with the to Berli tunity to study conditions| partacas rebellion, after | was went to the Baltkane| miraion After return where he reported to director general of the supreme ¢ council, he served the at Parte ports that he would remain a passive various other countries on special missions. | The public ing | TUBERCULOSIS EXPERT NOW LOCATED HERE| Dr, Raymond J. Cary, who during }the past summer conducted a tra-| | veling clinic for the Washington Tu-| | Derculosis association, in co-operation | | with the anti-tuberculosis leagues of} the stage, has returned from a reat | hea California to take up the cee i | nent work of clinielan and diagnos j ti jan for that organization. Dr. Cary is a graduate of the [Johns Hopkins university medical) | achool, and for ten years was en hat organ federal tained Municipal Prot the signed to hool |b ransferred te Me where he! military | bad app uring the ich b a specta ng to F Herbert Hoover ts Invited to the meet gaged as medical director of tuber-| | culosis division of the medica! corps! | of the army. His headquarters will| be at the office of the association, | 200 Securities building, Seattle. LAZZARI = Metropolitan Opera House Contralto—First Time Here— In Concert at the Metropolitan Tonight (Monday) at * 20 Prices—$2 to 50c LAZZARI Will sing two grand operatic “Scarlet Days” New Griffith Picture at the Strand Today } the olden California of the gol tortals, “Heart o' the Mille”; Coliseum News. STRAND — Starting today, D. W. ‘heartet Days.” 2 Over Curwood's “Rack “tends of . | Lerri "e—tlare, Kimbo! Youss “The Mead Thru the Dark.” ————_—____—_ barefooted Kentucky mountain girl in “Heart o° the gills” at the Coliseum this week She rides a horse, standing on the saddie, and shoots at a target at- tached to the tree an the horse trow around it. ‘The plot, like other movies of the Kentucky mountains, hinges upon a feud. It succeeds in being vastly more interesting than the average feud story. This ts because Mary Pickford is the center of attraction arias, those from “Les Hugue nots” and “Samson et Dell- ALLACE “Hawthome of the U.S. A.” is here—a hilarious story of an American chap who hires a jitney for a tour of Europe, breaks the bank at, Monte Carlo and wins a kingdom and a princess! e & * Wallace on the Wurlitzer playing “Indiana Moon,” by Freed and Wallace *% % *% Liberty Pictorial Review with excerpts from leading news weeklies. * * *% Earl Alexander Tenor , One scene shows the mountain |eirt with her childhood sweetheart fishing. This is an unusually pretty cone with little Mary acting the SENNETT COMEDY “The Speak Easy,” with full directions how to bootleg unsuccessfully. ony Bayer ARY PICKFORD impersonates 6 | Clarine Seymour and Richard Barthelmess are here shown in a scene from D. W. Griffith’ lat the Strand today. Advance notices describe this picture as a romantic tale of ‘8 “Scarlet Daya,” which opens ld rush ih daye of '49. coquette to perfection. Another scene which stands out distinctly shows Mary aboard a mule on her way to @ school in the low.) lands. She comes to a rafiroad track for the first time In her life. She gets off the mule and tries to lift up the track. Along comes a train. Panic stricken, she gets off the track just as the train dashes by She mounts the mule, and the | mule equally terrified by the train, reare up, the girl sliding off back ward. | Mary's romance culminates tn the | final reel, By the brook her sweet j heart proposes, She becomes so ex lelted she falla In the brook eee LIBERTY “Hawthorne, of the U. & A.” is a familiar story. The American hero, in diffiquities abroad, over comes all difficulties and obstacles by free uses of money and brase. “Hawthorne, of the U, 8. made from a stage play of the same name, once played on the stage by Douglas Fairbanks. ‘The setting for this comedy drama, ie & mythical European kingdom, Bovinia. When the story opens, Bo- vinia is bankrupt because no one patronizes its health baths. The king is an old fellow, forced by the condt tion of his treasury, to borrow home made cigarets from the royal guard. The princess is a charming miss who Wears slippers with holes in the toes. The young American (played by | Wallace Reid), arrives with a suit case full of money he won at Monte Carlo. He preventa a revolution, marries the king's daughter and makes the | state a financial success: | ‘The last reel, via the sub-titles, A.” te In , , tacaishy | Y NOW-—UNTIL FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY A Vivid Western Play of Bandit Love the scarlet I Here’s a new Griffith duced with all the great director's mas- tery of color, adventure, plot and char- acterization—after weeks of painstaking care, I days when roamed the olden West and hearts felt little but love or hate, 'ECARLET DAY SI brigands picture, pro- dancing. wake It is D. | mour, and ! tainment that keeps the Bichard Barthelmess, Clarine Sey- George Fawcett, Ralph Graves, Carol Dempster, in a dramatic enter- red blood W. Griffith’s latest, his newest, his best! # s presents wan false to him he begins to take notice of the governess, and in spite of the part of the other wom an Pauline teeogmnes bie bride, REX In this day of walkouts and strikes | there is one strike which bids fair to | Body of Man Is Found on Tracks Dead for several hours, the body of an unidentified welldressed, one- legged man was found on the rail [road tracks at Hanford st. and forma un that the old king shows his|become popular thruout the United) pairoad ave. 8, Sunday nfght by appreciation by becoming American: ized, and learning to speak English. This picture ix the chief attraction at the Liberty this week. . . CLEMMER ¢ Geraldine Farrar In supported by her popular hushand.actor in “Flames of the Desert” at the Clemmer theatre this week. The story, which ts of Oriental at | mosphere, and the plot concerns the Jattempt of Abdul Bey to found a |new Mohammed empire and |throw the English yoke Tellegen makes an unusual ap. peal in the role of a British of. |fleer, acting as a sput with the | Redouina of the Sahara desert, who jare planning the revolt against | thelr English rulers. Garbed in the |flowing robes and turban of the Egyptian Sheik Essad, Tellegen is |considered by all his acquaintances to belong to the dark-skinned ples of the Nile. When he meets and falls In love with Lady Isabella Channing (Ger- aldine Farrar) it is diffieult for him |to hide his real identity, and when Lady Isabella decides that he in the jone man in her life the situations come greatly tangle Lady Isabella fights to uphold | the pride of her race and not until the very end of the story does she learn that the supposed sheik is in| reality a British officer, eee over | COLONIAL Women of fine training and su perior ability are sometimes forced {by circumstances into positions | where other women take advantage! of them. This hap is to Pauline Frederick tn her latest photoplay, | “Bonds of Love,” at the Colonial this week Miss Frederick t# employed as a governess in a wealthy family take charge of the son. His mother is dead His father is so devoted to his wife's memory that he has not married again But he has in his household a young married couple, his wife's sister and her husband, who live joff his bounty, It is this young woman who jnesultea wline Fy p rick and makes life as uncomforta bie as possible for her. She is afraid that the new woman's su perior charms willewin the aft tions of the son and the father, And there the trouble begins, When the husband finds jasters proving biivat nis first some | wis Hood’s Sarsaparilla | Take this good old family medicine For Scrofule, Catarrh, Rheumatiom, Kidney Complaint, Dyspepe: Having superlative merit it has given entire satisfaction to three) jeenerations, Fine purifier and tonic, |which ends in a thrilling States. This ix the famous “hunger” wtrike staged by twoecore of animals in “Back to God's Country.” adapted) from “Wapl, the Walrus,” being shown at the Rex this week, Jamen Oliver Curwood, author of the stor his scenes as graphic as ponsible While Dolores LeBeau (played by Nell Shipman) is lHetening to the love! stories of an Eastern hunter, the dow: | ens of bensts and pets whom she| spared no efforts to make) _ | members of a Milwaukee switch en gine crew, It is thought the man waa handicapped by his artificial |leg in getting out of the road of jan approaching switch engine. has made love her besiege her fath-) er’s mountain hut in their desire to} be fed Among those who engage in the| & raccoon. ducks, dog hunger. atrike are a bear a porcupine, a donkey, turkey chickens, cow, rooster, 0: monkey and owl. The animals invade the kitchen of the hut, paying no heed to the en treaties or offers for arbitration. The story has its setting in the Canadian wilderness, from which it switches to the frozen Arctic lands, where some of the most un usual scenes were taken. eee MISSION “More Deadly Than Male” unique title of the photoplay at the Mission this week. The picture is all about a man who wants to go to Zululand for adven ture, He meets a clever girl shows him that it's more exciting to stay at home. Ethel Clayton ts featured as a high- spirited girl, in love with a wealthy Jub man, who ts used to searching in queer corners of the globe for ex citement and adventure. When the girl urges him to settle down to a useful occupation, he retorts that there are no thrills in modern civ. ilization. Whereupon she sets out to prove him mistaken, All sorte of hair-raising Incidents in a mountain camp follow, The young fellow is forced to fight a duel with the girl's supposed husband unter is the who with the police. Of course it’s all a frame-up, but it works fine, and Ethel wins a hus band. TO ERECT NEW BUILDING Real estate deals, ale of the Adrian ave posed construction of a seven-story building at Seventh and Stewart by George B, Seibert, were announced Saturday by the office of Henry Broderick, Inc. 8 camps charged including the court, Summit D FOR INVESTIGATION ‘ eral robberies of tents and on Bainbridge island to G Clarke, M4, a caulker, held in the elty jail Mon day fe further investimation, He was arrested at Ballard 8 ernoun ¢ north: | and Madison st. and the pro-| | | UNTIL | FRIDAY | NIGHT | | JAMES oftver CURWOOD'S WO: PICTURE OF TH FROZEN NORTH THE TALK OF THE TOWN Sunday aft | |e reported that SAYS BERGER TO BE OUSTED Second Election to Congress Won’t Last Long WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—The sec- ond “career” of Victor L. Berger, Milwaukee socialist, as a congress- man-elect will be short, Representa- tive Ballinger, Massachus@tts, chair- man of the special committee that recommended the Wisconsin repre- sentative's first exclusion from the house, said today. A resolution will be passed exclud- ing Berger from the house with as large a vote of approval as the count of 309 to 1 on the similar one ex- cluding Berger after his first elec-| tion, according to to Ballinger Cabin Looted by Hold-up Men! While one man held him at the point of.a gun, apother ransacked his cabin of all clothing, $20 in cash, and a revolver, G. W. Deit- rich, night watchman at the Co. operative Packing plant, Renton Junction, told the police Sunday, the robbery had scourred at 7:30 Saturday evening. Strand Orchestra, under S. K. Wineland, playing “Madame But. terfly.” Clide Lehman in a piano solo; Cho-— pin’s Polonaise NEW PRICES Afternoons Loge Seats . After 6 o'cloe! Loge Seats . Children 10¢ any time, All prices plus tax. * Short Course in Ars : Mining Opens at ‘U’ Registration for the 24th annual session of the winter mining course at the University of Washington opened Monday morning, and will continue thruout the week, it was announced Saturday. The three months‘ course is designed either for the graduate mining engineer or the practical miner who is not a college man, It combines lectures, class and laboratory work, open to all regis trants without examination. YOU HAVE FROM MONDAY (Today) To SATURDAY THIS WEEK TO SEE “Saturday to Monday” The Merricst of Comedies WILKES THEATRE A Massive Spectacle And a Great Love Story— GERALDINE FARRAR “FLAME OF THE DESERT” A plot that holds a hundred scenes that thrill. CHRISTIE COMEDY— “A ROMAN SCANDAL” Two Reels of Laughs Current Topics And a Weekly Liborious Hauptman Director Concert Number: Selection, “Carmen”...