The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 26, 1920, 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)

SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1929. SEATTLE STAR 2 : TODAY'S PROGRAMS : ERTY — Marshall Neilan'’s | Don't River Marry | ; CLEMMER—Alice Joyoe in “The | | porte | : COLISRUM ] = modeling a i] STRAND —Jack 5 | : Wolt | , REX.—Mary Pickford in “Rebdecea ' of Sunnybrook Farm.” | ; COLONIAL—Harry Carey in “Hu- man Stuff } CLASS A-—Pnid Bennett tn “Step. | 4 | ping Our 7 = - a ] r— * 7 TW [LIBERTY | — ———t8| . “DON'T EVER MARRY” >a F (First National e Joe Benson : Matt Moore | Dorothy Why... Marjorte Daw Go}. Whynn r Tom Guise , Mrs, Wnynn..... Adele Partington | ee - | ey ILOTHES make the man, but as to ey how far they make a woman is| ‘ Another question. Joe Renson trusted , to clothes to make an irate father be § lieve that the girl he was ; Marry was another than his dau ; ter He didn't get away with it, be Cause the father didn't b : young woman should be married : With her vell down. What happened ° afterward provides a seri of humor : ous interesting ¢ and An ex ] 3 eeedingly fascinating story as pre} a sented Marshall Netlan in his} J—Scene from “The Sea Wolf,” at Strand. 2—Alice Joyce, starring at Clemmer. 3. latest production, “Don't Ever Mar.| 5 nat: Pitches “Rehece Fy.” which will be the attraction at|°—/@ry Pickford, as “Rebecca the Liberty beginning today | m @ tee ( : v f ’ Dorothy Gish, as she appears in play at Coliseum. 4—Marjorie Daw in Marshall Neilan’s “Don’t Ever Marry,” at at Rex. ’6—Scene showing Harry Carey in “Human Stuff,” at the Colonial. ine _ th al MISS LORING RESIGNS 'Belated Bouquet Delivered : oe Pity the Poor TO BECOME BRIDE STRAND y Ht size So Cokes or to Doug and Mary by P t. aa Cite TAtteT ||... . Provecty Main! were seme cee et |: wie wesc to oe einaren poet ton “THE SEA WOLF” ntly resigned as production mana-|o¢ Douglas Fairbanks and Mary 1 ger of serials, Western dramas and! p: m the liner fend, on| 7 8 seaky ore, | © at shor (Paramount) Here's another reason for the ee wet ans high cost of automobile tires. William Faversham hag reversed 25 human skulls an 20 rg short-ree} features at Universal City, | which sailed on thelr honey. board who could get on deck ¢ rewster abe the order of procedure b: orking |* @¥ nothing of 16 ‘oyster fc is taking her honeymoon in an aecro- sieuday ed to . ra ery circle peemenrey Vou Worden at ro | They're wearing rubber dresses be Bhan me AR —— = sagt dau: shat teak. Sone, baal. 408 aane - mn ty es ym han wero- | moon trip to Europe Saturday (June ed to the rails, At ev Thomas Mugridge haynes Matson | hese colliahe abet eveea | Bt BARS om Seip * pe wie TS wwenre? 3 that a | Rane with lowe excitement than the |12), but the biggest bouquet of ll boat came lower. Finally a med » Not conte ove ha vy a ae ‘ea. who rode to je ne co e bi > hi porne 7 “ “The Sea Wolf. Jack London's| 54 large order poor prop lerats fr ert rode to the} came when the big ship had borne adie! Le Strange, climbed Oumm in in them out beyond Sandy Hook Greatest story, and one of the best| Protests against the high cost of Sea stories ever writthn, comes in| clothes, some of them are trying pPhotoplay form to the Strand for a/ Week beginning today. | out tWe rubber dress. Movie ‘The picture is filled with thrills! Queen Bebe Daniels is wearing and deep human emotion. The ferry Director George L. Cox haa prac tleally finished his work on his cur p house for b | rent production, “The n,” at the |r “It's a Great Life,” by Mary|ty acquired husband, Lie keebetean wtudies S artars. | Roberts Rinehart. In addition to! Lighton, a reserve mill eee he 6 Mudge Kennedy is ill, Not very, [ay ean at Goldwyn studio) Miss Loring resigned her big exec-| Just a short time after the Lap-|‘%¢ wing with the bouquet Sm: who had to fit out a cannibal island | utive job to ke liand left her dock in the Hudson hand. As the plane swooped , t. Louls D. message came flickering out on the liner and people aboard or , aa ry aviator west by telegraph from a upward at the daring mechanig | ee things mentioned, the|and magazine writer of note. They friend of the talented young couple, dropped the bouquet. It burst » 0 procure the follow now zooming over the Southern ordering four dozen E flowery bombshell on the hur a this one!—made of rubber, with q Boat accident is said to be one of the but enough to make a few days’ rest more or less undomesticated | California mountains in a plane, The | -ones as a farewell gift. [t looked as| deck of the liner, and beft pD Most spectaular ever flmed an appliqued design. sential; #0 work Was halted on t ticles ship was 4 to the honeymooners |if the presentation would have to be and Mary could do so slim The central figure is “Wolf” Lar ECR A ae | almowt-completed "Girl With the Jazz| Twelve nose flutes, 78 assorted! ny Frank Lawrence, editor-in-chief of yoned until their return, for the, wave their thanks, it Sen, a peculiar mixture of brutal sea ’ He which is being made at Gold. |Pa*kets, 19 bamboo sticks to carry) Universal productions, whose con nd was y heading ocean-|back to the const. be _ eaptain and student of philosophy,| says. |wyn's Eastern studios. fueenteser 50 nore bars; § tropieal|tract with Universal stipulates that) ward with black smoke pourirtg : : is hateves in the “survival of the oe musical instruments, 2 huge stone|/he must not cavort around in the from her funnels. ¥ Attest.” Lieut. Omar Locklear, the daring |Pot®, 40 oysters, each 7x11 inches: | air, | eu . r |! eee a | aviator, hae joined Fox, 3 battle axes, 1 akull basket, 1 war —— 4 ceased Ciasdek "neeeea abe j youd Reh director see cance seating 75 people tedde ! le co. rel | eicey ata wt soon bein work ny ‘anne Tote nisin|ORA WILL PERSONALLY _ |rmanacer ot the'Arcomarine Pune || dren’ une'a mogaoheee | ; tanh : ce Roc = - lotor Company, and he decided tha puttees and never wore Jon *Merely Mary Anne Jabout doing their spring shopping.| ANSWER ALL FAN MAIL! txcy"incuia nave their bouquet. ale| | shirt in bie lite Tile tien wipiaies Ora Carew, star of “Mountain telephoned hastily to the Aeromarine| nary member of the directs : * guest of hon m Madness,” has tackled the fob of an factory for flyt: HT wine, took ec ¥ . or recentiy ata birthday party, The TRENTON TQ ATTEND |iering ner most important tan let |the Dowtuet aboard, and. the’ plane| | his bow aa am lndependeat pa flim stars syearcid daughier, “a| FRISCO CONVENTION | teres ber own hand, After care 7 Sa | “THE SPORTING DUCHESS” (Vitagraph) ‘The Duc! Allee Joyce ‘The Duke . sees ercy Marmont Major Retand Mostyn...G. F_ Seyffertits, Gare Deimaine...-..1...---Baith Walker ! A Jealous husband is always ready to believe the worst, especially when he finds his wife In the room with @nother man. The Duke of Des ough was no cifferent than hun- ds of othera His own past had ht himeto be suspicious, He, be enanared in a chain of circum- that separates him from all he holds deir. He makes his final Play upon Derby and so does his di YVorced wife. This forms the basis of the intensely thrilling film version of “The Sporting Duchess,” which| comes to the Clemmer for the first | time today with Alice Joyce in the oe ,|COLLEEN MOORE TURNS )HELEN EDDY TO COLISEUM "| DOWN STAGE OFFER| TEACH DRAMATICS —____________g | _ Despite a life-long, and as yet um| Helen Jerome Eddy is to be the in “REMODELING A HUSBAND” | filled ambition to act on the spoken structor in a class of dramat to (Paramount) |stage, Colleen More has just reject | be established by the Hollywood Janie Wakefield... . Dorothy Gish |ed @ flattering offer received from @ dio Girls’ club: are ar wumens. -++-Jemes Rensle| New York stage producer, who |inpictures, and Mr, Wakefield ‘Downing Ciark | #0ught her as an important member the man - lof the cast he is now a je know Vivacious Dorothy Gish and her | The offer was made thru because of Revel means of laugh-getting will be |(Chic) Sale, and on his recommenda: | upon the screen the leading attraction at the Coliseum | tion. When that noted comedian was) She jas the leading role in @ screen beginning today in a sprightly screen |in Los Angeles making “The Smart version of a poem, now ueeetion © DOROTHY’S NEW GOWN jroared down the river and out thra| | ducer with “The Deep y considering the question for some|the Narrows in hot pursuit of the] | The fact that Wal hews g 00d e a had by « x oT t e fe esc! good Cite wan RAS hy ail | Pell Trenton in planning to attend | time, she has come to the conclusion | liner. The Lapland was making uel emblems that procilies his the democratic national convention |that any letter which is an inspira-|time, but she couldn't match thefly-| 7 ere be eo ial ti ! > coule ch thefly-| | has no effect ce Tom 2 re, under direction of in San Francisco, He is going as|ton to her work—and appreciation | ing* boat. || as a director, preci to Harry Beaumonty will begin work | the representative of a motion pic-| always inspires—iy worth a more in-| Passengers taking thelr last look| | Mayflower Photoplay © t ule week on hie latest pic ture, Stop | ture magazine, and will write a etory|timate reply than a rubber-stamped|at Sandy Hook were startled sud-| | tion, which presents hig p Thief! in which Hazel Daly 18 to of the presidential nomination for|form letter of acknowledgment, and 4 to see the flying boat come) | tions, play opposite hi | the publication, as seen thru the eyes|4 personal reply will be proportion-|roaring up to the liner and circle| 8 of a Mim star. ately valued. around as if with 1 Bernard Durning ts the latest film ————— : <a : Se oe ee: ie hero, “Berney” ig sixand-aquarter , feet tall, and the muscle he accumu lated in both the Idmber camp and army cantonment proclaims him one of the actual Sams@ns of the screen. YES, SHE’S IRISH Shannon Day, who has just joined yers, is just as Irish » Goldwyn p name. She was « od bat when she was 17 and an Irish hat, swung a abil lalah and sang an old Irish song in the Follies she was re od Mins Day is an enthusias ranging all the way from tate | tie danc nuse of the most modern ballroom dan 6 drama and | back to the old folk dances of t sh people, She is playing now tn yort of Jack Pickford in “The Who Had Everything was chow ean | I success Ma comedy, modeling a Husband.” | Aleck,” with Miss Moore aa his Iead- | being fiimed The action has a domestic flavor to/ing woman, he urged her to go on L. Ce American ft, being the story of a maiden who| the stage, for at least one season, studio, Santa Barbara. CREATES SENSATION married a flirt with the idea of mak-|and promised her an early oppor tia hee 08 the ern Ging & one-woman man out of him.|tunity. Altho she still hopes to ap-| SEENA GETS PRESENT |ccurccin screen world have been 7 = But he failed to keep his eyes in|pear on the spoken stage at some alifornia screen “i i ir nt develop| Seena Owen was presented with a/ Startled and dazzled by the butter. ure career | week-old ostrich chick recently, a impo: ea mned to keep the bird hillips to 7 the boat, and the result was misun-|time in the future, re q derstanding and separation, until/ ments in her motion pir } finally the young bride used her nim- | have forced her to the conclusion she bie wit and concocted a novel scheme | cannot desert the silent drama just 4 nice crop of feathers every fly gown creation, specia from Paris for Dorothy ar in Allen Holubar’s first inde ently produced f ure of insuring their wedded bliss. now. - It was given to her by Manager H.| pendently P 7 ‘ James Rennie, a prominent stage| a ‘om J. Vateher, of the CAwston ostrich| Made by Worth, the famous Pa player tho a newcomer to the cinema, | MARY'S JOB farm, near Los Angeles. risian modiste, it is ornamented with Treat Gich’s leading mah. The most unique assignment in| The little chick grew almost a foot | petrified butterflies, crystallized by : es them {al process, which ¢ eee | motion pictures has been given to in three weeks, ate Mary O'Conner, assistant supervisor chicken feed in that Um istency of spun gold. it tn ad 1 REX jot the Lasky lywood, !always hungry. Miss Owen became hanous affair, cut extremely who is now in the I ” has to alarmed at the ostrich’s «ppetite, daring, and, according to those who “REBECCA OF BROOK "| 2104 performances .w the emotional star wearing it on i, |day and every evening af the speak-| bird “4 m Pr hove jing stage along Broadway, to find|sent the little ontrich back Mebeces. Randall. Picktora | Ut the public demand along! cided it would be wiser to b Adam Ladd e O prises | amusement lines. plumes, Hannah t ° Bday Mr. Cobb. Charles Ogle Would you like to see Mary Pick ford, as the star of a three-ring cir. cus, walk the tight rope? And scan-| W dalizing the village school on ‘‘vis-| itor’s day” by reciting a rather start. | ling bit of verse of her own making? | Miss Pickford is coming to the Rex| today in her famous success, “Tte-| becca of Sunnybrook Farm.” Miss Pickford has made youthful, lovable Rebecea live upon the screen, Selling soap for premiums for “poor Mrs. Simpson,” going off to boardin: school, frolicking on the country straw ride—all the delightful mem ories of childhood are packed in this} picture. pounds of ind seemed matinee |and when she found the fully grown cow, she the studio stage, it Is more qu than quantity and could have bee smuggled into the country in a #* hollow tooth she has always done, gna | COLONIA ~ “HUMAN STt FF” Jamon Pierce Harry Carey *Washboara” Pierce. Rudolph Christians ——* L You know what Marshall Neilan can do. He made “The River’s End,” “Daddy Long Legs” and “In Old Kentucky.” Now he has made this six-act mirthquake for First National. It’s no exaggeration to term it'the laughing hit of the year in Seattle. It comes high, but there’s no advance in prices. : Scenes on a sheep ranch are effec: | tively pictured ‘in Harry Carey's latest photodrama, “Human Stuff,” which opens today at the Coloniak In the first part of this pictur: Carey departs from his usual cowbe style, to appear as a young sovigt chap. However, before the stor ends, he is back again in fis shirt, bigh boots and Mexican apurs.| BEN CATCHES COLD Ben Turpin, the aquinteyed screen | comedian, was laid up as a result of mehings he received in the taking Of scenes for “Married Life,” Mack | ’ Ps : ‘ ‘ Fe Sennett’s initial First National pro Not all movie stars spend their spare time in the divorce courts. Here is a charmingly) duction. The property man neglect-| intimate picture of Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Hamilton, filmed recently at their attractive | 6B to vr Heomweaption ne she sar! home in Los Angeles. Hamilton is one of the most popular leading mef on the screen and | e ption of work on ; : , q : “ | among the pictures in which he has appeared here lately is with Mary Pickford in “Daddy | Loi | the picture was delayed a week, until | B } | Ben recovered from his cold. | mg Legs.” Mrs. Hamilton is a non-professional. MATINEES 25c AFTER 6:30 35¢ Children, 11e Any Time 'ALLACE on the URLITZER Concert, 12:30 Sunday All Prices Include Tax

Other pages from this issue: