The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 27, 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)

> (Smeal JULY $f, 1920, gy bee oe RimMaher Baby Marie Is ENTERTAINMENT Dereiiy teh: wocmnpanlod by her Mot h er’s Child mother, will sail from New York on i broad, This is her firet e Owen Moore haa booked passage to Aft D “M ARY’S sa, old hed “mage, Pattee hawt oageyt aeayre: Ln er Divorce August 12 for a brief vacation since her entry into the movies in —With— Fort, will be made into screen plays | his latest production, “Way Down| sult brought against Leon T, Os | KAMmierY Chases Ray” im | ie oe = | Kast," for which $175,000 was paid | borne, the Sie father. } pte Comes Home. si » i | | nm granting a divorce and custody COLONIAL—J. Warren ervigeo in Douglas MacLean | Many’ motable tavouten, are: ine the [Of Her two children to Mrs. Onborne| | germ Serene Hire | | ja One Poem Feaen astagine hire remy Rich |yesterday, Judge Stevens exener- May to Tary'’s Aatie” And Barihelmess and Lowell Sherman, {ted both parents and Miss Edythe] | " mig pets Sterling, movie actress named aa|%——— Ar : e coe chs ‘« n min- Doris May of Pain Alice Hollister, who Is now with|conmbondent, from charges of mi" |i teTy Stary of “2314 Hours’ Leave” the Goldwyn company, claims to be|on grounds of extreme cruelty In “Homer Comes Home,” Charles the woman who put the vamp in| phruout the hearings during the| Ray's latest comedy success, opening that no one should neglect is itching, bleeding or pro- truding piles or hemorrhoids. Pyramid Pile Treatment || should give relief no matter suffer. It is in every —whether you Railly and Kort, and comes back to Mainaville 18 months later to spend | his vacation there. S80 prosperous does he look that! | the citizens readily subscribe toa) fund he gets up for a factory in} | Mainaville, to be erected by his firm. | |That was one of his dreams, for he | fi had overheard the bons my that any- jones who could rains subscriptions for moted. An the comedy unfolds, Homer in) j#een as the manager of the new fac. | tory, and as the winner of the girl he loves. | | vampire, Mise Hollister played the | tast three weeks “Baby Marie” han|at the Liberty today, for a four days’ | | title part in “The Vampire,” which| piayed a stellar role, since the little; Mtay, all of his original small-town the screen, th incipal things fought for | @ffectiveness, and ald in making this) » gk by her parents 5 - nicture a riotous triumph. |min B, Hampton film star, has «| Homer Cavender, the town of Mains powerful emotional role in “the| KATHLYN WILLIAMS TO = |vitie's ne'er do well, having worked | | ton photoplay of the famous Winston Churchill novel, which has just been| Kathlyn Williams will play an tm-|everyone a few days after he had eee next special Paramount, following} He goes to the city, gets work) imi “The Invisible Divorce,” @ Na-| “Something to Think About.” there as a clerk in the employ of| was one of the plays Georges Car.| Mabel Normand ta to appear in pentier starred in while in America, ‘een version of Mitzi Hajo's : * STARTING TODAY Chock full of hifalutin’ plans, but couldn’t hold a job a week. Neighbors ‘lowed he’d never For her sake he went away. And he came back, stylish | was one of her first appearances on| stars fat pay envelope was one of |Characterintica are shown up with Miss Claire Adams, noted Renja- use a In the early scenes he is seen a oe “ at all of the available jobs in that ton photopiay of the fanus Winn | APPEAR IN NEW PLAY |town, ana having been fired out of| i | released. portant role in Cecil B. De Mille’s| taken it. tional Picture Theatres production, mse ‘Head Over Heels.” AT THE LIBERTY amount to a hill of beans, All but one—a girl. as all get out—and money fa pleasing crowds at the Coliseum this week in his latest masterpiece, “The Orphan.” As the “Orphan,” he ts an outlaw hunted by all. By 4 trick of fortune, he is brought | near Ford's Station, where, in jtight with Indians, he makes uniform warmth—m: steadfast friendship with the sheriff. had to get the band out. condition, in all | | iff's niece from the Indiana, Boon after he changes his outlaw taction and fin A dandy sheriff's niece, CLEMMER lh Accidents often happen, and they Ht i] a story of | usually are considered unlucky, i i Al But the accident that befell Wint hh > plain folks [s/s | By “accident” he waa elected may. | | or of Hardiston, the trials of which | , made a real man out of what he was | before, an unenergetic, irresponsible | young fellow. | This accident of his being elected | mayor also won for him Joan, the girl in the case. Tom Moore and Jane Novak are the stars in this play, “The Great Ac iden the ‘Sogener this week. STRAND Stephen Siward is a young, but poor, aristocrat, with an inherited craving for alcohol, in the screen version of Robert W. Chamber's great novel of the social world, being | Mid shown at the Strand this week. He falls in love with Sylvia Lan- dis, a young society girl, at a coun- try estate, where New York's social " Satisfactory: ‘Terms Always | THE GROTE “RANKIN QQ) 1918, the sights of gay Paris, he is due| LOS ANGELES, July 27.—“Baby —_—— back at the Selznick studios to start| Marie’ Osborne, child movie star, corte Twin tien ss 7 pe lies “The Girl From Nowhere,” by | on a new series of plays. was today in the custody of her “The Orphan.” } | Bradley King, and “Don't Trust eee mother, Mra, Edytha Osborne, fol-| | CUMMEN— tom, Moore tn Ih |Your Husband,” by Garret Eladen| D, W, Griffith has just completed | jowing the conctusion of the divorce| | #TRAND — Kobert W, Chambers’ | HERE is a furnace that the high coal does not affect. It burns the, cheapest kind of. coal without the usual accumulation of soot. ern conditions. It consumes more of the gases in your fuel from the soot that clogs up the ordinary furnace—saves you from 25% to 3314 % on your heating bill. This furnace is self-cleaning. All inside walls are vertical —no place for soot to accumulate. It gives forth an abundance of clean, moist, comfortably warmed air to a'tactory In Maineville would be pre | every room in,your house. It returns every dollar you | | pay for it in increased comfort and fuel saving. A-B Pipeless Furnaces —gosh! Well, they just ff) Witsm raroum | have proven their excellence under every, 4 -B Pipeless Furnaces make unnecessary the cutting of walls and ceilings. They give agg tng Bye end h fortable through one ~~ _ Right wow is the best time to have an A-B Furnace installed in your ome. Come and learn why an A-B Pipe- " Jean Heating System is the best system for \or 70 hs piu President! ri Ht ll price and growing scarcity 0 sense a modern furnace, designed to meet mod- burn coal, wood or coke. It generates heat sizés of homes. ake every room com- ff] | | i eae mit sot In spending the week end. She breaks her engageemnt to | Howard Quarrier, a millionaire, and together she and Siward face the| Douglas MacLean, as Doc Hamp- {trials of the world. ton, a young and little known M. D., | Anna Q. Nilsson and Conrad Nagel! | in order to claim an inheritance from we the leading ae his rich uncle, has to get married at once. | COLONIAL He 1s at sea what to do when he Tonight ie the last time J. Warren! remembers a girl whom he met on! Kerrigan will be seen at the Colonial | Tag day. | in “The Joyous Liar.” | He asks her to pose as his wife | As Burke Harlan, a wealthy ar-| when his uncles comes to see if he is| jaist, he ented by mistake for | married yet. | hich he had captured| she consents, but for permanently, and was returning to} not temporarily. , Anne Warren, — Anne Warren's father, an amateur| We express our deepest sympathy | \criminologist, gets him out of jail| with John Davidson, of the Goldwyn and takes him up to his home to try | players, John tells us that he has and make him reform, never had a birthday party or re- He sugcseds, and s0 does Harian— | ceived any birthday presents in all by marrying the criminologist’s cap-| his life. |tivating daughter, His explanation of this startling fact is that he was born on Christ mas. Poor John! are entertaining Rex patrons this week in thelr latest comedy farce, Dougias MacLean and Doris May EER 5 Re Bashful Charles Ray Comes to the Liberty in “Homer Comes Home” Coming Saturday Wm. S. Hart in “SAND” “Mary's Ankle.” aon, Prinae Joachim, revealed to for- mer German empress. THE HAGUE —Death of youngest| ELDORADO, Kan—Three ,{ barrels of crude oil, valued at ALWAYS—FIRST.RUN PICTURES—ALWAYS LAST TIMES TUESDAY— “THE JOYOUS LIAR” J. WARREN KERRIGAN LILLIAN WALKER AND JOSEPH DOWLING STARTING WEDNESDAY— ORCHESTRA Between 1 VAL HUBER, Conductor SHAMROCK IV. AND RESOLUTE SENNETT COMEDY “You bn a Believe | “Just a poor dern fool of a boy,” that’s Charles Ray in his latest comedy, “Homer Comes Home,” showing at the Liberty beginning today and closing Friday night. | Here you see him about to apply one of his “inv: ventions,” a non-skid device, to his boss’ car. It works fine when the car is going ona dry pavement, but on a wet pavement—no! | His boss tried it, and he knows. It sent him and his car into the ditch, 4 MAYME LA RUE Olcott” UNTIL FRIDAY TOM MOORE — GREAT ACCIDENT’ Ben Ames Williams’ Sat- urday Evening Post story. CLEMMER MUSIC Litorius Hauptman, Director. Concerts Afternoon and Eve ning. COMING SATURDAY— ‘7

Other pages from this issue: