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J } > 7 > _ : q V¥eees ec evoeeserrvrr7"*™ (@ “CROOKED STRE (Pare ) Gan mis rt ~ Grisw< China in search of al re « On the voyage Mre wold be-| Mra. Griswold a « " shaw toget wt 1 dr Whiapers sec t Graws the r aw | This is or b ¢ the the scr m Streets, the . _ ; x [ CLEMMER ~ x “THE RIDDI kr WOMAN” lala aidine Farrar “The Riddle: Woman which mts Geralttine Farrar he role « ia, a lovely young society woman, the attraction now at the Cleny mer. It is an adaptation of a Danish Play by Carl Jacoby, The action re Yolves about Lilla Clark her husband him. Her happiness is jeopardized by t 1—Ethel Clayton, Strand; Love, Clemmer; 6—Norma T. COLISEUM “THE BRANDED WOMAN” who adores! as she ix adored by ingor, @ (First National the appearance of E Hel ne *. POEs a : a aad gambler and spendthrift, who makes | pougias Courtonay ¥ Marmont his living by carefully laid kmall:| Norma Talmadge plays the part of ing plots. a runaway wife in her latest film 4 + ——_——_———-& | play, “The Branded Woman," whict r LI B E R rT Y opened today at the Coliseum. How FE & baby figures in the straightentn yy ea ~EMy> | of & maze of domestic entanglement HELD BY THE ENEMY yia the telephone is revealed in the @ nount) film version of this fas ing play ehel Wt - Agnes A y ) er “Held by the Enemy,” a romantic} drama of the Civil War, ts the pres. | ent attraction at the Liberty. It is a) ——— Xk screen version of the stage play! » | made famous by William Gillete. { (Piret tiona: rie Ontare ‘ In a Southern town captured by | Dr Lansing coe Bas fedéral troops during thé year of 1864) 4 box of treasure and » the action is laid. Rachel Hayne, the | is jeft little Eileen O'Hara upon t Jovely young wife of Capt. Gordon | geath of her father, with the instruc Hayne, is the heroine of the story, | igns Which is filled with scenes of action, | until she findy an honest man. (suspense and romance. | eens entry into society and the COLON IAL ing sin” form the aherne of “Even ." the plewre play which tx own the Rex. NATIVES TAKE PART ° “LAHOMA” [ Peaches Jackson (Roulse Burnham Menry Giedware Wade Boteler | “Lahoma,” the photoplay at the/| 7 | Colonial, is a story of the West— IN O BRIEN PICTURE @f those early days when men lett Several hundred natives assisted thelr comfortable homes in the East) tn the production and staging of nd took their wives and their chil.) Bugene O'Brien's latest picture for ‘across thousands of miles of| Selznick, when the company recently sh, hard roads to a young and/| took exteriors at Gloucester, Mans. jand filled with dangers and| A score of modelé and latest fall jpe—and adventure and ro-| styles are also to be used in the Fashion Revue, which will be part of the production. The latter will be taken at Fort Lee, N. J. - The story concerns chiefly the ad- ventures of a tender-hearted outlaw. FOR COX BY EDGAR C. WHEELER Greetings, Ben: Is your hag aayeragped } ng of brave comradesin-arms, seck- for, or sideways, or with bis back to/ing cover from new risks for liberty the league of nations today? _ |and humanity, and refusal to partict ) There are one or two other qués | pate in protecting the weak against tions I want to ask you: | the strong, and in making aggressive If the kaiser, in 1914, had known | war too dangerous, in either civilized he would face not only the moral op-|or barbarous regions, to be under position but the economic boycott | taken.” from neutral nations, would he have) he worst Insult that Senator ed Germany into war? Harding has offered to American If Germany had known in 1914 that she would have to fight not only France-and Great Britain, but in ad dition Russia, the United States, Ja pan and China and many of the) South American countries, would she ieee res to ap inte ony il ter, about the association of nations.” If the great phrase, “America| 3 a tet” ao it io being ssttishly inter.| arene DOS bate y ee nator and preted. today by Harding and other | a4 4 negative presidential pa Wilson-hating senators, had been the) slogan of America, would the sons! of America have flung their lives in ito stop the greedy onrush of the| Huns? Is it true that Gen. Pershing said, men and women who “gave until it hurt” during the war has beer to cry “America first,” and in the next breath to say, “I am perfectly frank to say that Lam without a single | progressive, constructive in chars and look first to they own inde. pendence, and the security of their own property, to shirk their respon sibilities of the war, and to take no share in the fruits of the wir for ey Apert we are here’? Or did he | which American men offered their 4 . “Lafayette, we're sorry for YOU, | iyeq But the heel of the tyrant doesn’t : : concern us; we're too busy looking Se tr Ene Seeeans out for our own prosperity to have| 15 i VONE eee er Marging next| any time to protect the weak against pi aa yO vote for Aimerica first ee enone in selfish security. % LEAGUE 13 MORAL If you vote for Cox, you vote for AGREEMENT America first in protecting the w When all the misleading state) jn gaving lives from the aggrenvor's nts concerning the league Of Na | sinughterhouse, in beinging coopera Me ties “Ame ogg ened “Aen tion among the people of the earth. ” Bagong a: Suppose you vote for Harding ‘are shown in their” true light. the/ suppose you vote for your selfish league of nations, in words that €v- security. Suppose America stays erybody can understand, simply 18 4] aloof while threefourths of the| moral agreement between nations to] world in leagued together. Then undertake to prevent another war by | muppone, later on, that the security qmeans of arbitration about the coun: | of your American property is threat ¢il board, or by the pressure of eco-| ened? You or your sons will offer omic boycott, or by force as 4 last | your lives to defend it. » f oyesort. But what will you have to say to in: If such I want to ask you a the boys of 1917 and 1918 who fought gn agreement had been in force in| mititariam to bring e to the 4914, would the fields of France be| world, or to the mothers who gave { dotted with the graves of brave that it might not happen again? Americans today? What answer can you give? Charies W. Eliot, president emeri IDDLE tus of Harvard university, in a state ROME BURNS”. * ment giving his reasons for support rhaps, if you are a republican, ifig Gov. Cox, begins by quoting this| 34, wii recall, too late, the words ewe that are strong ought to bear “we canner Bédle while Rome the infirmities of the weak, and not/iueng ‘The allies may themselves to please ourselves.”"—Paul to the! rotity this treaty without us, and F Romans xv-1. thus assemble a council of nations QUOTES ELIOT OF HARVARD After analysing | of their own in an endeavor to solve | the problems of F principles of| “It would be irope the council of Europe, Hoth parties and both candidates, and|/ and in the midst of these terrible the issue involved in the election, | times, I would rather that we be President Eliot #a represented therein, lest it become a “The reflecting and responsible | league of Kurope against the Wert voter is going to make his choice on|ern hemisphere. A peace without us ioral grounds. He is going to a»k| means more army and navy for us himself who are right, the president | with the old treadmill of taxes and ‘and his supporters in-and out of of-| dangers for us.” fice, or the opporition senators Deutschland uber alles was the have been preaching for more th ery dt the Huns. It was their ruin year that the noble phrase | Are you willing to show a few sejf- | firet’ means, in respect to national) ish politicians to degrade the ery | gonduct, not moral leadership and|“America First” into a noise to | enterprise, and service without jarown out the voices of the weak in every land? / Yhought of self, but selfishness, deser diMcuity she has tn finding “the hon. | He telis Americans to keep aloot| 2—Scene from “Even as ‘almadge and Percy Marm ve £, Coligeum. ‘J. Parker Read Jr. Writes to Scenario | 0 entered 3 e miles. Tho pass his way and plese _ oon ——s eporens { pines to the inmatés of the Crip-|in a powerful Thomas H. Ince Asst. tow rote ain he invasion 0, + ‘ rl ter O at he comes t the elty but once a year,|| inajy ficld by policemen Te Se SER’ ot. (2AM) plated Fromecete epsctel.. SE H & chance visitor tolé him of the Acting Poli Schtef pnaeies, 4 ln tered .peodieation thie west = 4 age . we Ata nde t 1 t week, | wor ‘ecently completed Spe Editor The Starr Tt gives me janrounced a few days ago, five oftian |Wenderful picture and how it por || made a rule allowing pe with “datig” as’ host, yee Boge tet _ be a coder aed - cvision ot Sa Peseuce Se tance, Seal Bem bee a Seattle are also entered. The| trays the soul of @ dead mah bound || ¢o do other work in their off time, || nundredeaf the little waits were In-| ducer J. Parker Ieead, Jt | seeuario content. tam looking for best stories from each city will ge earth until freed by love and un-/| and since motion picture work || rormeg that, thru the efforts of Mra.| The fo riba ming Ince-Boswort Be tnines fram your ony, 206 6 be ment to the Ince studios at Culver Gerstanding between himself and liv. || pays good mondy, the coppers)! -rromas H. Ince and others, suffi-| st sige an in,” was writ Srisce sftered’ way te wen ber seme [CY Cal ‘That means there will Oiims fmends |} naturaltyturn to that line of ac- |) cient funds had been ruined to per-| ten b oy. Wileen; aft diapted oe }18 scenarios from which the three| _ fita.ta with the hermit’s philos- || tion mit the immediate construction ee the pitted by " Joeap y iw boson | winning ones will be selected. Thin) ophy of iife. After seeing the won The regular “extras” protest || new and comthodious hospital, with | Poland. I where the competition tx ever, a Sem Angeles Prancieco and people have been writ) scenarios on an extensl Seatt and, tie, Tacome and Spokane te offer mewer idee. Ideas are the things most denired. | The form of the story dees wet mat- | Bo the outlook is plays from the reach the Ince studio after the com: teat 1 am to pay the author of our first prine story the sum of $2,500, and for two second and third prize storire euitable for production, the respective same of 61.000 and $1,000. In addition, 1 am rendy to purchase other available seevarios entered for the sum of $1,008 each. I ask The Star to show ne tancy In calling on me for the fullest le over. Ate ¥ be observed 1—Write your ideas | trom the baste «tandpo! lof IDEA—not of form. December 1 FT | | ‘The above letter from the man who | . - jin managing the t serves aa a) Elinor Giyn, the n brief introduc him to The| “Three Weeks,” has | Star readers. Hoe wants Seattle peo-|from Europe and ts | the to get Roquainted with him thru| York. She witl leave of on | their scenarios, written in competh ition for the big prizes offered. IThe contest is open to everyone, AB for Gloria pearance. las all scenarios will be conali ‘The contest closes at mi! the Scenario Editor, Seattle Star. ted author of leives Seattle writers one chance out lof every six for each prise. As there) are Uiree prizes to be awarded.it gives e folk a fifty fifty ¢ of receiving one prize, at least. portunity pretty tn any form, int of quality tdnight, | Just now in New| soon for Los Afigelos, there to write a photoplay nheon's next screen ap- FOR HARDING BY RALPH J. BENJAMIN A few days ago I made the charge} and stores: that the democratic party is the| cratic, five. party of retrogremion and reaction: {RAST ILLITERACY the republican party the party of IN G, 0. P. STATES progress didn’t have anything to say to that, Ede 1 waited for you to ty-two states pro! from working on night seven are republican; |deny it, but you didn’t eratie. | Progressive nations and progres | jomployment of children ander 14 sive, forward-looking palitical parties | years in industry t¢ prohibited tn 27 are best judged by their attitude! regubticnn stales and permitted in toward the protection of, children. | ali jut {7 democratic states, old, reactionary parties scorn meas | What about schools? Compare the old reactionary parties scorn meas-| party records ures to ben@fit the children—the| gtntes that have laws compelling women and children 4 attendance at school; republican, 27; The history of legislation to pro- | democratic, seven. tect the rights of women and chil) States that have adopted evening dren shows that without exchplon | schcol laws: republican, eight; demo- the republican party has fought for! cratic, none these rights and the democratic par- ty “has opposed each and every fed eral enactment for the benefit of the wotnen and children. What 4 this record: The ast 7%); the greatest in Te ‘s bureau as a division of | party whore filiteracy © government. ‘The|1!2 per cent. There are only two re democrats opposed it. Again and) publican states whose illiteracy runs n the bireau has been thrent- | as high as 12 per cent. mod by the democrats and has been rly two-thirds of the republican saved by the republicans. In Wil-| states have less than five per cent von'a administration the democrats Illiteracy Nearly two-thirds of the nearly killed it, but republican sena- democratic states have more than 12 tors saved it per cent ill acy. Sixty-four per ‘The first child labor law was | cent of the republi¢an states have an. assed thru the republican party. | illiteracy of leag than five per cent; . democrats oppored it, A south-| 64 per cent of the democratic states nocritic judge declared this t humanitarian measure uncon | per cent. tions} | FEUDAL STATES 6 second child labor law, the one NOT PROGRESSIVE now on the atatute books, was passed} No state that by the force of republican votes fn! dieval in ita m Not one ublican sena- can be truly agninst it. Senator Yard-| that fails to thods ing t for it. Thirty per cent and protective measures for women of the democrats fought against and/and children can be called progres- voted against the bill, | nive CITES STATES WHO The record brands the democratic SHOW PROGRESS party as reactionary, | Let's see what the states have | medieval—all t | done in hand with democrat | ‘The progressive, advancing Amer. | extravagance, wiggling ican comménwealths are always the | on important issues, ones to adopt child bor and wom an's labor protecti ures firat.| | The record proves t wh of the #tat that have! party to be truly the passed laws establishing minimum| ress, the party that age standards for child labor—a| stepping abead, in bettering the es great step ahead? ditions of living for th Twenty-seven are — republican | ¢hildren states, 1% are democratic. | If you favor the m Stat with laws raising the age, rat reactional type for entering industry over 14 years:|ment, vote for Jimmie R | puny democrat. States with democratic, 18 limiting the age of children employed in building con struction, hipbuilding, electrical work and transportation ublican, publican, 27 ’ seven; democratic, six States having a maximum working y of eight hours, not more than 48| Work on “Pleasure hours per week, for women and chil-| Elaine Hammerstein's dren | for Selznick, started Kepublican seven; democratic, six Miss Hamm have laws pro: hibiting children and women from be ing employed more than eight hours Wu day, ix Fort to have young girl who wakes idler, and ‘regenerates days # week, in factories useful person. | states of intelligence, of literacy? Witeracy Is in lows P. ESTABLISHED ). Town is republican; Louisiana REN'S BUREAL is democratic. There are only six can party entablighed states controlled by the democratic have an illiteracy of more than 12 is fedual and me progressive Jopt remedial measures | things go hand and Wilsonian prand of autocratic pule. | If you favor real progress, vote for Senator Harding, the b WORK BEGUN ON — “PLEASURE SEEKERS” charming part, that of a inth Day of Great Cox-Harding Debate Republican, 14; demo hibit children joba, Twenty- 15 are demo- in Loulsiana, is lower than of education No party retrogresaive, © ineffic and ¥ with eney, jing the he republican part of prog: believes in ra © women and odieval, of ce auto- ig republican. Seekers,” new picture this week at! erstein is maid up a society ‘him into a) i THE SEATTLE Rex; 8—Wanda Hawley as she appears in “Held by the Enemy,” Liberty; 4-—Scene. from “Lahoma,” CqJonial; 5—Geraldine Farrar and Montague WALKS MILES TO derful pleture drama he declared it spirita do mmtertalize just as are shown in the picture. | bound” wilt be seen here in the very fair. | near future, { Those who enter thru The Btar have} idedly «trong possibility of win: | One Seattle person is almont| wure to win fame and have his name] successful in Unis enterprise. liowing are the rules that ahould in his new Goldwyn picture, “Hold Your Horses,” the which Goldwyn's Weat Coast studios, } Hugties, whose original was | Hie Way.” | pared by Gerald Duffy, supervision of the author, who also aided B. Mason Hopper in directing. All scenarios must be sent to{In the east are Naomi Chilters, Syl- v | more F, | worth, arrived | ——— To see “Parthbound” at one of the playhouses in Los Angeles, a hermit | mystic, trudged into town from his little hut in the Wildtrmens, a distance of 95 STAR |“BILLY” INCE AIDS CRIPPLED CHILDREN “Supers” Sore at Cops for Copping || Their Film Jobs LOB ANGELES, Oct, 0. Mo for their lvelthood the jobs they get at the studios from time |Bosworth in Ince Special Production Ap enthusiastic worker in behmif! Hobart Bosworth, whose performs of the hundreds of little childfén less! ances In two Thomas H. Ince spe! |\fortunate than himself, “Bi Ince, | cials, “Behind the Door” and “Below oldent#on of Thomas i, Ince, famous | the @urface,” marked him as the motion picture producer, has been in-| screen's leading dramatic star, haw strumental in bringipg joy and hap-| rejoined In nd will be presented SEE “EARTHBOUND” barefooted and bareheaded. mdael on F nd Lee will direct, the ortho-|the personal supervision of of woores of crip-| H. Ince. A story of the pearl smugglers 6& the Bastern tropics, with Singapore as the locale, the new vehicle, it is, said, affords Bosworth the most virile, role of his career. Madge Bellamy, Tully and Niles Welch have been for the all-star supporting cast, that the ety government should not ‘sanction the proposition of policemen holding two jobs and Beating others out of a chance to arn 4 luting; that tf the police- men are not carning enough, the city ts at fault and the “extras” should not stand the brunt. On the first day Chief Murray issued hie rule, 54 policemen “showed up” at one atudio. facilities for correcting pedic deformiti pled kiddies. remarkable work and said that} they “Rarth- SEENA OBJECTS TO | WEARING WIG) Seena Owen is one screen star who f» unalterably opposed to wearing | wigs. Only a few times during her| ‘The Mtory was written by Rupert | screen career has she played parts| title for tt] Marcelle St. Hilaire and Yolande | which required the use of a wig. the Man Who Had > “ Her own hair is a wonderful! the continuity was pree|@ © Aurore, two Frenth girls who! eoigen shade, nature's own tint, and| under the) ged from Los Angeles to New! is the envy of* every blonde she York on a hike, were visitors to the meets, ard her opposition to cover. [Selznick Fort Lee studio this week, [ire her own “crowning glory” is well understood by those who know hey w ited to ap; Bertram Griteaby, wont Z ieee” ccckeraan sa appear in} h ow remarkably fortunate she is in Stinson and Bydney Aing | S78"! scenes being possessing hair of such wonderful . . "Gl contbanies. beauty. Tom Moore has another Iriat rote] photography on been completed at 4 ju Martha Mansfield is to be the | ing woman in a new Selznick for National Pictures Theatres, — which will be started ina few Conway Tearle is to have the role, “Canavan, The title of Owen Moore's new ture has been changed from Me Your Wife” to “The Chicken im the Case.” is Ashton, taken by the| Lure of the Unknown! Thirst for @ new sensation! And she finds herself in an opium plot in the ; crooked streets of / = Shanghai! % 4 Finds herself with ~” the scum of the China coast, which had floated in to brawl and smuggle and kill! Finds herself dragged off to an underworld den, where, amid the yells of a roystering mob, a gambler and a sailor fight for her as their prize! ame the gambler win, ats FS { fim f LAY TON. Scooked Street A Big Paramount Picture, This Star’s Best . , Vivid with mystery! Flushed with love! Cast in the spell of the Orient! With Jack. Holt. LOVE DAVIS on the WURLITZER