The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 7, 1921, Page 4

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THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON RENDERS AN OPINION ON A MOTION PICTURE! —, USE op EPR lumpia Febru: ». l»g 27 18, ™ q ‘THE INSIDE OF THE CUP’ IS HERE NOW! “Cupid” Returns to _{ seseration. Gage served for 10 years, MRS, BELMONT IN - wa | under County Auditors O. A. Chase, | Official Dove Cote Byron Phelps and N. M. Wardaitand| tre eer year Of abeenc | igaued some $2,000 licenses. He has| C. F. (Cupid) Gage has returned to | been reappointed by County Auditor |» iasue wedding permits to the new|D. EB. Ferguson. ant.” whieh politan for soon, in Mrw Nmited York. of Mrz. |Bast™ in still playing, all |debut in silent drama. 100% Courtesy, Pictures, Music HOUSTON decided in court here. What are you going to do if the girl you love is being forced into an unhappy marriage with another? anguish.” Better come and see how— ane iti lie” - GRIFFITH FILM Among the cast of players tn Grif. fith’s big production, “Way Down 2 comes to the Metro. engagement Morgan Belmont, « woman of social eminence in Griffith secdred the services Belmont, who ts noted for her beauty, after no little persua sion, and on the opening night in New York City, where “Way Down society | ling emotion «he foils the schemers | turned out to witness Mra. Belmont's Texas—Right of a| woman to amoke in public will be) LIBERTY John Park filed divorce proceedings againgt his | mous novél, “The Jucklina,” you will wife, alleging “her smoking in pub has caused him “great mental | acters of his story in action on the THE SEA ave.” STRAND—Winsten Cherchill’s “The Inaide of the Cup.” COLISKUM—Pela N COLON TA Lemley in Fire Cat.” REX.-Mebert Reewerth in “The Brute Master.” |) - SIDE from its splendid dramatic | appeal and = artistic beauty, Passion,” the production at the Coli |erum thin week, marring Pola Negri | |} the great Continental actreas, points | ja atriking moral on the inevitable consequences of extravagance and eX Cenmen | “Passion” unfolds « compelling story of the rise of a humble little | | Pyench milliner to a position where | lihe is able to dominate a king. She | a character replete with « ctrasige | |mixture of virtues and faults, but, | above all, she pomseanes irrenintibie wiles and smiles, such as easily on |enare men of great rank, But her| | great triumphs prove to be her great undoing Im the end, and the conse quences of events thru which she passes in her rise and fall combine jto make @ trenendously appoating photoplay. | Mim Negri gives a truly wonder ful performance F | The storming of @ barricaded | prison by & mob of thousands in one jof the thrilling scepes of the produc | on, BLUE MOUSE “A woman despises a man for! love,” | This epigrammatic utterance of | Elizabeth Stoddard expresses, too, the | dure one man. Such was Storm. Natalie, young, beautiful, yet joving another, the case of very | of the stuff that dreams are made of | For herself Natalie asked nothing. But she was not considering herself. | Tom went to South America a | soldiering for fortune to lay at Nat |alie’s feet. He knew Natalie loved bs Yet, when he returned, he found |Natalie the plaything of another |man, the mistress of his home, his dreams were shattered. Natalle had | made her choice, There were two | paths open’to her. Poverty and it}. | | ness—for her wister and herself—and | the other which led to comfort and | tane, outdoor life for Beatrice, with laughter and sun and joyousness, | Natalie chose the latter road. All this happens jn “Love.” the J./ Parker Read, Jr, screen story which | | features Louise Glaum, the popular star, at the Blue Mouse this week. How ft in worked out is better told im the picture than in unsympathetic type. CLEXMER Charming Mitte Afice Lake te the star of “The Greater Claim,” the }tim drama which is showing at the Clernmer, Mime Lake can always be | counted on for a splendid production. land this latest feature gives the lyoung star ample opportunity to} prove that her graduation from corm: edy to drama waa well deserved. In “The Greater Claim” Mins Lake | plays Mary Smith, a Follies beauty. | "Chuck," twenty and rich, marries | Mary, but the honeymoon is spoiled | when the groom is kidnaped by rut. flana in the employ of his devermined |father and taken to sea. The mer | riage is annulled, and Mary goes to Broadway and cabaret life, plunging |D*®UtY. Plays the leading feminine | the drama. |deep into gayety and deeper into) misery. When her chia arrives she | abandons theatrical work. Poverty | compels her to acoept the aid of twa} crooks, who use her to fleece the father of money. Then, when her child i» claimed by them, so as to wrest more money, her mother love grows dominant, and by a compel-( and wins recognition. Bayard Vallier personally super vised the production eee | soreen at the Liberty this week. The | If you have read Opie Read's fa- be pleased to sea the sturdy char. James Kirkwood of a Subject Touches Human Heart Tunnels > “THE FIGHTING - SCHOOLMASTER” does it! From OPIE READ’S “The Jucklins” A Paramount Picture Chester Outing Scenic SUNSHINE “LOST, A YODEL” COMEDY The Swiss Alps “THE BABY” Elmore Crowhurst on the Hope-Jones Wurlitzer Adults loges .. Children Orchestra COMING—“THE KILLER” MPH As s Louise Glaum AND IN A DRAMA That Treats Vividly Every Into Your Deepest Sympathies a | Blue Mouse Concert Emil Birnbaum, Director BLUE MOUSE Ea THEATRE NIGHTS Adults Loges Children 500 Our Immense Hope- Jones Wurlitzer Organ, with Frank Leon TTLE STAR Scene from “Passion,” the Coliseum this week, with Pola Negri, the famous Continential | star, featured in a big dramatic role, “Passion,” Attraction at Coliseum, Features New Motion Picture Star MONDAY, MARCH 7, 1921, SPECIAL LOTS ONLY! —The stocks in the Special Price Basement are constantly changing, being composed alto. gether of special lot purchases which are bought at big reductions and sold quickly at very low prices. 400 New photodrama showing at the Joving her unless she returas his story in sereen form in called “The | COLONIAL Fighting Schoolmaster.” pe plot revolves around the fam. | feeling 6f the worman who must en | ily of Jucktins and thelr neighbors | romance. jin the rural districts of North Caro-| Mins Roberts a Natalie | tina, and the young school teacher, |lan girl, whose only surviving rela- who, distiked and discouraged by his | much desired, loved Tam Chandler. | own people and his neighbors in Ala American renegade. She swears ven- Tom had “prospects,” but they were bama, come to board with the Juck- geanee, and goes to the notorious ling and teach the country school Two delightful romances are develop | ed, one of which leads to « supposed murder by Alf Jucklin of b after the latter makes slichting re. marks about his girl. Diy clever plot |manipulation, the author finally frees the supposed murderer, and by the Introduction of surprising cir cumstances, proves him technically innocent. Monte Blue, Mabe! Julienne Scott, Ruth Renick and Charles Ogle are fa | vorites in the cast. | STRAND } “The Inside of the Cup.” the photoplay now at the Strand, has the rare distinction of being shown | to the entire legislature of this state | at Olympia recently. The state solons | liked the picture so well that they wrote the motion pitture producers & special letter of appreciation re | gerding it, terming it a great produc. | tion. The lieutenant governor, Will fam J. Coyle, also wrote a letter commending the film, and Senator Davis of Tacoma bad a resolution pase the state senate, which joined with the house of representatives at the showing of the picture, extending thanks for the opportunity of wit- neasing “The Inside of the Cups Winston Churchill is the author of “The Inside of the Cup.” It is a! dramatic story, the action thrilling and the love interest centering upon a rector and settlement worker, ex ceedingly appealing. The o~ and hypocriay of meciety arf exposed with mereiless vigor. Pith Hallor, the popular stage role and the leading man is William P. Cartet i WINSTON CHURCHILL'S rival, (@ AS & performer in the dance hall |of the South American Sodom she SECOND NEAR SENECA In a Superb Photoplay “The Inside of the Cup” A dramatic love romance that is irresistible! STRAND ORCHESTRA Under S. K. Wineland, playing “Mlle. Modiste” First Public Appearance of Seattle’s Own Popular Baritone MAURICE FRIEDMAN COMING—George Arless in “The Devil” Spring Blouses Exceptional Values at $2.95 NOVELTIES MUCH UNDERPRICED Tricolette Mignonette Pongee Striped Cerpe de Chine Crepe —Smart models in overblouse and regu- lation styles in a wide assortment of Cari. Dut she finds her ven |{, Charming new modes. Greamed, for a volcanic, erupuon ||| —A large range of colors, including | uffians, and the villainous reneease || flesh, white, jade, bisque, copper, Copen- | hagen, sunset, taupe and black. Edith Roberts ts at the Colonial in “The Fire Cat,” a South American its as @ Percy. tion, her mother, is murdered by an STRIKT mining camp at Purisima to ture him by her beauty and then kill him. meets a young American engineer, who proves to her that all “Gringoes” are not inbuman, and finally awak- ens a feeling of deep love in the beart of the young daughter of old is engulfed by a sea of lava, Wallace McDonald and Walter Long are prominent in the support || ——A]] sizes, 36 to 46. ing cast. 9 . cee REX Hobart Bosworth tn another of his popular sea dramas, “The Brute Master,” ts the featured film attraction at the Rex. In this picture Bosworth appears as Bucko McAllister, captain af a schooner plying between Frisco and the South Sea Islands “Bucko” rules his crew by sheer force of brute strength, and when Walter Maxwell and Madeline Grey take passage on his boat he puts them to work, too. Madeline's sweetness soon domi nates over Bucko's bully dixposition and it is not long until the hard-} ened skipper realizes he loves the girl, How he wins her, in spite of the treachery of members of his crew and McAllister, who also wants the girl, furnish the high spots in A (hbriiling fire at sea and a kid-| Raping are additional thrilla re a CELEBRATED NOVEL in First National's 9-act record breaker ; “PASSIO The intimate story of a little Paris milliner! COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA4 34——ARTISTS——34 Under Arthur Kay, playing “Pomp and Circumstance”—Elgar MALOTTE on the Wurlitzer PATHE NEW: Mats., 22c; After 6:30, lower floor, 45c; balcony, Sle Children, 13c any time. All prices plus tax. COMING—“FORBIDDEN FRUIT” Eruptions of the Skin Cause Torturous It VANITY cresren SUSE SOR RERREREREE EEE COMEDY “THE DEVIL” OUTING If you are afflicted with any form! ‘This explains why disapp ae Your 18 COMING @ SCENIC of skin disorder, you are well ac-| Comes from the use of lotion®, jusinese” “Frivolous Fiji” quainted with the flaming, burning! tments and other local S.S.S. has given great sal itching that these diseases produce.| in the treatment of these So many people continue to suffer! because it is such a tho! from eczema, tetter, and other forms’ isfactory blood purifier, It ¢ of skin disease because they do not! the blood of all impurities, seek the source of their suffering, counteracts the effects of the and no disease can be successfully | that attack. the skin. combatted unless attacked at its) Begin taking sougee, you will write a Skin diseases are caused by an im: purity or disorder in the blood, and, give you expert advice there is no real and genuine relief charge. Address Chi within your reach until such impuri Ues are removed,

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