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mick UNI i ehatd the Man."* CLEMMER—Giedys Walten in “Al BLUE MOUSE “BEHOLD THE MAN” (Pathe) IR the first time today local mo- tion picture fans will have an unity to witness “Behold the the wonderfully tmpressive ¥ Presentation of the life of the Christ, from the Annunela of the Virgin to the Ascension, & modern episode of a mother the Bible story to her children, of the pictures are hand col LIBERTY _ * | “THE OLD SWIMMIN’ HOLE” 1—Charles Gerard in EDITED BY DAISY HENRY “The Passionate Pilgrim,” Strand. | George Walsh, starring at Colonial. Charles Ray in one of his popular | ry boy roles, is the hero of “The Swimmin’ Hole.” the screen ver a James Whitcomb Rile’s fa 4 Charles « appears as Exra, the coun- boy, who is vamped by the village When she throws him over he thru with “wimmin™ for life—that all except one pretty little curly. villager who sort of creeps his affections a little later. ae | “ALL DOLLED UP” 1, (Universal) Gladys Walton ka 4 Pretty little Gladys Walton comes te the Clemmer tomorrow in “All Dolled Up.” a photoplay which deals with the tangied romance of Maggie Quick, shop girl, and Eva Bundy, a millionaire spinster. It will be noticed that Fred Mala festa, one of the best portrayers of Villainous characters, is among the supporting cast. ‘Miss Walton last appeared here tn COLISEUM || AIRBANKS has a& gO unnoticed. But let Doug everybody comments on it —that's what it is mustache. Your next-door neighbor might grow a flowing beard and it would Fairbanks send a the romantic film play “Pink Tights.” | Picture showing @ mustache and Fame} ovie Quizzes (Conducted in Co-operatha Wétn Associated First National Pictures) K.P. M.—Kathertne MacDonald ts working on a picture in which Wes ley Barry will play 4 prominent part Mins MacDonal!’s address is The MacDonald Film Ca, 904 Girard at. Los Angeles. A. N.—Norma Talmadge has fin- ished “Satan's Paradise” and this picture will te released shortly Norma and her mother are leaving for a’ vacation at Palm Beach, where they will be joined by Constance and her husband. ° M, R.—Anna Q. Nilason's middl name is Querentia, Mins Nilewon was bern in Sweden and Querentia ls a | Swedish name. Bert Lytell is stilt jin his twenties, and Harrison Ford is about 4. . Brown Eyes — Juanita it at one side. |i» naturally curty. over again, so that would account for the facta you mention. jshowing of D, | which 2—Milton Sills, Coliseum. 3—Scene from “The Purple Cipher,” Rez. 4—Charles Ray and Gladys George, Liberty. 5—Gladys Walton, Clemmer, -~ Griffi th Film | Now inThird Week at Met | Sunday night will witness mart of the third and final week W. Griffith's famous cinema spectacle, “Way Down East.” has been playing to large crowds at the Metropotitan theatre for the past two weeks. ‘The opening week here broke all records for the offering on the Coast, oven exceeding by thoumnds of dol-| lare the opening week of the same company at jhe Curran theatre, Ban | Franciaco. When Griffith announced his tn- tention of making a super-production of the old drama, “Way Down East,” and playing it at first clam theatres the wise ones shook their heads and said ft couldn't be done, Every one of his 19 companies now on tour has shown a wonderful profit, Basically “Way life which Lottie Kath Roland's hair | Mair Parker and Joseph R. Grianer It takes many | made familiar weeks to make one picture and a | stage. scene often has to be done over and! comes a new art. on the American By Griffith's treatment it be Music adde ft charm and the combination spells a new form of expression to every the at Down East” te a} Hansen's | picturization of that story of New hair is bobbed and she wrually parts | Engtand rural Doug’s press agent doesn't men-| sonae that seeks the playhouse, | 1 | Satevepost story by Licyd Osborne. clure Patter Clara Kimball Young has started work on “Charge Yt," screened from a story by Irving Bachelier. eee In “The Man Who” Bert Lytell plays the part of a young man who went barefooted in New York to| gain notoriety, The plot is from the Two bunnies Anita Stewart found on location have euperseded her pet | dogs in her affections. eee The hooks that enable a fy to) | walk upside down on the ceiling are! shown in a recent Pictograph, eee Collegte men are tobe given pref. erence for positions am editorial ax sistants hereafter by Goldwyn. eee ot Andrew Soutar's bas been com: | Filming drama, “Courage,” pleted. ee A socialist DIN In the Prussian landtag for the nationalization of the film Industry was defeated. vee There are three Lakes tn are Fy bis THIS IS | LEATRICE JOY | Mins Joy ix to pe the heroine of | ‘The Ace of Hearts,” a Gouverneur Morris original | ncenario, soon to | be filmed at Cul- ver City. She played the femin ine lead in Mor ris’ first original photoplay, “A Tale of Two Worlds.” 8h e| played opporite Lon Chaney in “The Night Rose.” Lon will! have the mascu line lead in the new picture. Leatrice was born in New Orleana La, and began |the her stage career as a member of a| stock company in Ban Diego. Her | hobby is golfing. ” os x MAURER MEAN TANANRIL AE 4 SHIP LAUNCHING SHOWN AT LIBERTY Liberty theatre patrons this week will be shown many new local events | lof interest in the Jensen and Von| Herberg News, an item on the new program, The United States scout cruiser Milwaukee is shown at her launching | jat the Todd Shipbuilding company | | yards In Tacoma. department is shown receiving first hand information on fire-fighting. Preparations for the coming dog ow and Safety-first Week are also shown in the pictures, TONY MORENO Antonio Moreno has returned from | a long visit Francisco and with others on a ranch near Bakersfield, Cal. Con | Unulty ty being prepared on two new stories for thiy star by Vitagraph as next features after “Three Sevens,” which he recently complet ed. The title of the first production to follow will soon be announced. Oop . The Seattle fire | “East Lynne” at Winter | “Bast Lynne,” Mra. Henry Wi famous story which, along Uncle Tom's Cabin,” “In Old Kame tucky,” “Ben Hur” and “Way Down most popular old stage plays, hag @& | last reached the screen. It is showing at the Winter Garden a clever cast of players inel Edward Karle and Mabel Ballin. | The plot is so familiar it no detailed synopsis. How Carlyle is influenced by Francia — Levinson to doubt her husband, de serts him and her son to go with Levinson and returns pre |doned by him to die in her h armas, is faithfully reproduced on the with friends in S8an{ screen, Louise Glaum wil] wear 24 ent gowns in her next picture, gd shoes and hats for each ony, tee anally Best foodstuffs for the least a8 Boldt’s. Advertisement. : Pere cores East,” is recognized as one of the |. wood. They are Emmett Lake, wife and his hie daughter, Alice’ Lake, GEORGE L L. TUCKER FINISHES NEW FILM tion a word about the mustache. Maybe he's waiting until It becomes MILDRED HARF HARRIS NO NOW more noticeable. Doug and Edward Knoblock are aes PURCHASES WITH CECIL DEMILLE |“numonesaue” ror wire ‘orrest | Preparing the scenario on “The Mitre. . J. Hartley Manners, dramatist and Fontain La five | Three Musketeprs.” ‘That will prob-| , pa gg been engaged | neatricnl producer, and noted as ax deiph Menjow | ably be filmed after Doug and Mary |»¥ me to pley one of | thor of “Peg O* My Heart,” has pur.| George Loane Tucker, producer of “second honey. | the moat important roles in his new | chased and will produce a play by |“The Miracle Man,’ has completed Paramount picture, of which the title/ Fannie Hurst founded upon her|arrangements for tif» forthcoming and nature is withheld. Mr. DeMille | story, “Humoresque.” which, pro-|exhfbition in New Yark of his latest Announced recently that the leading |duced in picture form and released |photoplay, “Ladien Must Live,” feminine role would be in the hands|by Paramount, has been and still is|adapted from the Saturday Evening ON VACATION |¢° Dorothy Dalton. It is understood |one of the biggest successes in the|Post novel by Alice Duer Miiter mors cody edly hws gay hin Mtarted | history of the acreen. In the stage | Those who have seen “Ladies Must tess the boetoy ry aaa tee (ee, in “April. This will be Mise} version Laurette Taylor (Mrs. Man-| Live’ pronounce it another Tucker |brought this statement Harris’ first work before the camera | ners) will play the leading role, that/triumph. “The Miracle Man” already | Hart: since she was granted her divoree|of Mamma Kantor, enacted in the|has brought in more than $2,000,000 S elk gel to eniloy: w lotig war ee ares Cason. picture by Vera Gordon in profi cation. For seven years I have work- ed every day making motion pic tures. Now I want to play a while. The picture which I have just com pleted is my ninth and last for the| Present. I am now four pictures | ahead of my Paramount schedule. | have no plans of any kind for the} dorion | future. A few weeks ago I purchased | vTeen Gute |@ little ranch in the hills not far) from Los Augeles and I hope to en- | ‘When Samuel Merwin, author of) joy many days in the outdoors with “The Passionate Pilgrim,” the film | the Pinto pony*and my other horaeh play now at the Strand, first wit: | that will be pastured there. I simp Neewed the screen production of his |jy want to feel that I am absolutely story he expressed great appreciation | free.” for the way Robert Vignola, the di- Silat tasen rector, had followed out the plot. LILA LEE SAYS SHE 1S NOT ENGAGED) “The Passionate Pilgrim” concerns life of Henry Calvery, an ex- eorvict, who had served a term as “It tgn’t true that I have confirm. ent of supreme the result of a mom p led my engagement to Capt. Claud | | Collins. T don't even know him.” This from Lila Lee, Paramount | macrifice to save another. COLONIAL |hressing woman, who has been the victim of either a joke or @ mis | take. | She tam*t engaged and hasn't any | desire to be at present, she affirms, being too busy working in pictures and too young to be bothered with | | matrimony. Miss Lee has recently completes | the leading feminine role in “Crazy | |to Marry,” of which Roscoe (Fatty) | Arbuckle is star, but asserts that | Just because that is the title of the | ‘umber scree ersior picture is no reason to suppose that | oe ieee mone ot the. pono i echoes her own feelings in the by Louis Tracy. The picture | *ahtest degree é traces with great favllty tr | EUROPEANS LACK IN FILM DETAIL situations in New York's European movie makers have not yet learned one photographic effect now used by nearly all first-rate |directors in the United States. “THE PURPLE CIPHER” That is use of shadows which (Vitagraph) | veil the less important parts of the Earlé Willams scene, thus ring attention on Noe Yess |the main figure or chief action of vAllen Forest {the moment. The old way was to light up all parta of the scene brightly. In such | a scene the attention of the audi ence keeps moving from one detail to another. | The most important detail on | which the whole event turns may | be missed. This lees advanced | method of lighting still in followed | by most directors in Europe. When a foreign film rings the bell, as some do, it is not ALINE much money or technical skill hs been put into it, but because the story has been better thought out than most stories pictured in tho United States, “FIGHTING FATE” NEW PHOTOPLAY William Duncan, Edith Johnson | and a troupe of 50 players are now at Kern River, Cal., making the final scenes for their newest chapter-play, “Fighting Fate.” All of the past month has ed for exterior scenes by Duncan, much of the| prettiest scenery in California is to be seen in the later chapters of his production. “Fighting Fate” has been acknowledged the star’s best | production, To Seattle Music Lovers— Bille, in the role of Mich,| return from their &@ young shepherd who, feeling | moon” @ivine call to heal the sick, starts ‘out on this mission, is the chiet char-| BILL HART NOW in “The Faith Healer,” the The Coliseum Concert Orches- tra, augmented to forty-four ar- tists for these occasions, and under the baton of Arthur Kay, on Easter Sunday morning, March 27, from 11 to 12 o’clock, will play the first of.a series of concerts designed for the same hour each Sunday morning. How he meets with unlimited suc cess in his mission and is able to Bring happiness to those who seek his aid forms a plot equally as im- STRAND ve from Mr. A BEAUTIFUL . HAND-COLORED VERSION OF The Passion Play Periodically for years the story of our Saviour has been told in spoken drama at Oberammergau, limiting its scope, however, to people within close reach and rich Pilgrims, x * * The opening program will be as follows: Overture—“William Tell”: =: : : Rossini Aria from “Martha” (tenor solo)—J. Ever- ett Bardin, pupil of Prof. Durmashkin Selection from “La Boheme” Puccini “Jolly. Fellows Waltz” .. ; Vollstedt Second Hungarian Rhapsody Liszt x * * There will be no advance in prices for these Sunday morning concerts, and patrons may re- main for the complete photoplay entertainment which will im- mediately follow. Artista, actors, authors, orators, sculptors and theologians ~ have alo sought to convey to our imagination some realization Mystery, love and adventure are of this memorable event. the chief ingredients of MES, jr. now showing of tie Fach has had his limitations and now it le left to the Cinema, the newest of the dincovered arts, to so visualize this immortal narrative that all the millions of the earth can enjoy its beauty and feel iis influence, irrespective of land or tongue, ee 80 WITH ALL REVERENCE WE PR NT THIS EXQUISITE FEAST FOR THE SOUL ENTITLED “BEHOLD THE MAN” PORTRAYING IMPRESSIVELY + The Life of Our Saviour An Enthralling Production That Possesses All the Attributes Essential to Entertain, Will Stir All Human Emotions and Yet Remai teverential BLUE MOUSE THEATRE Fifth Ave., Just South of Pike SPECIAL MUSIC A splendid choral and orchestral accompaniment. Immor- talized selections from the world’s greatest music masters, Rendered in perfect synchronization, i} =e) Submarines, shipyards, Rear} estates and golf links furnish atmos- phere for the plot of “The Purple Cipher,” the mystery drama in which Earle Williams is now appearing at the Rex. ‘There is plenty of love interest in the picture, besides a number of thrilling incidents which endanger the life of the hero. Vola Vale ta the girl. Coll B. DeMille in still busily en- gaged in cutting his massive allstar production, “The Affairs of Anatol.” It is understood that somewhere about March 21 he will begin work on a new picture about which he has given out no details. fh is inl \ KATE BRUCE Kate Bruce, who played the moth- in “Way Down East,” and who also had a similar part in Thomas Meighan’s Pararnount picture, “The City of Silent Men,” has been chosen to play the part of “Youth's” motuer in the tee Fitzmaurice produc- tion of “Experience,” for Paramount. For good apple ple, 6o to Boldt’s Advertisement, iA hil Wy! vw CTS ne TNA ANG ih . AU) sn: ‘ COne ( YD Nn MES Se "