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THE SEATTI POSITIVELY ONLY 2 UNTIL Norma Talmadge at Co .E STAR FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY! MORE DAYS! ‘OW.GRIFFITAS 12 REEL EMPIRE OF EMOTIONS » ” TODAY'S PROGRAMS Jane Novak in “Melle of Colleen Moore in “When « KN: Meets,” M—Norma Talmadge tn } Wrough W. Gelffith's “Orphans ‘Tom Mix in “The Diamond.” [COLONTALClaire Windsor tn ! Larceny,” iu A—“Seme Wild Oate” (hy- Nenle film play) OAK-—Louise Ginam in “Sex.” G pleture tastes of mont ¥ are satisfied at the {Columbia Round | }five of the “L, * tw the | medy drama attrac brings | to the screen all the hun thrills nd color am well aw romance of the | t ring. From the skiliful pen of | |. C. Witwer, whose stories tn Col-| Her's received nation wide approv “The Leather Pushers,” is increas jing in popularity with each round | “When Dawn Came,” is a strong! drama that satisfies the patron who jdeetres a picture with a human ap-| |peal that threads thru the more |nerious phases of life. And then comes “The Dark Horse,” a reall joomedy, with a horse that has more jthan horse-sense and gets many “kicks” from the audience. . Play ORPHANS Based on the Famous “THE Two LILLIAN AND DOROTHY GISH JOSEPH SCHILOKRAUT a] TE BLUE And Thousands of Others COMING Saturday ae ‘TER GARDEN Did you ever see pictures of Irene |Castle with her little monk looking |wistfully into her face? Of course you have, The monk and Irene are inseparable friends, Wherever Mra. | Castle goes, “Jocko” goes, too, One jis Known about a as the other . Lys ‘ese » in oe uonated to the screen. The sce ee © picture play at the Win ) 2 atv |ter Garden thi x which marks England and Miss Taimadge git the dancer's return to the screen | Of the dual role of Monyeen and after an abse two years. and modern girl. Poaltively Until COMPU) sss., Norma Talmadge as she appears in a scene from “Smilin’ Through,” one of the finest pictures this clever actress has nes are laid in treland and es a wonderful perfor-nance Kathleen, the old-fashioned LIBERTY | Buster Keaton goes Capt. John} | Smith and his Pocahontas one better | NORMA TALMADGE In showing how a white man can be sik 0a a *” jsaved from being skinned by red- her greatest, “SMILIN’ THROUGH ag greg nena gener tgp Coming Saturday—Richard Warthelmess in “The Seventh Day” | Paleface,” at the Liberty this week | The Keaton comedy shown + Until Friday Night— jalong with “Belle of Alaska,” an in-| A freshman girl wants $5,000 ay jteresting dramatic feature in which Jane Novak plays a splendid outdoor jFole. year with her man and ts willing jand anxious to marry at 22, accord ing to @ questionnaire circulated at the University of Wisconsin, while | pa the senior will take $2,600 and walt ar The average age at/ay which women in Wisconsin wish to marry {# 23. The college man doesn't | ab want to settle down till he is 29 | ta All the dope on the men and BUSTER KEATON tn “The Paleface” | STRAND | Many of the scenes tn PD. W. Grif. jfith's picture “Orphans of the | Storm” were taken at Griffith's great jestate, “Orienta Point,” at Mamaro. neck, N. ¥., which he purchased ———JANE NOVAK —~— “Belle of Alaska” Heap Big Funt Many scenes inid in Seattic Coming Saturday—“The Crimson Challenge.” based on “THARON OF LOST VALLEY" till she's 2 now tn cond big week at the Strand, ts cturization of the fa-| mous old stage play, “The Two Or phans.” ance to the amount he spends for movies and how often he brushes his teeth. Some of the campus women will marry the “right man,” regardicas of PALACE HIP time, place and size of his bank roll, Tom Mix is playing at the Palace| while 250 declare themnelves com Hip this week. Mix is seen as the mitted to a career and no husband hero of “The Rough Diamond,” «|The men are almost uniformly will-| Picture that is an extraordinary de-|ing to marry after 26 and regard) parture from the type this popular | §2,600 as enough for a couple. The college man who steps cee jactor has made famous. ft in a ncents he ts called upon to dinplay | cuss, SPOKANE. MAN GAINS TWENTY POUNDS ON IT paratively itl, The student —— let of CLASS A “Some Wild Oats” Is being shown at the Class A theater. This is the film that was stopped by the censor! board in Portland, but was later! | passed by the city council in that city, where it is stil ning. “Some Wild Oats be at the! Class A theater for a week only, continuous fr: 11 am. to 11 p.m dally, with etal hours for both} “ - . 7 ee nee |Rheumatism Is Gone, His 'Tuese money bags represent the MORSE Th es Digestion Is Now Per- average price of Arcora for the past Windsor, popular screen! fect, and He’s Brimful the rote of a pampered | ie and wears many stun. | nd Larce: the at the beginning today. The story is by Al bert Payson Terhune, and the cast | supporting Miss Windsor Includes Elliott Dexter and Richard Tucker. of Life and Energy Since Taking Tanlac, |. Says Green \Tr Southern two years. See how the price is lower this month, NOW, than ever before in its history. Thousands of people will wait until next Fall, when Steamfitters and Plumbers are rushed to death, before ordering Arcora. You can cash in on your foresight by telephoning for an esti- mate this month, NOW. ning gowns in “ new film attrac “After my © OAK Loulse Glaum plays a mont dra | matic role in “Sex,” the present film feature at the Oak, The offering ced by J. Parker Reid, not has given many North Post St, Spokane tel changed me from a nick who pie It means good-bye to cold rooms; good-bye | tures to the screen, and the story was |Fundown, mise able man into & wall to'spotty heat; good-bye to high coal bills. An tiles ‘tceohay Gokiiee the os ie tomach. For a long time | ARcoLa system means an American Radiator traction at the Oak will be “The|1 hadnt heen able te mtlatress att | yy in every room and it pays for itself inthe fuel [Vianna AFFINE Wie rwanda, and I now trace to this fact nts, such as ‘ all of my other it saves. wea « lrheumatiam and hewn ; one of the Sending “My stomach ts as sound as a dol j ARCOLA iar now, I have a dandy appetite | just feel brimful of new life and en jersey Taniac is sold of the Storm.” oe n, in “The Crimaron # at the Liberty sat.) Fists Heats Whole House Cheaper Than Stoves Heated Two Rooms A. Maijotte of 184 Division Street, River Rouge, Michigan, has a seven room home. For- merly he heated two rooms with two stoves. Now he heats all seven rooms with Arcora y all good drug Dorothy D: Challenge” urday ° “The Seventh Da Richard Bar ay, In ached. “eum soon thelmenw uled to open at the Cc | | . | in “The Man * 16 @ new Columbia at Herbert Rawlinson | Under Cove traction and American Radiators and saves a ton of 1a part of ia {3 coal a year besides. | t Salmon City on Apri all women dresned in | The price of a ton of coal a year is worth sav- ing; see Arcoxa today. AMERICAN RADIATOR COMPANY Ingar Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators for every heating need Seattle, Wash. | men's 1219 Fourth Avenue Ben-Gay Jor Sciatica | Say Ben-Gay at any drug store an you will get a tube of the o French Baume Bengué | | sique), then apply as follo sage the area of pain Baume—rubbing gently at first and then with more firmness. Keep a tube handy for Lumbago. THOS. LEEMING & CO., NFW YORK FREE A fine Arcova book will be mailed you if you will send your name to the address above. And tele- phone your Steamfitter or Plum- ber for an estimate, NOW. COMING SATURDAY “FLOWER OF THE NORTH” ADMISSION TWENTY CENTS ANY TIME Here’s All the Do pe | on College Student ington. The cost for men’s cloth: ger,” “playing a harp in St. Pet orchestra.” Officers Nominated who attends most of the mixers Kets 30 da Most of student# at Wisconsin y more than $50 a month board d room, slightly more than the erage at the University of Wash. ut § x rer & month. For women the om $25 to $50 and up. the most popular sport, 15 i 1 from the late Henry M. Flagler ev: | coeds Is available at the Badger [with basketball second and baseball Mieral years ago and which is just} university now. The question. third Few underclassmen know {| outside New York City nalres range in subject from the | more than 200 of their classmates. “Orphans of the Storm,” which In| size of the student's scquaint- | Among seniors, 40 per cent know 400 or more. Not one of the freshman wom- en was opposed to coeducation, altho one-tenth of the women tn the university condemn the ays- tem. are opposed to the coeducational scheme, Approximately half of the students admit that they might get more out of their col- One-quarter of the men lege work. Nearly all the students admit ocon. thrillingly romantic story, with Mix| regularty to dances requires $30 (sional attacks of the ues,” from | playing the part of @ dashing gentie-| = month for amusements and his financial worry, studies, homesick man adventurer, In the early! popular friend manages on COM (nen, love and discouragement. ‘The dente write an average of 500,000 ters home each achool year, most them going from (he women Leas than one-quarter of the students expect to return to their home towns. have prospective jobs, the occupations of parents, 4,000 Few of the seniors In listing 000 were given as busl- 1,500 as professional dd others were “booting- Jack-of-all-trades” and er's by the Muny League Julius L. Baldwin and Robert C. were nominated Tuesday for nt of the Municipal league. nominated for vice-president * Howard A. Adama, Jackson Sil. ugh, W. E. enry and Robert F. fall er will be will be un D. Hall, Metkirk, Walter » War. naman, W. Mason, le and Andrew Steers Grandparents Are Kidnapers, Charge ant cities were asked ‘aptain of Detectives “Thousahds have seen it!” WOMEN ONLY! CONTINUOUS TODAY FROM 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M, Starting ‘Tomorrow Shows for Women Dally From 2:30 to 5130 P.M, IT Calls “A Spade a Spade” Hesitates at Nothing Is “The Naked Truth” Dee A STARTING TOMORROW DAILY 11 A NIGHTS 8: Class “A” Theatre Third and Pike St. 0 2180 P.M. TO 12 M. nas) PAGE 3 Open an Account at Grote-Rankin’s _ THE GROTE-RANKIN CO OTID F. KEGEL, President, Fifth Avenue and Pike Street THE MONARCH Is More Than a Range The housewife who is so fortunate as to possess a Monarch Malleable Range has a super-range to be proud of. For the MONARCH makes cooking mere play—the beginners can operate the MONARCH with the same sure results as the experienced housewife. The MONARCH—the pride of thousands of Seattle house- wives—is a range apart—a range that looks better, acts bet- ter and, best of all, COOKS better. Then, TOO, it is built to last a lifetime. Small monthly payments puts a MONARCH in your home, Charles Tennant, to aid tn locating, EMPLOYEES of the Northern Pa- Mr. and Mra, Monte P. Zicree, for! cific will hereafter become auto | Tepelrit. Next Liberty th whom a warrant has been Issued,| matically pensioned upon reaching| To puild yourself up quickly charging them with kidnaping their! the age of 70 years or upon becom-| Flu or any wasting illness, take | eranddaughter, Anita, Kynar 5 ibe | ine tncapacttated after 20 years of HEAMOTONE Zinio, mother of the child, *|service, acconting toa report re-lane great tonic and blood b The grandparents are supposed to|célved by Judge Georges T. Reid. | $1.00 and $2.00 bottles at all have left Seattle for California in a| vice president of the road, with of-/ stores, or direct, p. p. by Jt large brown touring car. | fices in Beattle. ‘Drug Co., Spokane—aAd If you value your watch, let H In Business ‘Transactions How convenient is the elimi- nation of correspondence and travel. How profitable, in the econ- omy of time, is the immediate answer and the avoidance of delay. How satisfactory is the direct personal touch. Convenience, profit and satis- faction will be found in the use of the long distance telephone lines. Every Bell telephone is a Long Distance station. The Pacific Telephone And Telegraph Company