The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 7, 1922, Page 3

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With This Contestant? Star readers are struggting with | the problem, The question they are | } “ALWAYS. THE WOMAN” invited to discuss is the crucial ofs that Manette, Storm,” the big Contest Conditions 24 Prizes—Open to All First prize . seul prize ..... . Third to tenth ‘prizes, lumbla pass for two fer balance of season Bleventh prize .. Twelfth and thirteenth .... Fourteenth to twenty-fourth Tickets for “The Storm" The above prizes are offered by The Star for the best answers to the problem of Manette, heroine of “The Storm,” which ts to be shown soon at the Columbia, namely ‘Should a girl choose a city man or an outdoors man?" RULES Letters must not exceed 200 words. Answers must be written on one aide of paper only. Decision of judges to be final. Employes of The Star, Columbia and Universal Exchange barred. Address Problem Editor, Seattle Star. heroine of “The | Universal produc Until Friday Night Onty— DOROTHY PHILLIPS Firet Nationals 4 Hance at the Sem, “Hurricane’s Gal” win WALLACE BDEERY Raturday—Thomas Metghan Home of the Big Successes 4 More Days to Seo WALLACE REID bat gh Rona banana Selene “THE DICTATOR” east are FE wostett, Alan Hale tion, which ts to be shown at the Co Yumbia, has to solve—“Shall ft be the city man or the man of the out | doors?” R. W. Monroe, of 6700 87th ave. | and T. M. Warren, 228 Yaie Butiding, | express their opinions as follows: The following tp my solution for Manette, who is loved by two men| in “The Storm.” Some folks go miles and miles to find happiness, when it is often knocking at the door of their home, if the door is opened within they will find the aimple things of life—the things that are really worth while. Such would be Manette’s lot should she chocee David, then return to Burr. Burr, the woodsman, could be im- mensely happy should she marry him, altho Manette would always re- member David Stewart, who kindled the fires of her day dreams of gay city life. The sophistiented David would very | likely return to bis old haunts and| habits onee back in the city and neg lect Manette, should she choose him. While a man of Burr's type would g° thru fire and water for the girl he loves; something that David would not likely do. Even tho he ts not the least bit romantic I believe a girl should choose an outdoors man tn preference to a city man.” TIME fit ths Tine 10c cI ONIA Drcate ia FAMOUS DRAMA TO THE RIGHT” COMEDY 10 auwars R. W. MUNRO, $700 37th ave. “T belleve that Manette should marry Burr Winton, the woodaman, because she, herself, has lived all her | life in the woods and they would | naturally have a great deal in com mon, while if she married the city | jman, he would no doubt tire of her soon, and she would also long to re. turn to the forests and freedom of the out of doors that she had learned to love. I do not believe that two} people who have lived such entirely | different lives as Manette and David | Stewart could live happily together "| T. M. WARREN, 228 Yale Bidg. LONDON AUTHORITIES CAUSE FILM DELAY Work on the production of “If S| Winter Comox” In London has been |temporarity halted because English authorities have barred the importa- tion of foreign actors to play tn movies made on English fol} Ann Forrest, who will play Lady Ty- bar in the film, comes under the ban |The immigration prohibits the limportation of any labor which Brit co lishers are qualified to fill. BUFFALO BILLS yf TE onangage he be agreeing werghe ene WILD WEST SHOW act | other actress is qualified to fill Miss | Forrest's role, except the man re| sponsible for the production of the film? Percy Marmont. was selected by the ducer, William Fox of Mare Sabre j British subject Asm VARIETY | | In one scene of “The Ol4 Home) stead,” which James Cruze ts direct. | }ing for Paramount pictures, appear | Chinese, Siamese, Portuguese, Ha watlan as well as American and Ene- | lish extra people. The scene ts « big | Prices: Adi | casino at Macao, China. eT ee : Seat sale at Owl Drug Sto ‘Third and Pike. ai eae JACK HOL Jack Holt ho recently completed work in “While Satan Sleeps,” will | laoon start from Hollywood for New |! | York where he will begin work In a| sew Paramount picture, “Making a | Man.” Part of it will be made at the Long Island City studios and the re. | mainder on the West coast. EXTRACTION FREE DAILY Our whalebone rubber, which do Rot Cover the roof of the mouth if) you have two or more teeth. woe $6.00 Gum Lyke Rubber, a perfect re| Production of the human gum, set . $10.00, $4 Most of our present patronage is| fecommended by our early custo-| mers. whone work is still giving good satisfaction. | This Space Reserved for the All work guaranteed for 15 years. Examinations free. OHIO. CUT RATE D ENTISTS j : Established 20 Years Bnd Ave. and University St. Columbia Theater hd CE iin yan agg at = eran aa NN TE | “Poodles,” THE SEATTLE STAR Heroes May Come and Heroes Go But Wallace Reid Goes On Forever Wally Reid, the perennial hero of the silver screen. He is) at the Liberty this week i in Richard Harding Davis’ romantic story, “The Dictator.” Monkey Act |Here’s Big Job at Palace Hip} for Will Hays Fonniler than humans are the 20) Movie producers cannot afford to ring-talied performers who go thru/ wall toa loudly at the Inequalities & five-act bill of their own without | of national laws and local censor. Outside direction of any sort in Ever-| ship when their own industry t* set's Monkey Hippodrome, the fea: | beset by conditions that do not work ture act of the new show at the Pal-| for the best interests of the photo ace Hip. p A comical six-piece orchestra, which apparently makes up its music an it goes, accompanies the perform ers, whose efforts reach « climax with sensational serial work by one courageous {little animal who st & flying leap from one trapese to the | satisfactory distributing plan. other, Witt Hays, as head of the produc- Mitchell's Jazz Maniacs are four |ing and distributing elements of tly colored syncopaters worthy of head-| industry, will have achieved an im ning the usual vaudeville show.| portant advance for the motion pic- Their repertoire includes harmony | ture when he makes it possible for songs, plano jazz, clever impersona-jany worthwhile picture to find tions and clog dancing. | nccems to all the sereens of the coun Wielding the accordion in a man-| try regardions of the source of pro- ner that te beyond the efforts of | duction of that film. Many grown-up entertainers ts littie| = sania Torrano, a 14-yearold miss. PRISC 1 A DEAN “Ireland's Sweet Ringer” te Harry Princtila Dean ts on her way back Reilly, whose Dublin songs and sto- | to Universal City. She hag been tn ries make a big hit. New York, working on her latest pic The bill opens with Sonta and Her| ture, “Lady Raffles.” While in the Excorts, in “Pleasurable Pastimes. big cit Priscitia slept most of the Tom Moore and Helene C wick | day and worked nights at the Eden star in “From the Ground Up,” an | Musee, after the crowds had been put Irish photoplay lout. She saw but one show all the | while she was there. Hamlets’ a Swedish production of | unusual merit starring Asta Nielson, has shown in New York but has not beet generally released thru the y because the American spon EUGENE, Or. — Plans announced | for replacing University of Oregon| SUMNER buildings destroyed by recent fire. killed in motor Richard Bradley, 19, yele accident. HOORAY! THE CIRCUS IS HERE! Bi - Ca Stee shirt, Here he is—George Hanneford, brother of the famous doing a somersault from the back of Antrim, his ring horse. “Poodles,” George andthe rest of the riding Hanneford family make up the feature attraction under the huge Sells-Floto circus big top at Fourth and Republican Monday and Tuesday. The show, said to be the largest straight circus in the world, steamed into the city from Spokane just before dawn, Monday. The Cells Floto street parade, advertised as the largest in the land—reached the downtown thoroughfares shortly after 11 a.m. It was distinguished by its great number of open cages and dens, its 480 handsome horses, its novelty and clown sections. There were bands and calliopes, The performances, starting at 2 2 and, 8 p. m., Monday and Tuesday, open with “Night in Cairo,” huge lyrical spectacle, employing 1,400 people and animals. After that, 700 arenic notables, headed by the famous “Poodles” Hanneford, o> | sors of the film cannot arrange a/ | le “ | TODAYS PROGRAMS, | } | | | | uamenry wails Ned in ome | WINTER GARDEN —riorence Vider | 1 “The Heal Adventure.” | o on 1SEU M—Derethy Phillipe te wrieane’s Cel.” STRAND—Betty Compeon tn “Ale | ye the Women,” until Teesday | ight OAK Laat Baird tn “Don’t Doubs | At Your Wife.” TIMES the tastiest dish on |S the table ts something mother has concocted from odds and ends of foods that have served for other meals, the new dish being Mavored with something suggested by her own Ingenuity Bo it in with motion pictures, ‘The O4d_ and ends that have served to make other pictures enjoyable be- come more attractive if put together | by expert handling in a new film. Such a picture ts “Hurricane’s Gal,” | at the Coliseum this week. | ‘This film contains all the best ele | | ments of all the sea stories that have been told in the filma, and so deftly jare they arranged by Allen Holubar, the director, and enacted by a splon. | did cast, that “Hurricane’s Gal" ts one of the bert sea stories yet told on the sereen. Dorothy Phillipa, the heroine, ts a/ swashbuckling shipmistress, rigged out tn rough skirt and turned-up | trousers, a la Dorothy Dalton. The plot contains smuggling, fet | fights, stowaways, Chinese cook, pet |monkey, airplane thrill, ship fire, United States navy to the rescue, baby rea in a contest with a woman of | culture for the love of a handsome hero, eee | LIBERTY | Heroes may come and heroes may | ko, but Wally Reid goes on forever True, he has his ebb tide when some jother elick-haired Apollo - supplants | him for a time, but his full tide fol one wave follows the ebb another. “The Dictator” marks his return to the full tide of glory. This adap- | tation of the Richard Harding Davis story and play furnistes him once again with the hero type he first portrayed during his early screen successes. It's on view at tbe Lib- erty this week. Like many of Reid's previous Pictures tt tells the story of a young |man who doesn't believe in work jbut who gets there just the same. This time he becomes dictator of a |tropical country am the result of a flow of mad chase after a gir! with whom he! has fallen in love. lita Lee te the girl and she’s a mighty charming little heroine, eee WINTER GARDEN Is marriage a succese? Should a man share his business with his wife? Rowe, the wife of Rodney Aldrich, Chicago's millionaire lawyer, war deeply in love with her husband, but the time came shortly efter their marriage when all her dreams of ro- | mano were crumbled by the realities of fe. Rodney did not want to talk bust |ness to his wife--he wanted to love ther. She rebelled at being only a woman—she wanted to be apprect ated as a woman with @ keen brain So eho left him, determined to make la career for herself, #0 that she could meet her husband on a ground of intellectual equality. Rose and Rodney are the leading figures in “The Real Adventure,” the | King Vidor production starring Flor lence Vidor, the beautiful heroine of |"Hatl the Womi “Woman, Wake | Up” and other big productions, he Real Adventure” ts the at traction at the Winter Garden until Wednesday night . oe STRAND In ancient Egypt thousands of years ago @ young queen, Neco-Tok |ris, sacrificed her throne and her life for the love of a handsome priest Many centuries later, in our time, an Egyptian mystic named Mabmud, endowed with supernatural powers, astounds a company of people steam ing toward the Orient with the/ declaration that | Broadway show girl and the ship's dancer, is the reincarnated spirit of | Reypt’s anctent queen and that in a secret tomb of the desert waits her. All this is the beginning of the | plot of “Always the Woman,” and linvolves pretty little Betty Compson a treasure (who plays Cella) in a foutine of [thrilling as well as dramatic situa tions, “Always the Woman” ts at the | Strand until! Tuesday night It will | be followed by “Borderland,” a new Paramount offering starring Agnes Ayres and Milton Sills, ‘pow G FATRB:! ANKS. Douglas Fairbanks may not appear on the screen for many months after the release of “Robin Hood.” He intends to produce pictures starring other players. One of these may be "The Virginian.” He believes the | public would not accept him in the principle role of that MIRIAM BATTISTA Mirlam Battista, nine-year.old stage jand screen star, was received in pri |vate audience by President Harding Jat the White House during a personal |appearance engagement at a Wash |ington theater | It don't take long to trot and Walts by my easy method, njoyment out of and the uncouth woman of the! lown just an surely asx the crest of | Celia Thaxter, al Open an Account at Grote-Rankin’s OTTO F. KEGEL, Preaidest, Upholstered Davenport $125 1} NOt A SALE, nor a SPECIAL, but an every-day GROTE-RANKIN VALUE, elected to speak today of the Grote-Rankin Co’s. policy ||| of presenting at all times worth-while quality at moderate prices. Built to our specifications, upholstered in tapestry or velour, of graceful lines and comfortable—this Davenport is recog- FIFTH AND PIKE ; shy Bas LY; is 4 pay I ha, “I {iss nized as decidedly unusual value at $125.00. COLONIAL | Winchell Churchin Smith has « happy faculty for writing plays that ure wholesomely American. He has | @ touch of humor and a touch of | sentiment, an easy knack of char. | acterization, a clear sense of what | the average American is sure to like, and an unfaltering faith in the fact that the heart of the public ts in the right place. Churchill's famous stage play, “Turn to the Right,” possesses just | these qualities. In picture form it ia showing at the Colonial until ‘Wednesday night. Two crooks and ean tnnocent suf. ferer at the hands of the law have/| the leading parts, The innocent boy | has “done time’ as have the two crooks, and when it is over they all repair to the country, where the boy lives. Here the wise men of the dark nights are turned loose upon the Innocent and unsuspecting coun jtry bumpkins with highly humorous results. Jack Mulhall and Alice Terry head the cast, K omen have made sacrifices for their children ever since the begin- ning of the world, but never did a mother sacrifice more bravely than Aurora Lane, the appealing little mother in “The Broken Gate,” which will be shown Tuesday and Wednes- day at the Oak “The Broken Gate” Is adapted from the widely read novel of the same name by Emerson Hough, It was | directed by Paul Scardon and the | cast includes Sam De Grasse, Mar querite De La Motte, Joseph shown PAGES - UMMER and the open air call forth all the pent-up enthusiasm of the winter. The urge to get outdoors and in- duige in strenuous recreation brings with it the need for vitality to sustain the body. Kristoferson’s Perfectly Pas- teurized Milk fills this need ad- mirably. This health-building product is kept up to an unusu- ally high standard of purity and quality by modern scien- = methods in a big sanitary plant. y . Loyd Bacon, | Kilgour and other favorites. | Tonight for the last time “Don't Doubt Your Wife,” the dramatic pic- ture starring Leah Baird, will be on phone Bean DOK 0040 PT Hatdwate 6 SOXTH AVENUE wed PIRESSIRSES to $4.00...... RE RENE OENEEgE TE A $65.00 brand new, their families. $2.19 Auction Sale | Monday, Aug. 7, to Sat., Aug. 19, | latest model Royal Electric Vacuum Cleaner SOLD TO HIGHEST BIDDER. No delay, Step into the store and drop your bid in sealed box. Anyone can bid, except our employes and Any Screen Door in the House With Black Screen, values | With Galvanized Screen, $3.19 Six patterns with Diack screen and 4 patterns with galvanized screen, but not all sizes in all patterns. values to BLACK | GALVANIZED | 1 (only), 20x78 Inches. 6 (only), 80x78 inches, | 61 (only), 34x82 inches. 19 (only), 82x30 tnones. | 8 (only), 36x84 inches. 13 (only), 84x82 inches. | Many have wide stiles that can 2 (only), 36x80 inches, be cut down to smalter sizes, | 25 (only), 36x84 inches. It will pay you to buy them now for next season ” How Good Is Your Guarantee? If you get it from us it is backed by our reputa- tion of over 25 years in this same location, We positively guarantee our PIPELESS FURNACES to heat your home to your satisfaction. Could | guarantee be broader than that? Victory Installed complete for 150.0: Miri mnt: i

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