The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 13, 1922, Page 3

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OCTOBER 13, 1922, SIeGS RR RRR REB Pigeons in | | STARTING SATURDAY— COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA Playing the “Lacin” Sextette Viola Dana in “The $5 Baby” HERE SATURDAY— DAVID POWELL IN PARAMOUNT'S An avalanche of thrills! Another picture like “The Flame of the Yukon!” ADDED ATTRACTION— Mack Sennett's Tie, “WHEN SUMMER COMES” e just roars! a - LIBERTY NEWS CLEL EL ELLE SACOM mene ENtca Achievement! For a few days only— B.DeMilles PRODUCTION Ld we Thomas Meighan leatrice Joy -Lois John Miltern George Fawoett dalia Faye Edythe Chapman dack Mower Derothy Cumming Casson Ferguson Mickey Moore James Neill Sylvia Ashton Raymond Hatton Mabel Van Buren Ethel Wales Dale Fuller Edward Martindel a Ogle Guy Oliver Shannon Day Lacien Littlefield A Paramount Picture Baby Esther Pressman in Her Dance Interpretation of “The Sneak.” Coming—'PINK GODS” GRAND OPENING “0 LU 0 N 1 riEATRi Pere ieaaad ia: 13th and East Pike TONIGHT “Fatty” Sanders, Seattle's Pep Artist, Formerly of Vietory Club, Will Be There Irresistible Dance Music Everybody's Going—Regular Admission 7:20 and THE ‘Take 1 oF ¢ Lessons STEVENS Way They Are Dancing Now Little Cost. Private tails Day and Evening. Young Lady Assistants, 1611% Fourth Av., Ne. Pike | Te. Mi 201 Reservation TONIGHT—Last Times—“ BURNING SANDS” TONIGHT ONLY—Buster Keaton in “The Blacksmith” and DOROTHY DALTON MITCHELL LEWIS “THE SIREN CALL’ With BILLY BEVAN and MILDRED JUNE No laughs—. Acclaimed by Thousands De Mille’s Biggest STRAND ORCHESTRA under WINELAND River’s End The Big Curwood Story A Stirring Tale of the Royal Mounted Police AMATEURS Tomorrow TONIGHT For 3 Days A “Bungalowilte” Can't Go Wrong Hilltett 0810 for Ever so many | Miss Junken jbrother, J. ON. Union corner. pigeons have come 3 and 4 o'clock, the corner. Previc Junken It réla to cat birds. them. and walked out. Wayne Childs, 26. silly young girl.” Ol Madison gat Second ‘T. DAILY NIGHTS 7:20-0:90 TODAY “SEwWs “The cinematic But none more tame than those |which hover about * ~ Seventh | who declares she has always been interested in ant mals and. birt, pharmacy at the Since then pigeons have gone ant remains, Each afternoon, pigeons make thelr appearance on Miss Juniven, too, makes her ap Pearance. The birds watch for her japproach, then fly | They Nght on her arma, even her head. ters peanuts on the ground and the birds fy down to pick up the food, | to six years ago, Mins i in Grant county on a homestead, She was years, going from her home tn Seat tle in 1913 with the same brother whom she now asaists. by those who knew her on the home- stead that Mins Junken trained and made pets of all things, from squir- Certainly as a pigeon trainer she bids fair to rival the ladies of the footlights who receive plause when their birdies light upon City Roost | on H fer Arm Woman Feeds Dozen or More Daily at 7th and Union By Wanda von Kettler ‘Tame pigeons in Seattle? | “Silver Wings.’ the youngest daughter of Mrs. Carr. rifices and triumphs of mother love. Bride Finds Hubby Belongs to Another CHICAGO, Oct. 12—A 16-year-old girl, who had eloped to Chicago from her home in Peoria with a man sho! hag known but a few hours, found & letter in his pocket on the sixth day of her marriage. She frowned. The handwriting was feminine. She tore it open and then sighed. It was signed “sinter-in-law. She read tt, put on her hat and coat ‘Then she caused the arrest of Gall Te no MUSICAL COMED With the California Girts tn “CUrID’s ROUNDUP” TOMORKOW EARLE WILLIAMS —to— “ROMANCE PROMOTERS” COMING SUNDAY GERALDINE FARRAR | in “THE WORLD AND ITS WOMAN” Any Time—10e—All the Time LAST TIMES TONIGHT PETER B. KYNE’S Long Chance” STARTING TOMORROW HERBERT RAWLINSON —IN— The peppery go-getTem “Confidence” —ALSO— “MIRROR” Showing San Francisco Fire fre Columbi | theater. jand divorce,” | Bhe was) and] picturized form at the Winter Gar It is a Vitagraph pro- with Earle Williams —|in 116 Monarch among the first pur- chasers of Monarch Ranges, we would advise you to attend the demonstration and Jearn how won- derfully the Mon- arch performs under conditions that you would expect to op- erate it yourself. A scene from “Silver Wings,” a William Fox production, | which opens an engagement at the Blue Mouse theater, begin-| Mrs, Mary Carr, who gained fame thru her | performance of Ma Benton in the Fox picture, “Over the| | Hill,” and who is shown above, is the featured player of | May Beth Carr, the girl in the picture, is| The story is one of sac- baking and cooking the things the aver- age woman would use — and she keeps the oven at baking heat at a cost of less than 2 cents for fuel per hour. ning Saturday. TODAY'S PROGRAMS STRAND — Thomas Meighan end leatrice Jo; COLL MITA itenry Friday & the last day of Bus “Manslaaghter.” Five Dollar Baby," at the Liberty) Bi, Walthall and humorous incidents | oT » Keaton's latest com Viola Dana is pleasing) | able, and we want you to see how sim- ple economizing on fuel is with a Mon- arch. hance BLUE MOUSE—Owen Moore tn “Lave is an Awtal Thing. | COLISEUM—Milton Silla and Wanda dey in “Narning Sands.” a Paramount | | LIDENTY—Bester K = Viela Dens in “The the attraction open | 1} Naby. ing Saturday, It ts @ picture of the) | WINTER GARDEN—Rarle Williams | | | COLONTAL—Lewis Mone and Jere Daw an Alaskan gold/ “The River's Bad.” leading. fomigine role Jove picture which was filmed en tirely on the deserts of Arabia, will | be shown at the Colonial Saturday, The last showing Friday night of/ gundaay and M The letter had/ the told of his baby and other wife “She had not obtained the letter read. “And, can't see why you want to marry a nESE® | STRAND Columbia theater. Thomas Meighan tn story ts that of gambler who pro- tecta the interests of a girl whone |mother he bad loved and lost. The girl te Mildred Jones, daughter! of Mra. M. Ft. Jones, for many years! | state employe at Springfield and fecently In federal service in Peoria Childs t# the son of a prominent |P¥t ® small Teal estate man of Mason City, Iowa. | He met the girl in Peoria, engaged to an older man, a member| of the state vice commission, but he| story of romance was waiting until she grew older. Childs’ courting w swift. The girl came to Chicago with |den theater. him and they were married. stove as part payment on a Monarch. ter, depicts a stern district attor ney who endeavors Herbert | reckiens mode of living of a rich {P| soctety girl whom he loves pic! Joy as the girl, who is an orphan, '© |) kills a motorcycle policer | the attorney, who believes the girl) the Attorney who believes the girl| must be punished S/ means of waving her from herself, tes her vigorously. i town on the map, WINTER GARDEN com: | prosecut “HELL SHIP” STORY ALL TRUE, SAYS MAN WHO OUGHT TO KNOW ‘That the experiences related in which foists happiness and | fortune THE GROTE“RANKIN GQ) QTO F. KEGEL, President, Malleable Ranges Sold During the First Ten Days of the Demonstration If you are not Mrs. Johnson is That is remark- Nine-piece Aluminum Cooking Set FREE with ‘ every Monarch Range sold now: Buy your Monarch Malleable Range now—you can trade your old “The Price of Sal “To Alaska in a Hell appearing in The are absolutely the experi ences of those who travel to the Bering sea in a “Hell Ship is the word of Frank 2704 Sixth ave. who himself made the trip North during the past summer. Houghton, a cannery mechanto, left Seattle April 18 and returned He spent much of that time between the two months on “aquare-rigger” Tax Reports Minus the |2° 5 wer penine. me which Milton Stile and Wanda Haw. in the leading parts, BY W. H. PORTERFIELD The hills of Beverly and Holly-| movies. Somebody has been toying WASHINGTON, lare the multimillionaire movies of | California? Have they been decelv-/ anything on Fifth avenue look}™ment to reveal the names of the Uncle Sam as to their real! cheap by comparison, riches or were the “million « year| salaries” reported to be received by Customs and costumes of the Arabs are displayed in thia picture, while their fighting) ‘methods are also shown. } in the Bering feclares he had reason acquainted with the living conditions of ail those on several of them merely press @6°M') Winiam B. de Mille, for example, bad ay bea hn ag in Holly-| Sosed to run well into the millions,|¢ral convention of the Episcopal wood a few we : : . mon talk about the studios dor nd Mary Fairbanks were) Por og "52,000,000 a year, and|Showing that inthe whole state closes at the Colonial | theater Friday night of adventure in the frozen North. | “The Sheik’s Wife,” ENGAGED ‘Fall Dahlia Show Will Open Monday | The Fall Dahlia show will open its doors in the tourist department of the Chamber of Commerce at 10 a. m. | while Gloria Swanson, Mary Miles} come. others were solemnly those “in the know” to be receiving/ Siven, it is known not leas than $10,000 a week salary,|these seven came from north of i And George Beban told me per-| Tehachapi! W. M. JAMES, a Seattle man, has sonally, that he was one of the| In fact there are only 121 Cali.| been appointed local traffic agent for “small fry,” but that he had spurned] fornians in the “$100,000 and over|the Chicago Great Western Railroad an offer of $4,000 a week net, as) class,” “not worth considering.” | years ago, before the movie mag-/formerly was connected with the have been Invited to make displays Editor Conceals nates were fairly started. P| - e for the regular old fashioned mil- Millions of Moviedom |: ise. -e2 Paes with the truth and we plain people would wish that Senator Bob La Follette’s bill to compel the govern- Oct. 13.—Where| Wood, too, are crowned with palaces) |of these movie stars, palaces which, | |in appearance at least, would make| income taxpayers had not been shelved by ‘a congress, too ready to protect the poor rich. Besides the stara, there are the | directors and promoters, Cecil and} whose incomes are popularly sup-| ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF the gen- “s .jchurch will be outlined at the morn- Ea eee ee ce lforuln noleamed’ today |! service of the Trinity Parish r CM churgh, Eighth ave. and James st, Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. “The Great Commandment of the Law” is the subject of the evening service. Sunday school will be held at 1045 a. m. at Trinity chapel. there is but one million dollar in. Just seven persons admit in- Harold Lioyd and a host of/ comes in excess of $250,000 each, | declared by| nd while no names or details are! that most of Chaplin another million, * and this is less than three| Co. it was announced Friday. James Carnation Milk Products Co. and Source of News editor of the Richmond and Twick enham has flatly refused the demand of the local authorities that he re ree of information pub. lished in connection with a recent meeting of the board of guardians. _ AMUSEMENTS _ Money! Money! Money! ~RUPERT HUGHES nm Aubrey Trio |i0i4 News |i0142 t Next February set as the date of the wedding | of Miss Camilla Lowell Ashe\ Bath (Me.) society| girl, and Senator Walter Edge of New Jersey. If you liked “The Old Nest” you'll love “Remembrance” with W. R. Grace & Co,, steamship eo operators, OP was easyand the family knewjust how to make a little touch. While he worked hard to pay the bills, his wife and children learned to play bridge with a grand manner. Dear old dad. He remembered earlier days when mother would serve the dinner in a ate ng gingham apron. Now there was a utler, Now there was only disapproval of his lack of social grace and his homely attire. But he remembered the dear, meaningful words of long ago, “John, I love you.” Every Once in a While Another Old-Timer Wakes Upl Among the alive, progres- sive, up-tordate business and rofessional people of Seattle, including bankers, realtors and mort Title Insurance hi the recognized a of evidencing ting land titles, But once in a while there is an old father both ® ses abstracts are good enough for him! Probably they are. One such old-timer ved a shock the other day when he saw our figure showing that nearly 75% of Seattle's title business is now on a title insurance basis, with the percentage steadily increasing. The one great American author who tells his own story on the screen has directed @ perfect motion pidure To quote the slogan of a well-known advertiser— “THERE'S A REASON” Washington Title Instrance Company “Under State Supervision” Asseta More Than $675,000 A picture you will remember forever

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