The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 21, 1922, Page 3

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SATURDAY, OCTORER 21 Rede Daniele oe Kirkwood n Temple yooh John Quelch, the dominant figure ef South African business and poll ties and & power In the diamond E markets of the world, Is endeavoring Ete stop the theft of diamonds from Phils mines. He suspects Louis Bar D mey, @ diamond buyer. P got arrives from England with her little son, S watched, then falls in love with her Yerraine Temple and Lady Margot Cork are invited to see Quelch's col lection of diamonds, and falls a victim to their lure. She Jater steals a diamond from Barney and places herself in his power. She fe afterward saved from him bh. Lady Margot and Quelch confess their love for each othey and the final scenes of the play arf hap ones for all. COLISEUM “HEROES AND HUSBANDS” (First National) Qesanne Dendury. Katherine MacDonald Waiter Graylora Charles Clary Susanne Danbury (Katherine Mac- Donald), successful novelist, prefers | ber work to social diversions, and jays no particular attention to men ne is in love with Walter} by | . 1922. A Flags,” With Priscilla Dean, at Columbia; Bebe Daniels N Excellent Selection of Photoplays Will Be Shown at Local Houses Beginning Saturday While Edna Wallace Hooper, the 52-Year-Old Beauty, Will Appear in Person at the Coliseum to Tell How Plastic Surgery and Proper Care of the Skin Keeps Her Looking Youthful. “Pink Gods” at Strand; Wallace Reid at the Liberty; Johnnie Walker in “My Dad,” at Blue “Under Two Mouse; Edna Murphy in a Romance of Journalism at Winter Garden; “The Four Horsemen” at Colonial; “In the Name of the Law” Starts Sunday at the Princess. 2. Nilsson | | | When Mar. } Dick, Quelch orders her | Lorraine | oom Ing the revival of an anctent feud, ts forced to flee. He meets Maria To assist her tn finding plans for her ancient castle, which in haunted with ghosts that have made away Graylord. During a week-end party Bemis, publisher of Susanne's novels, Be shot, and a number of dramatic} incidents follow, Susanne and sev-| eral others are under suspicion of the police, but in the final moments! @ the play matters are happily} ‘straightened out by a timely confes-| lon. True love for each other is| hen realized by Graylord and} ne. ' BLUE MOUSE | “MY DAD" (Clute BeattD) Johnnie Walker | Ruth Clittord a = | ‘The unflinching herolam of «| in bia efforts to prove his! innocent of a murder, in which | he was supposed to have been im- forms the theme of “My "a drama of the anow lands, In : Johnate Walker even excels brilliant performance ax the gk sheep” in “Over the Hill.” In ” Johnnie is a good boy. | ¥ in he obedient, but is eto the point cf recklessness. ‘@ash thru the frozen trails to! re the evidence with which to! his parent Innocent ts said to) & gripping episode. “My Dad” he shown at the Blue Mouse neing Saturday. LIBERTY “THE GHOST Bi KER” Jarvis. Wallace Reid Lila Lee Walter Hiers ~ Warren Jarvis, after becoming en- ae, + with Marta’s brother, Jarvis goes to Spain. The mystery is solved and Jarvis and Maria realize their love for each other s soictereettinhimentnte ill | WINTER GARDEN “mareal Exraar Mary Rogers Kana Morphy Barry Price... “Extra! Extra! which ts described as an absorbing love story with an abundance of live action scattered thru it, is scheduled for a three days’ run at the Winter Garden commence ing Sunday. It deals with up-to-the minute newspaper enterprise as ap- plied to big business and high finance, and from this the romance develops. Among the characters are} editors, reporters, millionaires and— & very charming girl who ig secre- tary to one of the millionaires. One of the incidents shows a youthful re- porter swimming out to an anchored yacht, In his zeal to obtain important facts for his paper. . PRINCESS | = “IN THE NAME OF THE LAW” “In the Name of the Law," which commences a three days’ run at the Princess Sunday, a picture dealing with the American police, fs said to|role in “The Four Horsemen of the | Apocalypse,” a Rex Ingram picture, | be the greatest picture of its kind ever filmed. It deviates from the beaten track of previous productions dealing with the police, and Instead of making them the butt of comics, it shows them fn a more favorable ght. 1—Edna Hopper, Coliseum (in person). Theresa, with whom he falls in love.) Jonnnie Walker | z AUTHOR GOES EAST FOR MARY PICKFORD Elmer Harris, who is writing Mary | Pickford’s screen version of “Doro- | thy Vernon of Haddon Hall,” ts pack ing his grip and wardrobe trunk once [more for a quick trip to New York, | where, In addition to witnessing the opening of “Robin Hood,” he will confer with Miss Pick ford regarding certain situations in the story, It is possible that he will continue on to Cuda and Mexico with {the Pickford-Puirbanks party, ing out the story with Miss Pickford as they go, | metropolitan HINDUS AND SOLDIERS SEEN IN FILM BATTLE More than 150 Hindus and halt a» many soldiers of that country do bat tle in most convincing style in one of the scenes of “The Young Rajah,” ® Paramount. picture starring Ro- dolph Valentino. The scene takes place in a palace and f¥ an uprising of the people against their govern- ment. cast includes Johnnie Walker and other notable actors. 4] COLONIAL | “THE FOUR HORSEMEN” (Rex Ingram) | Rodolph Valentino has the lending | which opens at the Colonial Sunday. | This picture required one of the larg- lest armies of actors ever ansembled jat Hollywood, and it i said by critics in all parts of the country to be one Its principal characters are | of the greatest pictures in the history ehiid. tangled in a shooting affray follow:! Patrick O'Hara and his family. The of motion pictures. 100% Courtesy, Music, Pictures WHO'S AFRAID OF GHOSTS? Wallie isn't—wait till you see him clean up a whole army of them—you'll roar like Mack Senne with Louise Fazenda, LIBERTY NEWS Mine Maud crowned by Mayer KE. J. Brown. you've never roared before! tt’s “BOW-WOW” John Henry, Jr., and Teddy A Genuine 100% Laughi Mrs. Raby Burns, of the Women’s Reliet Co te jam ea fy erway for new iy Boon will be Bight. sents new allk flag bridge A LAberty Guest Mnjoys the F OF The famous stage beauty of 20 years ago— WALLACE work: | is ‘|Llovie Quizzes | (Conducted in co-operation with | Associated First National Pictures, | ine) | Marigold—Oh, no, moving pictures |t# not her only achievement. Pola | Negrt loves opera, rarely missing a | Mant of it, and it te aaid if she had } not given her time to the screen she | might have developed a voice of pos | etbilitios: Fan Mania—Sines you are so very much concerned about the lady who #0 farhous, here is something that may interest you. Theda Bara is conversant with books, | poets and painters jand vampish as she is on the screen, j#0 cRarming and adorable is she off Yeu, and she is very chasitable, too. Martha—Katherine MacDonald ts hot married just now, and she doesn't expect to be, but we are wondering | what the solitaire on her third finger lof her left hand means, Leatrice doy ie married to Jack Gilbert | Miriam Cooper and Ralph Graves appear in “Kindred of the Dust.” Don't pay any attention to rumors— Harold Lieyd and Mildred Davis, well—we haven't heard anything to the effect that they were interested in one another, They were seen about together, but that’s no crt terion. Malvin, Montana—so {t Is—Crane Wilbur ts now a relative of the ta |mous Sarah Bernhardt, having mar ried Suzanne Caubet, the divine | Sarah's niece. They have lost them jaclves somewhere in California, Rosemary—-Yot poor little abused Come to me with your trou bles. If not a helper, it's a sympa- made the role “Of a Fool There Wan” | authors, | As sophisticated | A 4 i é 58 + by DOROTHY DALTON’S NEW PLAY HAS RAT ACTORS “Rats always leave a doomed ship,” | is an old saying, ured in “On the High Seas,” a Paramount pieture featuring Dorothy Dalton and Jack Holt, with Mitchel! Lewis in the sup. port, Large rate are actually seen leaving the veasel which is soon aft- Irvin V. Willat, who made thin picture, dectines to tell how he persuaded the rata to act. erward destroyed. thizer I'll be, Not a word about | Madge Kennedy. Well here's one |for you. Madge will soon be seen in | the wereen version of “Dorothy Ver- non of Haddon Hall.” And I can just hear you yell “Hurray.” Guasie—Jack Pickford and Mart lyn Miller were married at the home of Doug and Mary Fairbanks. You're welcome Charlies BE. —"Skin Deep” ts the picture in which good looking Milton Sills makes up like a crook. role in thin picture, ¥. D. W.—Harold Licyd does not wear his glasses tn private life, He wears them only for professional pur- poses and the ones he wears contain no lenses. Yes, the square rimmed ones in “Grandma's Boy” were pretty funny, weren't they? Reminded one of the old family album, but perhaps you do not have any such old-fash- toned affair in your possession. Fan-Fan-Fan—If I have anything fof a lamb's tail. But it ts mad, but true—I have very little to say about jit. “Serambled Wives’ | picture she has appeared in since her | marriage to Lieut. Palmerson Will. |iame, They are now living down ' South, Fior- | ence Vidor also plays an tmportant | to say about it, Marguerite Clark will | |be back on the screen in two shakes | iw the only | % Actor, ‘12, Now Free In the ordinary kid's life, his 12th birthday is of no more’ im- portance than ts the average age milestone, but Dominic Palumbo, | who with eight other lads appears in a clever skit entitled “Youth,” at the Pantages this week, ts ai the seventh heaven of bliss over that commonplace occurrence. Because he has been under 123 years of age for so much of his brief career—four of his years hav- ing been spent behind the foo lights, Dominic hag been “pinched” more times and has kidded his way into the hearts of more stone vieaged judges than any other kid alive. It ts against the law for a child |to act in vaudeville under the men toned age, but Dominic has been able to convince the courts that j bis education has been well taken jcare of, despite his stage activiry. Now he won't argue any more, for this week he became 12 years of age; and is celebrating the free dom by doing what his boosters may ia the best work of his career before crowded houses at the local theater of tho Pantages chain. Harry Knoles has arrived in Amer. fea with a print of “The Bohemian Girl," which he filmed in London. In | the cast are Ellen Terry, Ivor No-| vello, Gladys Cooper, Constance Col. | Mer and C. Aubrey Smith. | Nazimova plans to film “The | World's Milusion,” by J. A. Waaser- mann. —Priscilla Dean, Columbia. 3—Edna Murphy, Winter Garden. 4—Wallace Reid, Liberty. 5—Bebe Daniels, Strand. 6—Ruth Clifford and Johnnie Walker, Blue Mouse. Vib rw ~~ Larry Semon in “Golf” BLUE MOUSE Travesty on the Sport Larry Semon, popular com- edian, who is appearing in “Golf,” a travesty on the popular American sport, which begins an engagement at the Blue Mouse theater Friday. Hé practices golf in his parlor, while on the course he gets into all sorts of com- plicated situations. A goose lays an egg where the ball should be, and—well, Semon used to be a newspaper car- toonist, where he learned the importance of originality. clure Patter “Rupert of Hentzau,” the sequel ot “A Prisoner of Zenda,” will be Presented to the film fans by the Selznick company early in 1923. Elaine Hammerstein, Conway Tearle, Eugene O'Brien and Owen Moore are all in the cast. . Charles Hatton will have the title role in “Michael O'Halloran,” first in |the series of Jean Stratton Porter stories to be filmed. Irene Rich and Josephine Sedgwick are in the cast. eee Adele Rowland, farnous musical comedy star, is Mrs, Conway Tearile in private life. She made the trip to Los Angeles in order to see her hus- band make love to Elaine Hammer- etein—in the film: . « Theda Bara will be the ster of a special to be made by the Selznick people for early showing. Her re- tremendous interest by the film fams. eee “Her Unwelcoms Lover,” Elinor Glyn story, is shortly to be made into a film by the Selznick — company. - eee Roéolph Valentino plays with Eu- gene O’Brien in the Selznick Picture, “The Wonderful Chance.” eee Pauline Garon will have the lead- ~ ing role in Cecil De Mille’s next, El Mott Dexter will play opposite her. cee “Paths of Glory” is the title of the | picture William De Mille 4s now film- ZUM OPPER appearing daily IN PERSON NCERT ORCHESTRA RAY MOND” She fs 62 years old and doesn’t look more SHE TELLS You HOw: —by Thomas text SPECIAL MATINEE FOR WOMEN ONLY AT 11 A. M. TUESDAY -ALSO— “HEROES AND HUSBANDS” The First National picture of a woman who thinks she mar- ries a hero instead of a husband. NOW PLAYING— Paramount's exciting drama of thé diamond mines in Africa— STRAND ORCHESTRA Under Wineland JACK, O’DALE ON THE ORGAN

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