The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 13, 1923, Page 3

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY DLIGERTY Drink the wine of Ufet 18 ‘eee | INN DRINK Marshall Neilan’s most-talked-about success— RS*EREGRE ER -SEWFOOS SS Ford Sterling Claude Gillingwater Eleanor Boardman Nigel Barrie Arthur Hoyt Rockliffe Fellowes Thomas Holding Eugenie Bessemer See the ne ts none oldest horse of Gal| department, who than 1,000 fires in a in the harness, “The been \ bird Tor’ with DOUGLAS MacLEAN automobile 1 |HANDWORK EFFECTS You have never seen authentic more entertaining racing picture in your life— YOU'LL STAND UP YOUR SEAT AND YELL. Corporal Ivan Edwardes, ittle used, HB materiais being worked by ha STRA ORCHESTRA under WINELAND playing Added— “PEST OF THE STORM COUNTRY” A Mermaid Comedy M “JU Starring ST TONY” [oF dg 2 ” “Hottentot” Prices: wonderful hi Madam Butterfly” Matinees 35e; after 6:38, Ste aopletures Bo BRE~-BOBRBE-- DL. PEEBCRERDOEO EDO Children, 10¢ any time ca RUSSELL on the a WURLITZER the way. Capt. Marriott wrote the story. And Charles Maigne, director, newspaper and magazine writer, ad- venturer, war correspondent and what not, is focusing his dynamic tal- ents on the job of adapting the story to the screen. “THE 3 MUST GET THERES” A bie five-part comedy. hit. Hinging Today: "“BEGe BBB Elsie—Mal de mer iz one thing, but being sick for a sea story is an- other. In either case, you would have our sympathy. However, cheer up. for “The Isle of Lost Ships,” a Maurice Tourneur production, is on i ial EWROLE | “ tty Bebe Daniels, who is THE the star of “Singed Wings,” the new photoplay which STRANGERS’ . Ba opens at the Coliseum theater | THEY'RE OFFI 52° | . _. | PS A aS | BANQUET’ Watch Em Got F3/THRILLING SCENE IN | NOW HERE! rey “THE THIRD ALARM” with 23 favorites, Thomas H. Ince’s Conceded by experts to be one of ineluding— Ea| the most thrilling scenes ever thrown ‘ upon ® screen, in which a veteran Claire Windsor fire horse plunges thru a seething Hobart. Bosworth mane of flames with a rider on } WB | back, is the vividly dramatic c | Alarm’ | but serven to illustrate the! piayed by an exceptionally large caxt wreck that will hold ” you spellbound! and mn) IN. “ROBIN HOOD” F MADGE GB! Careful use of hand work on all effects in Douglas Fairbanks’ “Robin turn engagement of A First National Attraction, | Rance, of the production, for| of well-known players. | tn the period depicted machinery waa| roles are played by Claire Windsor, metals and almost all nd WH aa Seilie = NOW HERE! A gorgeous ro- mance—that of a girl who is called “the Flame of the Barbary Coast”— Bebe, as a beautiful underworld dancer, who becomes s0- ciety’s favorite, tempted by false love and risking all for the man_ she adores, in Para- mount’s . \ cyinge BEBE DANIELS ana CONRAD NAGEL COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA UNDER M. JACQUES BEAUCAIRE playing “Morning, Noon and Night in Vienna’ OMING SOON—LON CHANEY IN “SHADOWS” c "| who has befriended him ATTLE AR ELE CynthianaChild of Nature Refuse TODAY'S PROGRAMS nirangere’ Kanquet,” | popular stare. | Hie Dean in her —"Just Tony Tom Mia's Lillian apd Dorothy “Orphans of the Storm,” Kiek- Back,” with the starring role. GARDEN—Detty iythe | | te vase PALACE W1P——Colieea Moore, star- | ring in “Affinities.”* 4 % COLISEUM | the Collseum theater | Opening at today is the Penrhyn Stanlaws’ pro duction, "Binged Wings.” Bebe Dan- | iels and Conrad Nagel have the feat ured roles In the pleture Mins Daniels plays the part of Bonita, the last of a © proud and wealthy Spanish family, The wealth is gone and Honita is forced to dance in a water: | front cafe of Ban Francisco to earn | to support her aged «rand is called “The money father, Her dance Moth Dance,” and is one of the feat ures of the pleture, ee BLUE MOUSE A beautiful horse performing for the screen is the unusual feature of Junt ny,” & clever production which in one of the attractions at} the Blue Mouse theater thia week Tony ed an the fa mous movie star, and in "Just Tony” appears in the leading role, It in « Joture of the West, and ts enjoy jo from every standpoint, In this oftering Tony is seen in the role of ® wild horse who in the undaunted leader of his desert band of mus tan te Yet he gives up hin freedom the one man in all the world | | “The Three Must-Cet-There's,” a * an | . to be one of the most besias | big five-part comedy, with Max Lin. | ; ol that has ever been made.| 40° ang “pull” Montana, together | teachers insisted. So Cynthiana puts| moth with a large cast of comedians, is| the comedy feature of the bill cee | STRAND “The Strangers’ Banquet,” a sereen version of Donn Byrne's nov. | el, is the photoplay attraction at the} Strand this week. The pleture is ‘The featured | Hobart Borworth, Rockiiffe Fellows, |Ford Bterling, Eleanor Boardman, Thomas Holding, Eugenia Beaserer, | Nigel Barrie and Claude Giilingwa: | The story is one that Ia well Itked. | The Los Angeles #hipbullding indus try plays an important part, many of the scones being in the big yard f the Kheog company) see | LIBERTY |ing comedy drama specials that has | been seen here for some time in “The | Hottentot." which t# now showing at the Liberty, Capacity audiences have | witnensed nearly every showing at |Maharajah Is | Jazz-Drummer | CALCUTTA, Feb. 18—The favorite | diversion of the Maharajah ts jazz- drumming. H6é Js also clever at plano ragtime, | You'll Get Rid of | Blackheads Sure 1 | ‘There te one simple, safe and sure way that never falls to get rid o blackheads, that t# Lo dinsolve them, | To do this get two ounces of calo- | owder from any dru: Ie a little R K ator nv wi appeared. lackheads, no matter where thoy are, simply dissolve and disappea: Mackheads are a mixture of dust and dirt a tons that fi the of the ekin. Thi | vder and the wate: | blackheads so they wash Fi |leaving the pores free lin their natu condition. tinement. PRISCILLA DEAN “THAT LASS 0° LOWRIE’S' “THE FLAME OF LIFE” BABY PEGGY “PEG 0’ THE MOVIES” —and— GEORGE ROGOVOY in "Cello Solo n— Coming: GENTLEMAN FROM AMERICA” “THE BEAUTY SPECIALIST toWe Cynthianu Scott BY GENE COHN BAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 13—You hear about “nature bables” now and] again, | | “Nature young women” are scarc er. Boys sometimes stay pretty clone to nature until they reach a consid erable nu ut the girl babies « it before| they're much past the t tage. | Cynthiar ott sw “nature young woman,” or very near it; she’s 17 Cynthlana hax lived all her life in] th She never has worn stockings t during school hours. | | big ety of Ban Francisco, too. | | Her her stockings on as she enters and takes them off as she leaver Her attire in a slip-on and a pair of bloomers. By preference abe Sometimes she dons san She owns no hat, has never had on @ corset, a belt, or a tight dress | She never hi her hair, She nover’s been sick. She never even has had a cold. She eats what she Ikes—by no means nuts and raisins alone, Most of her spare time she spends} t of doors, on the slope of Twin loose, sleeveless | pen barefooted. ar Stockings kt more or less open country but in the San Francisco city limits und clowe to her home, Cynthiana is clever at her studies ve has a pretty face, a peaches- and-creain complexion and ts say the Venus de Milo ts not more 1| beautifully formed She lives according to no par lar “plan,” either of her own tion or her parents She has no especial ambition to shine as a classical dancer, in the movies or on the stage ‘We've lived always in apart- ments, flats and hotels,” says her , “but it made no difference to Cynthiana. T've let her follow her own inclinations and she's grown up a nature girl.” And it's taken some courage,” adds Cynthiana. “T've had to accus- tom myself to being stared at and having people consider me queer. I've been stopped on the street even, by | policernen who didn’t approve of what I had on. “They talk of morals! seem to think anything of health, “People are aheeplike. They can't understand anything they don’t do themselves.” They don’t ) big | latmed o's favorites, an appear and Douglas Mac the leading roles. | ~ and fecrs les of unusual | @ yachtaman who ha horses, and thru a se One of the fastest and most excit-| happenings, for the sake of the girl | cellent with whom he has fallen in love, | rides the Hottentot, the mont fiery | horse known, in the big steeplechase. ee COLUMBIA Said to be one of the biggest muc censen of Priscilla Dean's screen ca reer, “The Flame of Life” Is now showing at the Columbia, The plc ture fs an adaptation of the w y of the name name by Frances Hodson Burnett, ‘The story ix not a dainty one, but | is very realistic. Mlxg Dean plays | the role of a girl of the king coun: | try in North England, who has hard. ships almost unbearable, but In the end conquer most of them and is started on the way to education and happinean A good cast supports Miss Ds TELLS SECRET A Beauty Specialist Gives Home Made Recipe to Darken Gray Hair Mra, M. D. Gillespi a well-known beauty «pectalist of Kansas City, re- cently gave out the following state ment regarding gray halr: “Anyone can prepare a nimple) mixture at home that will darken gray hair, and make {t soft and/ glossy. To a half-pint of water add| 1 ounce of bay rum, a small box of | Barbo Compound and % ounce of glycerine, “These ingredients can be pur chased at any drug store at very | little cost. Apply to the hair twice & week until the desired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-| haired person look twenty years younger. It does not color the scelp, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off."—Advartisement. WINTER GARDEN Betty Blyt Wife's Husband Winter Garden today in | Douglas MacLean plays the part of | play is adapted from Anna Katheryn | Green's novel, “The Mayor's Wife.” Mins Blythe {# supported by an ex- cast in this production. George Fawcett, Arthur Carew, Huntley Gordon, Grace Goodall and Blanche Davenport are tho princk pals. COLONIAL Smiles and tears are mingled tn “Orphana of the Storm,” now the at- | traction at the Colonial theater. Lil-| Han and Dorothy Gish have the star- ring roles and are supported by an excellent cast. The picture ts an Adaptation of the stage classic, “The Two Orphans,” which was made fa- mous by Kate Claxton. It was pro- duced by D. W. Griffith and ts said to be better liked than the original siage play, PALACE HIP Tangled husbands ts the basis of “Affinities,” now the cinema feat ure on the Palace Hip bill, Colleen Moore and John Bowers play the principal roles in the picture. It is an adaptation of Mary Roberts Rinehart's famous novel, Thrilling comed: situations and excitement are features of the picture. eee PRINCESS A big Harry Carey production, “Tho Kick-Back,” is the attraction for this week at the Princess thea- ter. The story has to do with a lone cowboy and a band of Iand thieves who ure after his property and his sweetheart. After many bitter strug gles the cowboy wins a brilliant vic- tory and gains everything back. Ethel Grey Terry plays opposite Harry Carey. ovie Quizzes] y BECTER THAN “THR BAT" BETTY BLYTHE tn “HIS WIFE’S HUSBAND” NEWs, COMEDY ABRAHAM LINCO ADMISSION 100 LOGES 200 Madison t Secor LAST TIMES TODAY Frank Morton AND THE OLYMPIC es COMEDY Of 16 People, in King Koko A Delightful Hour of Bxotic Nonsense EXTRA TONIGHT Professional Vaudeville ALSO TOM SANTSCHI tn “THE SHERIFF OF MOJAVE” Tryout Admisslon—10¢ and 250 Gene — Well, well, haven't heard from you in a long while. What have you been doing with yourself? That was Theodore Kosloff who was the dancer in the early part of “The Green Temptation.” No, he hasn't played with Thomas Meighan in any recent pictures, but you will remem- ber him as one of the three artists RETURN CONCERT Russia’s Famous Tenor PLYMOUTH CHURCH Wednesday Eve., Feb, 14 SEATS NOW SELLING Sherman, Clay & Co, OTTO F KEGEL Living Bedroom | | ALTERATION SALE! | More than two hundred Dining Chairs, one, two and three of a kind, are reduced 25% to 33 1-3% HALF-PRICE Furniture Including Davenports, Chairs, Daven- port Tables, Library Tables, Gate- Leg Tables, Sofa End Tables, are reduced 25 to 33 1-3% In all finishes—complete Suites and Odd Pieces, reduced 10% to 50% | Rugs, Draperies, Lamps, Bedding, Lin- | ens, Stoves, China and Silverware offer wonderful opportunities for saving Used Furniture that has been taken in as part payment for new furnishings is offered at worth-while savings President Room Furniture in “The Meighan’s first’ s . Prince Chap,” Thomas tarring vehicle, ee Alex C.—Oh, you mean he with the tortome shell fences to shield his eyes. We nope they don’t break on him, anyway. That would be a mighty expensive proposition. No, Dr. Jack is no relation to Captain HOW TO GET AID OF COTRRH A Simple, Safe, Inexpensive Method That Clears Out the Head, Nose and Throat. There is no disease more offensive or disagreeable or no disease that will lead to as much serious trouble as catarrh. You can now get rid of it by a simple, safe, pleasant home remedy discovered by Dr. Blosser, a catarrh specialist. Dr. Blosser's § Remedy is com-%/, posed of medicinal 7" herbs, flowers and /4,/ berries, which you’? smoke in a dainty *: pipe or cigarette. ‘The smoke- vapor is inhaled into the air passages of the head, nose, throat and lungs and car- ries medicine 4 where sprays, douches and ointments cannot possibly reach. Its effect is soothing and healing and is entirely harmless. It contains no cubebs or tobacco, and may be used by women ay well as men, If you suffer from catarrh, catar rhal deafness or {f subject to fre: quent colds, send ten cents (coin or stamps) to The Blosser Co., 691 BD, Atlanta, Ga. and you will receive, by return mail, a trial package con- taining eight Dr, Blosser Cigarettes to prove their beneficial and pleas- ant effect.—Advertisement. DLA UacUTa PISA PING | NOW PLAYING D. W. Griffith’s “ORPHANS OF THE STORM” Photoplay Extraordinary! co Seattle's Baby Grand NOW PLAYING Firat-Run Pictures Only Tho great dramu of sti * pendous thrills ond heart tugs, ADULTS 200 Pricens 82.00, 81.80, $1.00 Plus ‘Tax ” BACK HIDD INS 100 Coming: “Nine Points Law" Applejack. I certainly must you have a sense of humor, “S Last” is Harold Lloyd's next to released. Gerson's peppy orc! popular prices.) Uc dance halt, but a first-class for refined dancers which proud of. : DANCING TAU! Beginners’ classes start and Thursday evening at 7 hestra, . all popula: taught in one term, 8 in beginners’ classes, $5; in $6. latest book desortt Dances, Etiquette, etc. pupils. Plenty of desirable And practice. No emb ‘Foe social feature al double the price and you will proud to say you are attending | school. You can never dancer with private lessons You must have practica Mr Honey has erected more fine semi em! taught more pupila | dance than any other person tn J Seattle Academy i a1 1 oti fea and perior to 5 This Ad Is Worth $1 I will pay $1 for this ad te 4 person purchasing tickets in ty our classes this week. Ticks until used, Clip this cashier, Phone East lessons all hours, 25 years, but today feel different woman.” This is © ore out of hundreds of : lar letters received from grat tients whom I have completely permanently cured of Piles, If you are interested in knowl! facts about YOUR case, send fo FREE illustrated book. It tells WH use no knife, clamp, ligatures, sti burning or other disagreeable and gerous meth your your eyesight dim if to wear rit 0 to any hott tails. nat Satie “the eves a ct ‘Sound directe mfortable Paracas

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