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Shea Mack Sennett special “THE SHRIEK OF ARABY” oun en Brea OSs rs aa COMING SATURDAY (a, 19238 NOW Booth Tarkington's prize story “ALICE ADAMS” with beautiful FLORENCE VIDOR TODAY 8 cCobLrianuM- Pauline Garon Dust LIBERTY PROGRAM RIEEN Jord ta Mughes and “Children of pert of Henteau,” se risoner of Zenda.” Andree Lafayette ju “Tril t MOUSE—Florence Vidor tn Alice Ad 2 Mary Philbin in “Merry Kroand.”* WINTER GARDEN Pal NIAL—"Tlearts Afiame.” STA! EILIO—Will King and company in ‘Stop Thiet.” PANTAGES—Vartety vend PALACE HUP—Vaud toplay, “Any Night. ~ “Three Who | LIBERTY “Rupert of Hentzau, Tho Prisoner of 7 t the Lit in the sequel to showing | pictu: matlo , and @ romantic lov |story 1s woven thru it. Lew Cody, favorite screen villain, has the part of Rupert, and Bert Lytell, F Hammerstien, Hobart Bo Claire Windsor, Adolphe MM Marjorio Daw and other por theater The dra thrill and rt nJou, WORLD of MAKE-BELIEVE THE SE SCREEN i Li BERTY BY tthe 1 ATTLE STAR Home ONE DAY Monn! Sir Anthony Mo; COLUMBIA Merry - Go much-heralded Keery With 14 Stars and and Mary Colebritie wing at the Colum features in reprod Antarday aSAaHLaHAUAS HOSES r o i Vout Virwt Vriday National fearts and N COLISEUM Walker, Paulino Garon 1 Hughes, Josephine Adair and o Lee enact the main charac Metropolitan magazine j williger,” In its screen showing at the of “Children ‘a well } Drama of Johnny mage: presentation, now Collveum, with tho tt Dust.” ‘The story 1 containg pler interest own ul and 4 ty of comic phases, PALACE HIP “Any Night strong huma’ on the 4 One Day More, Then Gone! Virst Natlonal’s Nomance— “TRILBY’ “HOLLYWOOD” IS The personal appearanc of Guy Bates Post, one of| Seattle's to the dramatic world, who now among the tage and soreen actors own contributions | foremost | in| America, is to be a special at- The biggest thing yet at- tempted, and possibly the biggest that ever will be attempted, of the capital, Hollywood! Starting Saturday — film TOLLY- stars appear in important pa traction at the Coliseum the- ater all next week. Post's ap- pearance will be in conjunc-| tion with the showing of his | latest screen vehicle, “Gold with funny BEN TURPIN FIVE REELS With Andres Noted French Sta sor of the World Perfect Veet COLONIAL Frank Keenan, Hearts Afiam: creates COMING. ATTRACTION as the of J I ywood, Cal, the c the greatest wtar Mic ce now of Micon one Saturday—“Hollywood" OF LAUGHS Fishing Ship Sells Cargo PETERHEAD, Eng. using a carr Aug. 23.—E before reaching port. = wa Pieson SAYS. SCHOOL y a What's all this scandal we've been hearing about you, MINKIE? Tell us all about it when you come ‘ to the LIBERTY 3 COOLEST 3708 100% Courtesy, Music, Pictures DANCE at De Honey's New Academy Pike at 12th Wednesday Eve August 29th Tho latest steps and. exhibition trodu and Mrs. De Honey, fea's greater dancers Argentine Tango and Gavotte. (Extra big urday eve, Aug. 25.7 every Wed. Sat. and Join the jolly crowd Melody Shop Orchestra Seattle's greatest dance artista, Am a's finest academy, where all the best dancers attend. Pop- ular prices. Remember dates. Dancing Taught Advanced cinas for new dances, fancy steps and the real tango, starts Monday ¢ve. Aug. at * Beginner: class starts Thursday eve. Aug. 20, at 8:30. ch step and figure taught. You will not become embarrassed and are mure to learn. Plenty of part- nérs and practice, and the soctal feature ia very desirable. fy lat- est book on dancing and etiquette free, ‘Mes ie: Honey has erected Moraiaise mcademica and taught more people to dance than any other person in America. Ho {n the owner of this beau ul acad- emy which Seattle is roud of, And it should not be confused with the ordinary dance hajJis, You can r learn dancing in private lessons from Inferlor tice and learn to lead and follc You can find no other sche thia cl If in doubt # the De Honey's dance on Aug. 29 and Dan will’ be convinced. that they have the only first class dancing sebool in Beatgle Special Cut Rate to all securing tickets Sept. 30. 1 will sell & lessons in Advanced elaanes for $6 or in be inners’ classes for $ W This term is reall lecure tickets at once ir three lenwons a week, Pr sone all bo Lady and gen leman profexsional inesructors, hone East 0269. Clip thin’ out Pavlown dance Sat- Dancing Sun. eve. before FALL OPENING |, ters of his ac in the part individual who has en career, He crabbed ¢ re m ney |achoa for activity and the life of a logging camp as he had known it tn |his youth, Anna Q ason also has a good role as the leading Indy . STRAND “Trilby,” a pleturtz famous old story which was a big stage drama in 8tri |Andree Lafayette, the French beauty, is the star, and the [cast contains a number of other CHICAGO, Aus. 33.— Taxpayers | Popular players. Arthur Edmunde ngall, the vaga Jaro not getting their money’s worth | Carew portrays sees |bond musician whore atrange power out of edu | over Trilby is tho base of the story The education committes of the | Carew’s makeup is an interesting Chicago Association of commerce, | feature. of education| | songn in Chicago and thruout E MOUSE fon of the by Du Maurter, sensation as Europe, fs the | after a year’s study the [BL | “Alice Adams, has concluded that mtuch | ¢,, jof the huge sum spent annus waste, costs a ple country, ‘om Booth Tarkington's famous ro: of public education" | "ll town ¢! because sho t will have to be conaidered to place the educational system on a sound]... Hbasis. Tho report suggests. that | WINTER GARDE ome forms of taxation be changed.| Dustin Farnur |new attrac Last year only one out of thres| en, “Three Who | persons reaching the high school en-| sory of the West. tered a high school, the survey re | vealed. In 1890 one person in ten} lentered high school. | | Merida, ~Conn., spends more| | ney to keep a pupil in an elemen | tary school one year than any other elty in the country. Savannah, Ga.,| spends tho least. A table prepared |by the committee, to show the cost | }per pupil for one year's instruction | in. elementary and high schools tn a| | selected st of cities follows: | High | $ jo star af t ov Paid,” Beaste Love has exeit tho featured feminine part, er capable players nro tn the cas Mediterra and of Elementary «,$ 29.75 4738 48.73 60.89 Brings More Wealth Boston | Philadelphia [Chicago . New York ., Cleveland . r Meriden, Conn.... 1 The committee fe De distribution of public funds, $795,000,- res of the } 000 went to elementary schools, | its chief fame c $240,000,000 to high schools, $58,000,.| ples at all, but from its 900 to universities, $38,000,000 technical sohools, $18,000,000 to nor. jmal schools and $11,000,000 to col. | lexes. |_ Members of the committee aro | William L. Abbott, chairman of |board of directors of the Commi wealth Edison company; William |Chalmers Covert, D.D,, First Pres byterian church; W. mer commis M. Moderwei Wilder and C. Herrick Hammond. Volcano Teaches Geo BY W. H. PORTERFTEL APLES, Italy. y enjoys 117.95 | the urbulent and world-famed bay For 1,900 years, or thereabouts, Vesuvius has been a consistent per former. No other work of nature or art has shown auch ability to |back.” Today with the ruins of |Pompet!, Herculaneum, Stabalo and a score of lesser towns and villa in the ashes and lava at its feot, Vesuvius is as greatly feared—and |loved—as at any time in its splendid "| career. It is an interesting fact that this famous volcano has brought far more wealth and glory to Italy than she ever took out of tt. The destructic of Pompell and her sister towns in 79 A. D. was one of the most spectacu the flu In 1919 took a greater toll of lives in one month than have been lost in all the cities about the base of |this cone from the time of Pliny to Victor Emanuel Il! a lot of things they might never have known otherwise, and the mir. aculous preservation of Pompeli and Herculane the one by lava and the other by volcanic dust, for 1,800 years, has given the world more ex- act knowledge of the life of the Ro |than all the books ever written. Classic | Pompeli and Herculaneum g slight depressions near the base of Much, perhaps s been excavated dur. ing the past century since the ruins were re-discovered, but quite fre- quently some new relic of value 4s brought to light in the most unex- pected manner. Less than six months ago, a Nen- politan farmer was digging a well about half a mile from the outer edge of the excavations when ho came upon a lifesize bronze statue of the first century, a magnificent work of art, of which but tho torso remained intact. There were a lot of smaller pleces of lesser valu, but the chef d’ouvre was taken over by the Ital- fan government, placed’ in the mu- FRIDAY seum, and the lucky farmer was given SATURDAY 50,000 lire for his find! Now a lot of Neapolitan kids are looking for bur- BURNING ws fed treasure in that same region. SANDS Judging by this standard of values, it seemed to me that the total wealth Wanda Hawley represented in the Neapolitan mu TU 10c cr. | Vesuvius the region most, With Bessie Loy Any Time 100 Loge Seats 20c Milton TS NI seum, one of the very finest In ex- m. | 20 CaNTS futence, might be sufficient to make # big hole in the national debt, if any government could be found rich enough to buy, but thug far the Ita h|1an people have been strong enough makes nifty sandwiches not only to resist the aalo of thetr art fubill § Biuhill Cheeso anyone to buy or sell any relic of ans tiquity in the kingdom or to remove the same from Italy The surgical Instruments discov ered in tho ruins indjcate in a very nd theater's feature thia week. |” celebrated | “land pathetic with a touch of thrill Meanderings Vesuvius Works for 1,900 Years. Priceless Relics at Its Feet. to| widely-ndvertised neighbor across the | bi lar events in all human histo | | But Vesuvius has taught geologists man people in tho first century A. D. | le in| of | treasures, but to make it a felony for | | = Cc ca . ‘who wrote the short GHALLAGER AND SHEAN story from which the picture was| ARE NOW IN MOVIES | adapted, lives in and knows Holl: | “Around the Town with Mr I | wood intimately, James Cruze, the ector, lives in and is familiar w agher and Mr, Shean” ts a corre Jovery phase of the community and/ description of tho activities of direc jatudlo life. ‘Tho only strangers are|tor Bernard J. Durning and the |some of the unknown rs, who|supporting company now employed interpret the roles of the folks from|on the first motion picture be | Cent Ind., and who are quite|made with the celebrated team of 1 ters they depict nedians as the stars. 8! Joo! Whitaker {» ordered West for taken in various parts of his health. His Granddaug York for the picture. Lucy gela, comes with him to seek a plac an been engaged for the p in the films, having been told, a: ney Blythe, Arthur Hous. herself being quite certain, Harry Short, Alan Hale and }will be a howling success a! Bollen have importhnt roles. Later on, the family come ‘ | Callfornia and all get into the fil jexcept Angela, who never ge ville, the oh ots are be "| Residents Salvage chance, They meet all the noted 2,000 Tons of Coal screen folk-—etara and directors, & 4) CARDIFF, Aug. 22—Two thous- thetr adventures are both humorous) a4 tons of coal thrown overboard jto lighten a steamer aground off the | Cornwall coast was salvaged by coast One of the features--perhaps the | dwellers greatest eeing all the famous ~ hpalicarberthe anous| Bride Plays Death Song for Husband places in and about the Western fi capital, This ts one of the most nove ictures that CHICAGO, Aug. 23 c a tow feet from where his br the plan w | a reen. son and dropped dead. | thrown in. has over reached the| a Diayt Have you found the house you have been wanting to rent? Turn to ho W Ad Columns and let them | nelp you. served on lettuce with choppedvegetablesalad, is so appetizing in hot weather. Slice it thin and sprinkle both the Sirloin and ealad with LEASPERRINS SAUCE nean Than it Destroys. logists a Lot. am. yay momething of what hap-| pened to science when European civ-| lapsed with the fail of tho| » Roman empire and slipped 0 the darkness of the Mid The whole story of Greek is told in marble and| Tho portraits in marble of philosophers, Socrates, Homer, | Aeshyclus, and a score of others, are truer to life, better portraits, than| jany made in the succeeding 1,500 | yenrst | | We know, for example, a good deal | more of how Socrates actually Jooked | tn the flesh than wo do of George} Washington, startling au this stato- | |ment may seem, for avery painter of | Washington inalsted on {dealizing his |subject and we do not know where} |truth left off and flattery began | Suppose that we possessed a por. | trait statue of Christ as wo do of Socrates, what a world of contro: | versy would bo settled! And had tho| | Savior been a Greak or Roman in stead of a Jew, thin might easily ve been possible. There are fow moro Interesting | studies than that connocted with the | daily life of this period of antiquity, |a time when Paul and Peter were | scarce cold in their graves i when | St. John was writing his epistles. It opens a flood of igent specula |tion and doubtless may yot furthe Mluminate the pages of tho sacred writings, if given the chance. Columbia NoW! te PALACE Hi? Srna eter t kay “ANY NIGHT” —a great crook photodrama with 5 v. CHILDRE ACTS 5 AUDEVILLE Oe ALWAYS Saturday! “Look Your Heat” (> Round trip | Ny f CHICAGO See w ST. LOUIS It's love the world and it’s love that makes KO round, that makos DETROIT NEW YORK | ( BOSTON | TACOMA—1111 Pac STARTING NORMAN KERRY —AND— MARY PHILBIN Stamped With the Approval of 'Thounn nf Seattle ¥ BE. G. McMicken, Passenget CWAI0 KANSAS CITY | p PITTSBURGH \ WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA H:RVALEXANDER Madness.” | Movie Quizzes | (Conductea tn |Assoclated First |Ino.) Vv; National Pictures, ete — “Faint 3 is soon, The cast has not ounced. 80 you haye been bet- |ting on the hetght of Con’ |Tearle, Well, all I can say in that you are wrong. Hoe ts not 5 11 hes tall, altho he doe |like @ tall man on the ncree Perfume,” by tone Gal screen ver: t been | Olive T. look He is nearer 6 feet 8 inches than 11, | it i | |Ho 1s to appear opposite Constance Talmadge in her forthcoming plc- ture entitled, “The Dangerous Maid.” Claire—Wallace Reid was born tn 1892, Figure it out for -yournelf. Of course Lon Chaney will play the part of the back in Victor Hugo's great “The Hunch back of Notre Dame.” It ts to be released very soon hunel co-operation with | to be shown on the | im | ay | feet | | Tom T—Milton Sills has a wife, | but she does not play in pictures. u Rita Welman. | Interested—Lou The story is by Tellegon {9 ap. |pearing in vaudeville at the pres-| ent time. Ho ‘s doing @ skit en- |titled “Btind Youth.” Oh, yea, he and Geraldine Farrar are divorced. Dougias—A life of Wally Reid has been written by his mother, Bertha Westbrook Reld. It can be |purchaged at any bookstore. *hil—-No, May McAvoy did not b) in a Hea I suppose |you are confusing her with Jacque- Hine Logan, for they do resemble each other somewhat. Old Timer—No, indeed, May Mo- Avoy has not bobbed her hair, y |should sea it in “Her Reputation," is as long and curly as ever, and |incldentally she }look at in this picture, in fact we'll jsay sho {s always easy to look at, |Flies 180 Miles to Perform Marriage | MANCE Dean McCormick of 180 miles to London in a fog to marry a couple there. TER, Eng. 1 Aug. {London Designers LO! Aug. 23.—British de- | meners havo decided not to accept | to re-introduce the French plan crimoline gown ow back East fares via California! Onn way California Both ways California $104.00 $119.52 99.50 115.02 90.00 105.52 123.62 139.14 137.76 153.28 159.56 165.40 162.92 171.50 Low fares to many other destinations on application. P SEATTLE—504 Seoond Ave, L. 0, Smith Bldg., and | $25 Pike St. at Fourth Ave, Phono Elliott 2068 cifio Ave, Phone Main 7178 t Traffic Mgt. Ly C. Smith Bidg., Seattle, Wash, PRESIDENT is very lovely to | Manchester flew Off French Styles | Here are some of the famous stars, direc- tors, leading men and women, comedians and notables you'll see: Baby Peggy Dorothy Dalton William De Mille Eileen Percy Owen Moore J. Warren Kerrigan Lois Wilson Charles Chaplin Thomas Meighan Lila Lee Gertrude Astor Will Rogers Fritzi Ridgway Walter Hiers Jack Holt May McAvoy Ben Turpin Ford Sterling Kalla Pasha James Finlayson Mary Pickford Douglas Fairbanks Leatrice Joy Hope Hampton Ricardo Cortez Dinky Dean Agnes Ayres Sigrid Holmquist Alan Hale Bull Montana Betty Compson Laurance Wheat Stuart Holmes Noah Beery George Fawcett Cecil De Mille Snitz Edwards T. Roy Barnes Nita Naldi Ham Hamilton Anita Stewart Jacqueline Logan Theodore Kosloff Pola Negri William 8. Hart Estelle Taylor Viola Dana Jack Pickford Anna Q. Nilsson Edythe Chapman Robert McKim Mary Astor Robert Cain Bryant Washburn Julia Faye George Stewart And one other who will astonish you. Effort will be made by na- tional headquarters of the Disabled Veterans of the World War, at Cincinnati, to obtain freedom of C. Hooven Griffis, Hamilton, 0.,(above), held prisoner in Germany in connection with the alleged plot to kidnap Grover Cleve- land Bergdoll, slacker. Griffis was one of two captured. Bergdoll killed one American. Griffis is a son of a prom- inent Dayton manufacturer. BABARABABABABABA U.S.NAVY YARD erton-Charlestom- Port Orchard ‘Take Fant Steamers at Colman Dock bad tJ *~ & a * a *Bxoept SPECIAL NIGHT SERVICE From Seattle to Bremerton Bundey, 0:90 PM. ly, 6:80 and 11:30 P.M. AUTOMOBILE FERRY Bsattle to Bromerton Dally S180, 12:80 A. M, 8300, PM Man Drowns as He Attempts Rescue CHICAGO, Aug. 23.—Frederick W- Davis and Miss Dora Mills were drowned while Davis was trying to rescue the girl. to tell about in print— Note: Kiddies a Dime, Any Time, at this family theatre, Next Sat: Will King Com- pany, in “Dancing Mad.” “Yes! We Have No Bananas” the wae Orel . Tne dance on Columbia Records? If you're one f the few who haven't, just ask for— The Song, A-3873 TheFox.trot,A-3924 At Columbia Dealers \WeWeProcess