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sheaters are ins 8 STARTING SATURDAY— That Great Scandinavian Extra Attraction! Ted Howland’s Musical Comedy Revue Presents “My Sweetheart From Sweden” OLYMPIC THEATRE Madison, Bet, First & Second anal | De Honey's at order to prove the superior quality of our school and how easy it is to learn modern dances, new steps and the tango. I will admit pupils to our Beginners’ o1 starting 39, May evening anced Claxn, starting Monday evening at $130, for $1.00 Jerson, or § 8, begin- Be advanced, $6.00. Plen- actics; no’ embarras lessons you will be Remember, Beginners, evening: " Advanced, MAY evening. Private lessons, hours, day and evening. PUBLIC DANCES Every Wednesds y and funday evening Shop More pep and enso Wednesday, special thee tare ent. Soi the dolly cyowai ptt br Phone EAat or to ere, Ada ster. de Danses WOH REGULAR AFE SERVICE ALTER OPM ool of playwrigh weather would he @ theatrical d 1 old times when prod three parts hokum ar d get top prices at SILLS mC Dead” BABY PEGGY “Nobody's Darling” “LEATHER PUSHE! opretaconts ae | Hy ‘unded on the fi Famous stagery a produced bi William A Pe | “BUCKING THE BARRL ER" AND GRANDPA will net like kids when they nee WILL KING’S NOW VLAYING AGNES AYRES 5 “BOUGHT AND PAID FOR” 5 comupy | News =< $ JACK HOLD Amateurs = | ‘Tonight oeeeeres Hic “DRIFTING” nH nous The ¢ » making Or ¥3 shows a great train } oe « ) covered wagons on mareh | | Priscilla Dean has chalked|*°r™ the continent, over desert mountains 4 plaina, and many up another success with her | nistors Jent in the opening of latest picture, “Drifting,” |tne we Indian attacks, buffalo which is coming to the Col-| hunts wagons fording a big riv umbia Saturday, She has an-|° ® spectacular prairie fire and many ther thrills are ntained in| other one of the fiery, spirtt- ed roles that have made hér famous, and her work in this picture is said to be excep-| tionally fine has been] MA In it re Uttle one a Want perhaps you may turned. DR. LOUGHNEY’S Human Bake Ove Banishes chrome neuritis for A. B.| Eckart, well known Seattle cigar! man. Mr, Eckart is now president of the National Variety Company, Inc., importers of glassware, gran iteware, holiday goods and wooden ware, with local offices at 316 Second ave. 8. Telephone EL lot: | 6619, Mr. keepsake Ad t 0800, have kart’s letter follows A. B. ECKART About a year ago I suffered a |most painful attack of neuritis, and {t simply would not respond to or-| dinary treatment, so finally a friend of mine, a Cobb building doctor, insisted that I go and be baked in Dr. Loughney’s Human Bake Oven, that the bake oven proven a| big success in. stubborn cases of} Rheumatism and Nouritis, so 1 lost no time in arranging with Dr n trea Loughney for his bake patee and Dr. Loughney prescribed corrective diet for me that he Bj assurea me was also important if| ~ lI expected to get the best results| posible, | I swed hin prescribed the letter, and I enjoyed it, quick relief that followed was even more enjoyable. I got well in leaps and bounds, I lost my neuritis in wide of one week, completely, and |have no! had one twinge of it since. But that was not all. TI {had stomach trouble that I never expected to be rid of, for 1 had been #0 troubled for years and | ye ra, and there was a form of Jasthma, or labored breathing, that |would choke me up on the least Jexertion, That asthmatic condition left me with the stomach trouble. Over a year has elapsed now and I still feel great, so I am giving Dr. Loughney this letter of endorsement juntarily, I have sent Dr. Lough. {ney a number of my close friends, |who were in bad shape, and every lone of them thanked me | wards and reported the same good care, and that they mecovered from |their ailments speedily. The treat ments are very remarkable. Most sincerely, A. B. ECKART, 316 Second ave. Phone BL jot-6619. Write for Dr. Loughney’s Latest FREE Book Entitled * “RHEUMATISM AND KINDRED DISEASES; CAUSE AND TREATMENT” address writ~ Bake Oven ented nt the in the 11-312 rentment Offle rner of Fifth and U Bullding, Rooms at | Jane, | better production than was “Peacock ley,” the star's greatest previous pleture. BLUE MOUSE Local screen fans will be offered a Iaat chance to seo Rin-Tin-Tin, 6 famous dog-actor of the screen Where the North Beg _ o Blue M r xt | urday | has portrayed. . | Lew Cody, after | TODAY'S PROGRAM SCREEN METROPOLITAN-—"The Covered Wa co M— Jacqueline Logan tn on “Biwe. cout MIMA—Milton Sitte in * never ilar attraction ¢ Emeraon the ploture The many wel hem being Kerr aying cast includes great n players, principal Lois Wilson, J John Fox and} among War Ern an, orrence “oe COLISEUM ‘The Coliseum will feature “Salomy the romantic drama starrini Jacqueline Logan, until Friday night The vivacious Mae Murray is th star of “The Frenci, Doll,” an artis tic and sensational picture which will be the Coliseum's next feature | French Doll,” is said to be even a the Bi feature ¢ 20 jwill be “Three Wise ture verston of the Broadway atage | pl with Eleanor Hoariman. aude Gillingwater and other stars in the cast. eee STRAND Final showings of “The Girl Who} Came Back,” will take place at the! Strand Friday night. The picture tn} an interesting combination of crook drama and romance and has proven a good attraction. Pola Negri will| be seen at the Strand, starting Sat-| n “The Cheat," her second| Amerioan-made picture, which 1a| sald to present the star in a role quite different from any others she . COLUMBIA “Legally Dead,” Milton Sills’ dra- matic starring vehicle, is to be the Columbia's feature only until Friday night, Priscilla Dean ts to be seen| starting Saturday in her latest pic-| ture, “Drifting,” a thrilling melo- drama, in which the star is support. | ed by Anna May Wong, Wallace | Beery, William V. Mong and Matt] Moore, LIBERTY Gloria Swanton in “Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife,” will be seen at the Liberty for the last times Friday | night. ‘The new attraction which will| open Saturday ts “Lawful Larceny,” a society drama with Hope Hamptot, and Conrad Nagel playing “Bucking the Barrier,” the present feature at the Winter Garden, The story 1s laid mostly in the Far North, but England {s the scene of some of the many exciting incl dents, eee COLONIAL Jack Holt and Agnes Ayres are now being seen in a comedy drama, {Bought and Paid For,’ at the Colonial theater. sae PALACE Hip ho Face on the Barroom | Floor” {s to have its final showings at the Palace Hip Friday Dana is the star of the ture to be shown at that |It is a comedy drama, “Love |the Dark," and Cullen Landis, line Pretty, and many other |known players support Miss Viola next pI theater. in Ar well Dana. The lost and found columns in the Want Ads will help you find that something you have lost. PERHAPS ST. PAU STOVE ROPAIN & PLUMBING CO, Furnace, Stove and Range Kealrings Water C r seo better with my , much better, a , maybe you will be able to TLI T | date in Spot Ja strong advocate of AR Starting Saturday $100,000 in “Gowns! $500,000 in Jewelry! “The Coliseum Concert Orchestra under M. JACQUES BEAUCAIRE Basin Meeting ‘Set tion Into the Irrigation project of t kano next Monday, according t Hervey Lindley, president of the Ir rigation league, who has ca tees of the leagy ne a confer ce wit the principal parts. |D. W. Davis of the U. 8. reclamatio ere service. WINTER RDEN Plana for legistation in behalf ¢ Arline Pretty has the feminine|t? project will be discussed, afte lead opposite Dustin Farnum in| Which Davis will make a three-d inspection of the lands with F. Weymouth, chief engineer, and Mile Cannon, field representative. Speaker Will Talk on Regrade Projec H. E. Ferguson, will be the princ pal speaker before the Denny Hi Improvement club, Friday evening a 7:45 o'clock in Sixth ave, and Bell st Ferguson the improvement of Denny Hill grading, by for Next Monday A review of the federal’ investiga Columbia basin will be held in Spo-| trus- | to meet on that} +1. |Doyle, of the Seattle Central Labor | Sacred Heart hall, at propose: re- AUTHOR-ACTOR | [re TONIGHT —Guod-bye t 2: The Girl Who ¢ Back TONIGHT E SATURDAY. MB | tices es | Ill Wife ress in a rpathetl role STARTING SATURDAY. IN Paramount high {ill type society crook drama Claude Gillingwater, who is one of the “Three Wise \ Fools,” coming to the Blue itil Mouse Saturday, besides be- 4 ing a distinguished actor on N i the stage and sercen, is also an author. He has written| IN M4 Hill more than 25 successful one- (| eral of which he act plays, s¢ ha played in vaudeville him- self f Lake Grave of Airman Widow to S Miller’s atter Ashes n Paramount's B=8 a a Hd aiid savasttie: in’ a = LEW copy art See hong peep nce il HOPE HAMPTON {lll Salted Matin’ Th’ hia chine” ree with CONRAD NAGEL will hop off Lake Washington with ful wid of the deceaned. her husband's The story of a wife ' JACK HOLT g=n=m: from the alti h Miller usually be. supported by m who loses her hus- request Q Charle de Roche {ill band tora modern Shortly before be as Cleopatra and wins ee ican yg } About a foolish young wife | him back in start- past who bargains her soul for tH ling fashion! Hl Juxury, ance. A An All-American Produc tion with a Happy Ending! 3, Bist st, an airstunt work His contract was to have expired at | the end of Spokane fair in Miller ne or two flights| only to make when his parachute | |tricked him and ho plunged tu the ground. Also— STAN LAUREL in the screaming Also— “TAIL LIGHT” CLT I ITA VEX AVIS A Cameo Comedy blue-chaser— “When Knights Were Cold” @ issn — MILLINERY FASHION SHOW (by cour- OE | Qi of Maxime’s Millinery) |QUAKE RUINED |S = ora 2 | iw the very latest creations | TOKYO FORTS jf = P« «ill Hil | The combined navies of the world STRAND | & |could not have more completely ORCHESTRA ALLACE molished the two great forts g aaa | AT THE lil ing the entrance to Yokoham | | Tokyo than did tho recent earth. | PN WINELAND MG URLITZER quakes and tidal waves, according to 4 4 | ‘ E aun a tat Senven, aeconting (0) 09) Playing “ates of Hot. N/E enNesr P. RUSSELL eas \Fg man,” by Offenbach, and | Organist |from Capt. F. R. Nichols, master of | “\tarcheta.” | the President Jefferson, due Satur- i | creme day night with refugess from Japan B= —= Tne ‘defenses, known ax Forts 3, AS “ a= Jand 3, were of the most modern| — y construction, the hugo guns being * mie Falls, and from there too train |imbedded in’ solid concrete and sur- Reforestation Men for Spokane. United States Forester rounded by a series of outworks. Go to Snoqualmie W. ‘B... Gresley" abootipaiiied ithe hey were all completely reduced by party, which included Senators D. U. The senate committee on refor- estation, which concluded hearings in | o¢ Seattle Thursday, the quakes, according to Capt. Nich- ols. The concrete lighthouses along o| the coast also were put out of com- mission and partially destroyed. The harbor of Yokohama is unguarded, New Hampshire and C. L. McNary drove to Snoqual-| of Oregon. jand no largo vessels pass the re-| h}mains of the once great concrete | breakwater. The floor of Tokyo bay is sald to have been forced up of | many Dias) making it unnavigable. | r a Gompers Will Be Seattle Visitor | here of | | 8 Plans for the reception Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, were {| being made Friday by Charles W. 1 }councfl, William M. Short, president at |of the Washington State Federation of Labor, and C. O, Young, of the | is | national organization. | | Gompers will arrive September 25, and will probably make a public ad dress. METROPOLI To Avold Standing in I All Sea ted from «Depicting Matinees: 500, $1.00 —P The Great American Picture At Last COVEREDWaceni erson Hough's Story of Love on the Oregon Trait cenes and Events of the Days of '48 ‘LOVE—ROMANCE—ADVENTURE __ 200 — BUF FAL) — 200 Why Is the Kimball Piano So Popular? Everyone is familiar with the Kimball Plano, through enjoying its wonderful music at the homes of friends, if not through the delight of personal possession, for the fact that it is in over 800,000 American homes today proves its tremendous popularity. This is not strange when one considers that KIMBALL QUALITY stands for ® plano of purest tone, a piano that is the triumphant achievement of over fifty years of concentrated effort to produce the best. Skilfully adjusted and finished in the beautiful model illustrated, we offer the Popular Sweet-toned Kimball Style 11 at $390 Convenient terms of payment will be arranged. We Invite you to see It and hear it played in order to really appreciate It. We haye also showing of fine models in Chickering Mehlin J. & C. Fischer Marshall & Wendelt Pianos NOW PLAYING Tew 1c TAN ine Buy Tic! ine its Reserved ae Jesse Lilasky presents NES — 1000 DREN —3 ver Heard In Seattle lus Tax— Nights: 500, Edisons—Band Tnstruments Victrolas $1.50 :