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TTSTEIN'S CREDIT SERVICE FOR HOME FURNISHERS PAY DOWN THEN WEEKLY i ei MARION DAVIES ; ey 1 OD eae te littl Old Nee ‘ [ CHOOSE A GIFT FOR THE HOME convenient terms make it possible for all to purchase eal, worth while gifts, Your Christmas gift money can be used to start an account that can be gradually absorbed by easy payments through the coming year, MAS CLEARANCE or ov Rockers—Chairs The Greatest Attractions In Motion Picture Filstory eo ae Irresistible charm and thrilling action make this story of the day« when America Was young @ truly great picture enters talnment, cK FIFTY-ODD OF SHOW start at 11:00 4:68, 7:07 and TIME Admission price of fifty cents for matinee and cents eve days and holl- nildren — twenty~ ents at all times, To THE URES Peng oa 3 “A LADY of QUALITY” ap ee nan $18.35 $22.50 ares NER aan, $24.75 ees cue Regular $53.50. . 7 c $35.00 eS ae Am, welous 5 eR $44.50 Ysrecar $59.50 The picturesque day of “Good Queen Anne,” with its | quaint fashions and intensive romance, has been beautifully | pictured in“A Lady of Quality,” the Universal picture now at the Columbia. In the characterizations of Virginia Valli |and Milton Sills are found the breathing spirit of that famous time. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE SAVINGS— ACTICAL GIFT WILL BE HE written musical score by the aug: puftering & arrest Sut eritt C. H. Kearner in the sid pgs hone ‘or 4 house orchestra, makes the station one of tho prettiest that has been see . STRAND Charles Chaplin has entereu ranks the gre motion ple ture producers with his first dra 1514-16 Sicbid Avenue, Near Pike Four Large Floors of Homefurnishings Paris,” which ts being featured on esterday: Bible Necessity “The most brilliant man who § lived cannot understand the thin, Is Sermon Theme |""*) : and spiritual life unless he has{ “The Bible and the Christian Life” HEILIG **** been bor: ‘was tbe’subject of the morning ser- | leas to NOW PLAYING MATS, 2ND TRIUMPHANT | 2:1 w EVE! FREED FROM THE PHYSIC. HABIT Says constipation and stom- jach trouble ended. Tells how. of the spirit, and it is use. | y to live a Christian Ife the Bible and Its teach. mon of Rev. P. A. Klein, pastor of | apart fr Dunlap Baptist church, who said | 1 Grittith and “The Common conunnta Virginia Yall! and Mtl- On in “A Lady of Quality Sherman, Play & Co. 5 iors is a growing appre- ciation of the beauty that exists only in a grand piano. It is a fact that a small grand piano takes up practically no Presents "Thad atomach trouble and conatl- pation very bad for a long time. Tried everything, but kept gettin: worse, y. eat anything and m n't move unless very day 1 have} and two children t work. t bottle of M s for me, and I con: until now I fel fine und can work every I have a g00d appetite, h trouble has left me, ai wels are an regular as clock work."—Mrs. Mary | | wia 103 8. Court St., Sioux City lowa | HEILIG | Mra. W + On its second week at the Heillg ers sh jtheater here Carl Lacmmle’s screen | aity and physica do not end const! production of the famous Victor) ition but usually make it worse | Hugo classic, “The Hunehback Of) xriiky Emulsion restores healthy, Notre Dame,” fs still drawing natural bowel action; it is truly a | ity audiences t6 the bic then corrective medicine, doing away with | popularity is marking-the picture 24) a1 need of pills and physics. It pro one of the. greatent screen attrac: | 1 otey tite and quickly puts the tions ever shown here and reports) aicestive organs in shape to assimi from other cities whero it is being) tate good, and thus build flesh and | shown give the production the same | vreneth. Milks Emulsion is atrong- praise. ly recommended to those whom sick- |} In spite of the fact that one is) has weakened; it Is a ponerti | impreased with the magnitude and) aig in resisting and repairing the did wond Nat Haines and vaude- || 0 PALACE HIP—Will King and com in “Nothing Dut the 10.000000 { School Children need 3 NATURE'S RARE oN From Norway’s ‘Seas SCOTT'S EMULSION The Strangth-maker, N.J. 2490 und out wh know — that Ite Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield a je | splendor of the settings and the | offects of whsting diseases. i imposing and beautiful replica of | stomach troubl omptly relieved E the famous Cathedral of Notre] ‘This is thn or olid emulsion Dame, all of these is merely a back-} made, and so palatable that {t is —Tropay— 2 Wednesday ¢ the. story and for the unforget-| Wonderful for weak, siekly children ) matter how severe your case, to try Milks Emulsion guarantes—Take six bot e stellar role of thal yo This famous, charac: | under this Chaney in are urg unchback ter actor has never appeared in | tle with you, use it according thing 4 r. His acting pred to di yng and If not satisfied with tes t re story |the results, your money will be A pretty musical prelude, ren-| promptly refunded, Price 60¢ sored Max Fisher and his pop-| $1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emul r “iegteld Frolic orchestra, 4] Co. » Haute, Ind, Sold by dru 1 as the rende’ of the special: | gisty everywhere—Advertisement Dee CRC TATIATIL NOW PLAYING REX BEACH’S { a more space NEW than an up- “THE SPOILERS” While You Are Earning right, set across a corner of a COUNTRY. 81 STORE and Saving for a Home, small living-room. Make Your Savings It also is a fact that a pleasing BIG DANCE Earn for You grand piano costs no more than Many an upright. Acad Pike at Your Savings Here Are Loaned to— wi Prides and HOME OWNERS ON HOMES H TO THE BEST PEOPLE ; ‘ rest" ON THE BEST SECURITY Home of Steinway, Duo-Art, Weber, Sobmer, Steinert i : IN THE BEST COUNTRY Sherman, Cl y & Co., Steck, Aldrich 1 oth and other good pianos Rea IN THE WORLD ) “ei ii” We Accept $1 to $5,000 ‘pr ¥ Third Avenue at Pine need. $4 Plenty oF Seattle achievement, “A Woman of| Emulsion | Coburns’ Vehicle Is One Long Chuckle at Met BY JOHN W. NELSON home, turns the spotlight of scorn “A play that made even Bngland! upon the visiting American family, Ruantt ve, em, {then all that Ls worst in America That's the reputation of “80 THI} i.e ty alt that appeals most 1udl- ls London!" which opened at the Metropolitan theater Sunday crously to the average Britisher—ts firat night” audletnoe that reproduced with such clarity that for the luugh-provoking q even & Babbitt would admit we are this George M. Cohan production, | Vase and uncouth, 3 And everyone knows that the E Apel ping Mexcellently oa. Aas Hiram Draper, the American shoe magnate, is played with ultra-real ium by Charles Coburn, and Mra, Co- burn, as Lady Atay Ducksworth, ple In & funeial.prooseslon,, fills’ role that is typical of an Anyway, when George M. Cohan American girl who has become Lon- took his sparkling comedy to Lon: | gonized, don, after a howlingly successfull gir Percy Beauchamp and his season in New York, dramatic crlt-| wife, Lady Beauchamp, might have jon said he would be booed off the| waked right out of one of those old stage, (They boo a play they don't! ingiish homes #o dear to the fic- ike in London.) tlonist onto the stage of the Metro- Instead, Cohan says, the firat act polltan drew three distinctly new bursts of! hruout there ty a typical Cohan laughter, And the whole nation {#|iove story, and thruout there are laughing at it, the touches of the burlesque hand That story, heard after witnessing |of Cohan, But withal, the story ts a the play Sunday night, sounds im-| splendidly done piece of humor, and probable, nonally, it seemed one| while Arthur Goodrich, who is cred- continuous chuckle from curtan up| ited with writing the story, probably to curtain down, with here and|tore his hatr a bit before Cohan there outbursts that quivered the|haf finished with'it, certainly the lofty dome of the theater, ristbilities of the whole are none Of course, it's funny to see the|the worse off, mannerisms of an uttra-conservative, | For, when all is sald and done, the “staid old British carica-|average American audience Ikes @ tured by some extremely clever | bit of hurrah in Sts nmusement, and | Amerigans—Sir Perey, with his | Cohan has not only put this into the | drooping mustache; the athletic and| play, but the average American the- pursewecking daughter, and the su-|ater-goer will recognize this trait of premely superior “mater—that {s|his countrymen when he sees {t funny, satirized by the dry wit of n British But listen! When that same fam-| country gentleman who has “retired fly, in the naturainess of its own! from trade.” ng lsh have #uch w finoly drawn sense of humor that the ayerage British Joke ij almost as funny as a crip- the Strand screen this week, Writ- ten and directed by Chaplin, the ple- Tkey Says ture is said to mark @ new depart | ure In almost every element that) 9 ° | goes to make up a photoplay, The t treatment of the story is new in| on le nature, and while the theme deals| with life as {t really ts, the psycho:| But He Nearly Fails) logical study presents life's problems from a viewpoint that !s more of| in Practiee understanding than of preachment. | Tho story is altogether interesting | BY-NICK SCHWARTZ ee finely Interpreted oa the! For $10,000 would you answer all 3 questions telling the absolute truth one Sapir n DIS) for 24 hours? You might think that Rew PAs ure. sions , view eu Jeasy, but if you ever decide to try,| ia the star an: lolph Men-| think it over twieo before starting: fou and Carl Miller are moat prom!-|ana then don't start. For all the | nent in the supporting cast trouble you may get into thru your| BLUE MOUBE Jhonest efforts cannot be told in |these few lines—as you may learn| mclty houses greet “Little | now from Ikey Leehinsky, that much-hi | Ikey, in the person of Will King, Marion Davies classic, in {ts second | does just that thing this woek at week at the Blue Mouse theater. | the Palace Hip theater, and he dem- n atory of the New York of| onstrates that ft is not a wise thing | lays of Delmonico, John Astor, |to try. ‘ormelius Vanderbilt and Robert] “Nothing But the Truth” serves | Fulton, the clty council and the|as Ixey's motto In a farce of t at | first fire department Miss Davies’! name, which is being presented b | presentation of ‘Pat O'Ds gis | Win King and his big company of ae - a Das Bet ov no ts |tarceurs this week. The comedy ts Pt he makes a conalstent m|& rewritten product of Max Fi "s clothing. Th 4 a if boy : ae it The age ad and s famous farce, and {t 1s “done| musical numbers feature Sch by King tn his own inimitable unforgettable “Song of Lov fashion. . | he haunting melody ts a feature of | 1p yy nothing new to say that the | |the special music wcore accompany: |tarce ts chuck full of laughs for| ling the prod ction. all of King’s offerings have been | just that. But that “something LIBERTY : different” that has also always tant “Ponso the picturization of | present in King’s shows, is especial | Cynthia Stockley’s famous story of|ly strong in this one. South African life, {s proving ©) Lew Dunbar, Reece Gardner, Beas | strong attraction at the Liberty thea-/1i11 and Billie Bingham, are in the| overs {t opened Saturday. A | cast vind photoplay drama of a story! Jean gin, | Singer, is also prominent. which was for months one of the) atic singer makes her debut in a six best sellers,” “Ponjola” is a stir-| 2 special musi De 1 of romance and adventure | /P° 8! ical number as well as} | play, and her ‘song version | odes: 1d fields. While 4 eeet of the late jazz hit, “Papa Better! {Watch Your Step," is one of the with King, and a newcomer, | jring stor |in the E its title is taken from the native name for liquor, the play is sald to{ ite: f fe be in no A preachment against | tae re spots tpg — intoxicants, but {t tells a story, sateen oe en | nevertheless, in which “ponjola,” the | brought back by the Star Trio whet | soul-destroying drink of that coun-| hey sing “That Old Gang of Mine, try, plays a prominent part. and some of the other members of In the part of the English nobte.|the company {ilustrate their number. | | woman who masquerades as a man, |Howard Evans with his picked doz about whom the story centers, Anna |€ choristers also has a very pretty Ae Nilsson has what 1s considered|"Umber, in which they introduce | reatest role of her screen career. |80Me new songs and dances. Billie r support James Kirkwood, | Bingham's number this week is '| Tully Marshall and Ruth Clifford are| “Cover Me With Kisses" and it is 1 prominent |tho best that Bille has yet done for | ee the King company. Hermie King’s “super symphonists’ Jare not to be forgotten, for they hold their regular high place on the offering a snappy program of jiate popular orchestra hits COLUMBIA | Months of delving into old book land manuscripts, woodcuts of an an- | cient vintage and engravings of sim!- lar periods preceded the production of “A Lady of Quality,” the spec acular Untversal-Jewel adaptation | cast are Lionel Belmore, Margaret neces Hodgson Burnett's novel/ Seddon, Peggy Cartwright, Bert| rring Virgini@ Valli and Milton| Roach, Earl Foxe and Dorothea Wol Sills at the Columbia Miss Valli) ber’ plays the role of Clorinda Wildairs, | HEF raised as a boy because her father | WINTER GARDEN had no son. Milton Sills plays oppo-| One of Dou site her in the role of the Duke of est pictures was Osmunde, Others in the supporting | Zorro," which is now on a return er | of ment here at the Winter Gar-| The story is an adaptation of “The | ade j Wy! |Johnston McCulley’s novel, Curse of the Capastrino, Ais} oun filled with swift action and interest. |The colorful background for the| |story is that of Southern California | jot nearly a century ago, when its destinies were zealously guarded by lthe Spanish settlers, irbanks has a dual role in which he do Chew a few F Pleasant Tablets |the greatest acting of his —Stomach Feels Fine | see [Rex Beach's Kion jdike rush da: "is {now being shown on the screen at theater, “The brated novel and it deals with tho historic clash that occurred in the Klondike when crooked politicians tried to fob the of their property. Milton |Sills, Barbara Bedford, Anna Q. Nils-| Noah Beery, Robert Edeson liffe Fellows, Ford Sterling, rt McKim and several other | well-known stars have prominent | jroles in tho r famot story he Spoil Instant stom ef! Harmle: The =m s Diapepsin" reaches the stomach all distress | from acid stomach or indigestion ends. Immediato relief from flatu- . Iwartburn, palpitation, tomach your digestion for a few | | cents, Millions keep it handy. Drug: gists recommend {t.—Advertisement. lence OAK A simple story wn folks is told Tongues,” the new screen attraction | the bill at the Oak theater. The | SPINAL IRRITATION |__| Pain in back of head; pulling Jot cords in neck; trouble with eyes; pain between on Ts or in other of fingers. or fe f, oF tingling’ ike JACK KAUFFMAN || pricking of liar, almost Presents fhable pain or distress in DICK HYLAND & t, stomach, kidneys or other | or abdomen; back (Famoun Hebrew Comedian) wche, seiati cured by inense is @ 0. 8. PUB, CO. 10 200e—30e Sox 850, San Diego, Calif Advertisement screen production of] inns and The colossal drama of telephone call—the little that village girl into a woman of Paris—the toy of arich bach world’s gayest city! In vi that « advanc CHARLES CHAPLIN in First National's “The Pilgrim” Strand, Robert COLONIAL —— | MARKET mor; drama, come back to the scree Market theater. For t ture has not been surpassed—it 18 one of the greatest melodramas ever made. head the big playing cast. West Ralph NOTE— are charging $1.65 for this sensation, we wish to announce that our prices are NOT Call Main 0022 for in: formation about at tractions at The Liberty thing turns a elorin the lew of the fact Il other cittes ed. Coliseum or W. Chambers’ well-enacted by a cast of able players headed by Enid Ber nett and Fred Niblo. . Johnson's great thrilling bound Limited,” has here at the ills this pic Lewis and Ella Hall “Annabelle” floa' me ts out with lody and rhythm as played by and fox-' A-38ST © Ted Lewis His Band in trot-tempo. New Process RECORDS Cole in Phonograph Company ST re I