The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 11, 1923, Page 7

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TODAY'S PROGRAMS SCREEN BLUR MOUSE—"Littie Old New York." COLISKUM—Marguerite do in “What @ Wite Learned. MEWIG--1on Chaney in Munchback of Notre Dar MIBERTY—Rianche Sweet in “Anna "Hoot" Gibson tn “The Vilage COLONIAL. ‘The White Rose, MARKET—Norma Tatmadge in Smilin’ Thru,’ STAGE ORPHEUM—"The Son Dodger,” and other vaudeville, PANTAGES—Triple headline vaude- Will King and com- "The 2 ~Diok Hyland and company in Time of “Abies Irish Bon,”* COLISEUM A polgnant romance of ambition, struggle and achievement is the description given, “What a Wife Learned,” the new feature at the | Coliseum, It tells a modern-day | Hove story of a primitive man who |1s awakened to a realization of his! own powers by the striving of his wife for self-expression, A |stampede; a fall from the dizzying | heights of a towering ture; the spectacular breaking of a dam and the struggle for life of jtwo men who are caught fn jraging waters are a few of dramatic incidents which form the background’ of the story. The big playing cast 1s headed {by Marguerite de LaMotte, John } Bowers and Milton Sills. ee cattle | | BLUE MOUSE On its last week in Seattle at the Blue Mouse theater, “Little Old New York," Marion Davies’ big Coamopoli jtan picture, is drawing larger crowds Ithan ever before. This soreen adap- |tation of Rida Johnson Young's fa- | moug stage play, is a bigger success | than Was the original play, and It will [live long.as one of the screen's pre- | mier achievements. In “Little Old New Ye Davies, whose work [Knighthood Was in Flow is re | membered by everyone who saw that |production and which gave her « ing position among the ne screen stary of today, is upon to act a role entirely dif. from anything she has eve |before played, and she acquits her ith the utmost credit. into your heart there she re- omnia Marshall Netlan’ “Eternal Three” NOW PLAYING D, W. Griffith's Tn White Rose” BATES’ ' ORCHESTR. A 8 UNTIL Be HEILIG Hugo, joroness, was imbued with this #pirit he Hunchback of Notre which is on the screen at the », KIDDIES M. ALWAYS 106 | amt amusively hie was bared in open pans fai gate @ Mas, and gave eco ft living rooms operative guild to monopolize the help you buy! bursults of their eal | te pe Wat Ads wi ell quickly. g Expose of Ierword Life | ssolute members of th heancé and its military, of wt |tain 3 | NURSERY FURNISHINGS Ravaraph onl | Enameled Furniture ts Sanitary a enes on = Barbary Coast By MARIAN MOORE From the topmost tip of Peter | Rabbit's ears to the fringe of the | washable rag rug on the floor, this | a, |nursery corner was designed to make a heal ot inelsco’s old Bar! passed int to es cy should be that no sofled, ding good to throw away diseese ge it for bi furniture it exposed. ard § evening. Proceeds Bimais the tifs in this famou A Secret World _ Ih march ofa t 1, fardie, a successful busi kie re : Ich seem to le {i ples, Enameled or paint- fills this order nicely, lw | for incredibly £ What he had ¢ tree himseis 2 rH Vivid ees Bich st. rt a = Sanitary Nursery. mn fe heart's content of azy mother. gre The high chair, with padded cushion, v its tiny out of while its ot be stained by or orange ue satin bow can injury. crreeponde with al z the cate r hamp and led clothe Marton | “When | | | atruc- | the} the} pos pe | wiNTER GARD N Th an ivory} while his ner affords ing. st germ-prod fthe drawers) rob alk (Welte to Marian Moore, care of | this newspaper, for advice or infor- mation about ree furnishing or decorating, sendin stamped, ad- dressed ation a breakfast color on M. them in the a red decora- antique sil- Answer: l've seer finish with neo Bu real MA Ln-0600, was but soon found out that he wasn’t. Proof,” starting Wednesday, at the Coliseum. i. THE IS HE A WOMAN-HATER? SEATTLE ) STAR A spree of furious jazz— “PLEASURE —with— Huntly Gordon Norma Shearer William Collier, Jr. Ward Crane Winifred Bryson woman-proof? He thought he!| Mary Alden All this in “Woman-| a George Ade story, in whick the star will be seen, | Does Tom Meighan look Metro’s story of STRAND A brilliant abounding in thrills is to be in which Ia now occupying the screen tha | lend |olude is true to | COLU MBIA | THAT CAN BE WASHED [326 ‘0, kow where this led Nerane Jin t of Quaint may be scrubbed to the | ait sudden wealth—and | melodrama to delightful comedy, Ro. i its temptations! story} mance and heart Interest blend with | found] delicious humor. Technically and the photoplay| photographically {t ts declared as near perfect aa a film can be.” It's cast of players fit thefr tndividual | roles as tho they were actually mold into them, while the continuity ° dire The picture arden screen | cast and a “Pleasure Mad,” ds Mary “No Loafing” A Tuxedo Comedy 1 sho mn of a master hand. be on the Winter ( Ir until Wednesday night, membera of the i ie on to th a Shearer, Winifred Truesde . cast COLONIAL will 1 i List dis Strand Orchestra under Wineland Playing “High Jink Friml, and © ntory of iin “The White Rose, iffith'n pleture, which now at the Colonial, Mae Marah is| the principal character and Ivor No No and Carol Demp: have the} chief roles in her support. | . | | { | tibson ts the star of a new kind of hich is de the Columbia. es have ranged Mexico, the comedy ne of Christina present scroen feature Tho story centers ttle Scotch girl who suddenly inherits a fortune and t know how to make a Dee) kn } Matn 0019 for In- mation about at at sequences in U: ia, and then !t suddenly he heart of Arabia. ve |“ABIE’ S IRISH SON” Is WELL RECEIVED AT OAK “Abe's Winter Garden management ounces that {ts current “The Vilage Blacksm! the sereen from Lo poem, has bro Irish Son,” entertaining woek. And the strong, nees has b exqu Its Liberty F a Ma Fe) nNOowW— THOMAS H. ational of the we thru, is up to Hyland's standard: bers on thia week's pretty. The pretty en- an elaborate snappy with 0 characters become INC jong that range from a against with Dram Sea— taged and ome Mildred Paige tx one new Now MATS.: 2 EVES.: 8: pod individual also a specialty in which} eo take part and win a big] All Senta Kererved William Tosselt George Marion Eugenio Besserer Deo. 11 Bearch | ny Wallace at the Wurlitzer ed by "Yvonne | charging at ents’ rest mber 14 in Farmer t and there over-|of the 1 Coming—*Thundergate” i to the p 20d On baence, ally ates can Madinon, het, Firat and Second NOW PLAYING DICK HYLAND & CO. =i ‘ABIE’S IRISH SOR’ | . Venture: “The Fortune of Christina McNab” Tonight: Adult Amateurs 10ce—200e—30¢ A DOZEN FAMOUS STARS in “THE HRIL HASE With EDWARD GIBSON as “THE EXTRA MAN* and NORMAN KERRY MARY PHILMIN KING BAGGOT REGINALD DENNY LAURA LA PLANTE You can buy a used car fe ment dow dl to the aymtents, Want BREMERTON—CUARLESTON * —PORT ORCHARD Take Fast Steamers at Colman i) Dock REGULAR SCHE Beattie 9:00, 8, 6:80, Except Bunday SPECIAL NIGHT SERVIOR 2 From Beattle to Bremerton Sat- urday and Sunday, 9:30 p. m,| tnd gaily 31:80 p FY seattic to Hirer 11:80 ally 10:80, 11:90 11:30 p. m. tea tty | “Always a Big Time for Your Dime” TURS. WED. and THUN, THOMAS MEIGHAN and LILA LEE in Back Home and Broke MEIGHAN'S ST WIT? Mito REN TURPIN in ster roRWAID" 10c any rin WAUPT- ALYCR MAN'S DOUGHTY ehestra Contralte to the Khips to See ALWAYS r nie Three Acts , Head Bill a Starting iPantages _ Presents | Varied Program With three featured acts, the new } bill at the Pantages theater Monday afternoon was as well-balanced a program of entertainment as has| |been offered at this Seattle show. house in many wee It's not the strongest bill, how but It’s good, solid entertainment of a high order. Judging by applause, Robertson's | Synoopators, a troupe of 10 negro Jazz hounds, was the favorite with the audience, altho Chuck Kyans, Eddie ero and Frank Evang, in | “Bits of Mark Twain,” scored nearly 49 heavily. Josephine Harmon and Georgia Sands, in a clever patter and song act, are high class entertainers and comprise the third of the trio of headliners this week The “Mark ‘Twain combination of old-time and modern | songs, syncopated by harmonious Volees of three young men, and a clever line of crossfire comedy lines based.on the two “immortals,” Huck | Finn and Tom Sawyer. Their rendt tion of “I’m in Love" and “Huckle- berry Finn" were the outstanding hong bits, | The negro syncopatora, capable of | setting the foot of a cigarstore In. jdian to tapping, nted a number [ot popu melodies and | popular airs in true plantation style. An encore selection, “No, No, Nora,” sketch is a apid And really humorous repar- ¢ the strong points In the Har. |mon and Sands act. These two young | women play “Sleepy Hills of Tennes neo” in fine style and intersperse humor with their planologue offer- ings, which include “Whndda They | Mean by Love?" and “Maggle, the Girl Next Door.” | Joo Reichen’s trio of trained dogs, in handstands and unique balancing | | performances, are fully as clever and jexeellent in trained animal acts as| was “Spotty,” the little terrler who} made his Seattle debut a week or 80] ago. Relchen has his canines trained to several balancing stunts which are Gistinetly new, particularly in the} cane of his “star,” a ght brown-| oa pertormer, who does a per! ning” act, balancing on his | op the trainer's arm and} jraising his hind quarters to the per. pendicular and then lowering until his tail and hind quarters hang per. pendicularly down, Mary Drew, muscular woman per. | former, closes the bill with som amazing balancing and weight lifting | exhibitions with the ald of two ns. | ts. John Burke mixes jokes and popula gs, in a nasal tenor, with some clever Juggling. -C. L. H. Realism Featurelte “Anna _ Christie” Is| Elemental Drama foremost humorist— “We're all poor nuts and things | happen and we get mixed up wri that is the philosophy of “ Meighan as a hand- some bachelor, with some astonishing ideas about women, mar- riage and money! ‘one not afrald to face Nite— tal people and elemental pas life and its facts atripped of tinsel and the glitter which hides the ore sordid Are oatie 8 of its de r * with Blanch at the Liberty theater this w not fall to hold a powerful a It's ong of those dramatic episodes feminine gather and tho subject of talk in formal dinner conversations. And Blanche istent film favorite, trans- ene O'Nell’s stage f in a realistic onderfully, not sensational the manner in wi |drama of the spoken stage must be | re-born on the silent s¢ It is impossible to get a common and standard for compar. oduction with a book, a film version of the same And much of the “punch pf O'Neill's Pulitzer prize. ae drama of 1922 is doubtlessly ening it. ‘The characters lose the} | well-turned phrases and voice inflec. s which made “Anna Christ! one of the t-tal Iked-of | America England, | Coliseum Concert Orchestra —under— reen. OSBORNE PUTNAM and Wednesday— (For an Extended Engagement) THOMAS MEIGHAN e Proof — Written especially for Meighan by America’s z GEORGE ADE TONIGHT— Last Times— “WHAT A WIFE LEARNED” in Paramount’s rollicking eomedy- drama— ) EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION— EMIL HANSEN in a novelty group number: “Kitten on the Keys” “Let the Rest of the World Go By” ‘Mighty Lak’ Rose” 4 screen pre the] in bilities of the cast presenting the | lim! if 1m version here make up for losses ism of presentation in their © of production agine, after you've seen ° | Found in North Carolina Soldier Reported “Dead Comes Back to Find! Wite H Has Remar ried C., De 11.—An has come to ‘and childr nei husband an the reunited nto a flivve nil th. They are understand to en expre Jother Enoch Arden awith | Kinston. packed Jude the handing| doir here, I for desire rupt He hardly knew what to d I advised him wa s he ich th le I a formal ¢ on of court agai that might “The case is not of reco: after a decisfongin the queer mari. to family anew. he wanted di ne ein which he {dentitie al ta promised not Judge} do, and nothin “Two men w could tory fo responsibl w aw sug. was| could hold him army,| fested that the married A Nortt tho other rer regular he, 908k t ular utherner In vol embarrassments unteers, Tho regular the al | south. He] The passing substantiate the in dead. to young won-an was reported seemed utherner ‘Constipation Vanishes gale Forever 7: teené' Rete | Prom t—Permanent—Reliei 6 the ‘volun.| CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS| | never fail. Purely vege- |table—act surely but gently on the liver. Stop after- dinner dis- A tress—cor- rect indiges- tion; improve the complexion —- brighten the eyes became 1 me the devoted and af He became f man "vo! ones but Ton luve my wife and little ones, Tho} fas v | flotsam He seem-| “Anna Ch jp | ences a few deca ristie"’—If you can—such a y being presented to mixed audi go. All the fire police reserves would have been called out and the {departments an entries would have been choked with Ana obnoxious, fainting yet, , there “gentlewomen.” ti is nothin| | nothing uns to the presentation |of the wrecking agony of life's depth girl the victim of circum 1 brute men—of "that old and “that old davil booze” And of regeneration of the a love, Sweet is the star—but sho has support in Marion a her old, “squarehead”’ S and Eugene Besseret as | on life's ocean." Russell is the braggart hero, AV of a soul t M real George STARTING SATURDAY James Oliver Curwood’s Masterpiece “Jacqueline” (“Blazing Barriers”) With Lew Cody, Marguerite Courtot I and an all-star cast La! and until Wednes: any Longfellow's Small Pill—Small Dose—Small ama |

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