The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1917, Page 3

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STAR—SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1917. PAGE 3 | NEW SET OF STARS COMING SUNDAY SLAUM, BEBAN, | —rw a vaenanesoeoes| RUSSELL AND | BRADY STARS Sunday's Programs Marie Osborne in Alice Meady in The Kimball Young in “The William Hassell in The Manuelita .............. PEE wee... Hurtado Flora Bella aor . .Schwarzwald Song .. Se aye ae .. Selected Peer Gynt Suite ... cesses e Grieg oe in “The Mortal LOUISE GLAUM IN onan Imstie us ano vane of DAYS ONLY tes ve Faber 80". STARTING SUNDAY | while aye a over net - M Gla 1 ” ate hat all ¥ women aren ke, particularly | whe e co t them Nan | Mishe girl of the inderworld . f 1 i n nt Yea h ed ™ vict Nan of fer of w ' or een falae| ac ed re politieal| Cact two-reel Keystone ete the | BABY MOVIE STAR | AT CLEMMER ¢ k new have pointed | | ring 1 Marie Osborne, which Ihave beer elsewhere which the ile _responatbilit e ‘ot Nan Bishop, vampire queen Maude Ad ayed anything wholesor ean Of an underworld band of ies ky cls Antero aciren a wolves, who lived on the out- peta dager ies a reser skirts of conventionality, with way, ie knows that) alll humanity as their prey! (notepiars He The story concerns Nan, 538 her man and the supreme er ev, beginning |Saerifice she offered on s,s \love’s altar. The play gains uence Mowe lin dramatic interest be- j,,,2uere is one combination that) Cause the action is that fe, Hetan bear and bees, whieh (Wald just across the Hl thy it eae SN oadtite, hetrecerie| imaginary line that resario. [Sunday, at the Coliseum | Mr. Be. separates the high- iit —-_ TU We HI 7 , ee eens tery | eolored uncon- 5 |e ean ee eae’ pve’ ventional from essful h netrate th Ithe bear, to . apl ‘ut of/the drab and Prob-| COMMON- ary eral h 4—Louise Glaum and Jack Rich-| eased cats food that might sustain! ardeon, in “Love or Justice,” Lib- life, was a serious erty. Id not co’ icate t © he was writing the 2—George Beban, in “The Road Fanus to ask permiss “ Yokes psn" | place! side Impresario,” (oliseum they elves sugKeS Lag vary not font attests $—Clara Kimball Young, in “The| Jeanne that they chloroform the | tha hited that ue Yellow Passport,” Rex. cats j pe hilpivee 6f tha funk 4—Baby Marie Osborne, in “Told | That Seemed Treason mag gee at Twilight,” at Clorumer F “Poor Jeanne!” laughs Mise Sad STORY OF YOUNG WIFE'S 5—Alice Brady, in “The Dancer’s jer, remembering the little SACRIFICE 18 TOLD Peril,” Strand. horror. It was nothing t s is featured In “The 6—Viola Dana, In “The Mortal treason to her. From th e a five-act drama of a Sin,” Mission. }she had more w e’a sacrifice, at the Mis-| 7—William Russell, in “The| shared food with us The story tells of a Frame-Up,” Colonial. ly, but would not leave « ‘ thor, who Is 2 18 alo’ the house with the cats perately on a novel Love’s Young Dream for a moment, to be a masterpiece, It is ce particular a wa ; Th rtal Sin.” The story Rudely Shattered by | soon over, however, for the supply it. So with « wife's sacrifice of ber " o : _| of chloroform in hospitals gave |for relief, beca el 1 order t > her Invalid Two German Officers | ut. Wo had to perform operations mean de 1. Anderdon Gevelope tt o—— - @)| without anaesthetics 1 we r Jeanne Was Pretty . reulost 1 Roe West He} | Continued From Page 1 || '#!»!y had ‘none for th sit ESSE : as sia teal ssneeaete Z e yn the other 1868 | told se real life. He house was spared and the house) dared not leave Jew one in the |to take hold of wite the ontaining the sacred cats was house long at a as it was not still loyal to Be man, In the ; laze. dashing back and carrying *af6 for any woman to be alone 10 | so tired of tH + Anderson had ll «them out again, struggling and Charlerol just then that they began to give wife. But in ? snarling and tearing her faithful Germans Drunk Often You couldn't blame overcome by arms, till, as Miss Sadler “While the wine-cellars of the a limit to what one car Mloury. He kills her.| they were like so much raw be town held out, the German officers {t med to me the ver, does n end the from elbow to wrist and soldiers were drunk 1 al 1 wh nas f ing an When, imme¢ after the tak-|the time,” Miss Sadler says. “I! Jeanne w tty. Also, she was | Pleasing ux ‘ ing of the tow think this is the explanation of | not old,—o and b always eee ed by the Gern ome of the things that were done | react t toe t rain CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG by the consul’s \ then.” ere are e thir man|IN “YELLOW PASSPORT” which had not been discovered, be-} She told me some of ther r he whe the oper Ki t the came a Valuable thing, and the, They are unprin . pretty and ex thentre nday will com arses felt that to feed to 16 d So they took Jeanne with them} One day, when the nurses dr ara Kimball You fi of the © ae be { their exhausted 4 est, {f-not the greates is that © to prepare coffee, an nnusual|The Lellow Passport,” or “Th UNTIL ing occurred was still |T of Shame.” Miss Young ts ked, and ng in th ¢ a role that gives her free THURSDAY tchen, coax ay de rein to display her tal cup of cof it of the poor ma-|ents, w h have done so much to The famous Rus- terial she had, Jeanne was stand.| Place her aa one of the foremost in the piazza, f hth en stars of the ¢ | sian Ballet, headed by Alexis Kosloff-- hness brighten-| ALICE BRADY IS SEEN (a $5 a seat attrac- ner |IN TWO ROLES tion at the Moore Officers Had ¢ 1 fee ar eee popier Se Se theatre) was se- A couple of German officers had | 4) The Das Bric cured for the mary rece , he nurses came,| Which sbe appears tn a dual role as elaborate dance Oh, tt ere just talking. —Yes, |* Young Ruselan ballet dancer and scenes in they had been there before ctwice |#* the mother of the dancer. The in fact characterizations call for wonder. PB emmren com ena Se CACTUS NELL Maat ae tolik from the oF gon |e. During the course of the play aE + DANCER’S that had stopped farther down the |fome splendid double exposure Cactus Nell,’ one of those two-act Keystones, that street. They were handsome fel-|neaay tn een an the young dancer carries a wallop in each mitt, is armed to the teeth PERIL The nurses were purzled and also as the dancer's mother. with comical situations and rides laughter bareback! AEWA ine veraat wists thece WILLIAM RUSSELL GOT “AN EARLY START sod ae uiantity of auille dutty {William Russell, star of “The| FIRST AT PIKE FEATURING ALICE BRADY German officers, of course, could [fy «sata ‘tore nat, with's| CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11 ADMISSION 15c—CHILDREN 5c THE WONDER WOMAN house for a glass, instead of going to the house where the milk wagon phe rien having beon £880-| used this as an argument to show|to us with news. The two German| “We told Jeanne, I shall never |away from us for a moment, She —AND— stopped? And what had they t clated with the stage in one way or) that there was no harm in doing|officers had been making inquiries | forget her face. followed us around like a dog, An@ with Jeanne about? j Anpsl r ain he wen 8 rents old.’ what they wished, ‘One must belat other houses, and it appeared | It Was Cruel Blow she regarded everything German ALEXIS KOSLOFF Bluehee Tell Her Story | pecan ate tater ace! friendly with one's captors! It i6|they had been sure the consul was! “They sought monsieur to kill /with a mixture of fear and horror, The nurses got no satisfactory | SUCcesses was with " @TTY"\ but wisdom!’ she would say; andj concealed in his own house; and) him?’ she sald. ‘And they thought) “When we left, about two months OF THE IMPERIAL RUSSIAN BALLET anawers from Jeanne, She blushed |More. In “Causin Kate |we couldn't contradict that. But it} t had been making love to/I would betray him? They came later, Jeanne stayed. The eats Introducing the marvelous Russian Dances with the most and tossed her head, and that was|~ peitmasaemratic eed). |S He, ime siprit that we saw nne in the hope of getting the|only for that?’ were still there, and she had prom- gorgeous settings—forming a background of unusual splen all interested, and so polite! ting hold of the people ever secret out of her The neighbor “She didn't «ry—at least, not ised to take care of them. She dor for this master drama—a drama which alone is sufficient After that she was always eager We warned Jeanne that they where | succeeded in convincing them that! when we saw her; but every bit of may still be in Charieroi for all I in itself for the time to come to go home| were up to something, and that she Only t went further with| Le Fanu was really gone. When the coquettishness and cheerful- know, I had a letter from the Le and get coffee read She admit-| was running big risks herself, but Jeanne, She 1 another girl.| they were satisfied of this, they | ness that hed made her so different, Fanus, in Ungland, not long ago, ted that the officers came often,|) we couldn't convince her he She was still thful to monsteur} laughed left her that day, and from and they had had no news of her, and that they alwa went before) she Jame, and took good care of ‘It's lucky for hi mthat he is!'| that time on she was as she had Rut I know that, whatever hap- wed them everything they want-| and im STRAND | t nurses came, They were very|ed to see—and they wanted to see, us and the cats; but she was differ-| they said; and one of them pulled|been before--only more devoted to) pens, there is one Belgian who will able! They had asked to see) everythir rom cellar to garret.| ent & paper out of his pocket ‘We/her trust, if possible. She ‘inter-|/never again ‘It ts wisdom to the house, and sh id shown them) They didn't find the things she Had Death Order have here an order for his execu-|red’ everything that she could) make friends with one’s captors’ jall over it, They were enormously hud ‘interred,’ however, and she “Then, one day, a neighbor came tion,’ ~ | move, and she did not want to be|And that is poor little Jeanne,” :

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