The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 9, 1919, Page 5

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ees —) mT /7 ALO @.| 7 nr = eo ) we PALACE HIP | 7 A new w of seven acts and of | THEATRE PROGRAMS 4 | MPTROPOLITAN—Roth Chatterton | 6) =e at the | ] Je “The Merrie Month of May the bill will be LEVY'S ORPHEUM — Midsammer Folly Co, in “When Women Wh . | PALACE Vaudeville foaturte , Ma | "The Minstrel and the Maid,” ¢ . comedy , 3 PANTAGES — Vaudeville featuring | |’ Perhaps You're Right,” masieal | | and yw | qumety Act provided | =; se: 6 ef t ible somersaults and} atches, W omedy tg vary their | METROPOLITAN w There will be a warm welcome for Gray and Elinore Jack: | Ruth Chatterton when she appear * from the legitimate | at the Metropolitan thea’ Mon \ m the moving pictures, | @ay night, August 11, and for the | will pros an UNUSUAL Skit, called remainder of the week, in her new nthe ad to Fr a bright} comedy Merrie Month of May ttle story of ctives, cowboys, a| under the direction of Henry Miller. | «it mance There are reasons why this intere Adolph The Wizard of the Ac ing theatrical event should ord will provide a high class pecial attention. In the first e,; musical novelty on the accordion, | Miss Chatterton 1s today one of the | ¥ ging and whistling adde foremost young women on our stage und Alexander, a pair of she has so large a following. In the charming girls, have an epoch story second place, the play is or and song revue cal T6 to 19 t Three Morris Sisters have a} delightful comed Am that always apr To use a much clean and wholesc not mean that it is « since in reality it is Another factor that insur worthiness is that it ts presented by Henry Miller, who aims in his pro- @uctions at the best in stage art The three acts of “The Merrie Month of May” are laid in the home Arizona. n take: of Baldwin. All of t of Senator Washington act place during a balmy May ¢ You meet J h dwin, F Miss Chatterton, a Washingt butante much sought after; Tod Musgrove, a young W h man; Congressman Hamill. a silve voiced politic Senator Baldw big, genial, kind-hearted is takably of the West; Cou! Biue. a society man; Miss Hallie Baldwin, the kindly sister of the senator; Mrs. Langley, an attractive Washington | widow; Pet Baldwin, the senator's schoolgir! daughter, and not forget- , ting old Jefferson, the colored re- tainer, who brings back memories of Civil war days. Mr. Miller has sur rounded Miss Chatterton with a Notably fine company, including James Rennie, Lucile Watson, Ed- ward Fielding, Sydney Booth. Charles Trowbridge, Katherine Emmett, Lawrence Eddinger and Flora Shef- field. . LEVY'S ORPHEUM The Mid-Summer Folly company at Levy's Orpheum, for its attrac tion, starting with a continuous per formance Sunday afternoon, will of fer “When Women Win,” a merry! farce comedy set to music and based upon the equal suffrage question. Lew “White, the popular Hebrew funmaker, will be cast in the role of an inventor of the famous love elixir, which, when given, immediately makes the taker fall in love. Lew White, with his assistant, Ert Hunt wanders into a fashionable hot where the suffragets are holding their annual convention, and after dickering with the proprietor of the into the ice-water cooler, with the result that the suf. frage convention is broken up. A number of humorous situations abound during the action of the of. fering, in which Lew White and Ert Hunt supply the majority of the humor. Another breezy offering from the | sunny beaches, billed as “The Rath-| House Beauties,” will be the featured musical offerirg for the week, and! will show the Folly Girls clad in the latest creations in bathing suits. Olive Finney will have a big number with the girls, and will be assisted by Lew White on his onestring fiddle. Pauline Arthur, Corey Hunt, Bob | | ] Sandberg, Floy Ward and Lawrence | Orth will all have up-to-the-minute | dancing act and Evans will present a « and talking act, with comedy | A will be feature shown. aixeact photoplay also ME SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1919. } HENRY MILLER Presents Ruth Chatterton in new comedy, | “The Merrie Month of May”; Musical Comedy at Levy’s Orpheum; Pantages Bill Topped by Singing and Dancing Act; Palace Hip Has Lively Comedy; Orpheum Vaudeville Will Re- open This Month. ) ) \ ) 5 PANTAGES Topping the new bill of v the Pantages, opening mtainee performance Monday at George Choos’ latest musical cor success, “Perhaps You're Right,” featuring a lot of pretty girl singers and dancers The added drawing card will be the Imperial quintet in excerpts from the standard grand operas. | Other numb are: Ray and Emma | Dean, in their big } Let Me Alone, Darn Y the Romano sis ters, three b ful dancers; Flor ence Rayfield, “the } sunshine girl,” and Ray Conlin, singer and , ventriloquist | see | COMING TO THE MET | The announcement that Henry Miller and Blanche Bates will appear at the Metropolitan for the week starting August 18 in “Moliere,” the highly successful play by Philip Moeller, which attracted so much at-| tention during {ts recent presentation | at the Liberty theatre in New York, | will interest all theatregoers. It in| seldom such a notable p' and dls tinguished company comes along. and the oceasion is one of rare in-| terest. The original production will be seen here in every detail even to the incidental music, for which spe cial players are carried. Mr. Miller will be seen as the actor-dramatiat, Moliere, and Miss Rates as Madame de Montespan, the beautiful and brit Mant mistress of the king. ‘“Molicre” is in three acts. The first and js show Moliere’s study in the Palais Royal in Paris and the second the} exquisite apartment of Madame de Montespan in the Louvre. Various famous historical personages are in troduced in the course of the play ORPHEUM SHOWS WILL COME TO MOORE SOON Orpheum vaudeville will be ushered in at the Moore soon. Manager Carl Reited said yesterday the new season will open August 24. The box office. however, will open August 17 as an accommodation to those who want to reserve seats for the opening and later performances. j During the summer weeks the) Moore has been completely reno vated and redecorated, and in said| to present an unusually attractive ap-| rance. A new stage, designed to} facilitate the presentation of the big- gest and most elaborate productions | in vaudeville, will be a feature this| season. } IDDEN treasure—hidden away in the heart of a mountain. and catchy numbers with the Folly| Read how # young American | Girls on the runway, as well as on the stage. | of Three,” Monday in The Star. | braves death to find it, “Hearts Jot several plays which 1—Ruth Chatterton at the Metropolitan in “The Merrie Month of May.” Midsummer Folly Co., to the Pantages Monday 2—Lew White, comedian with avy's Orpheum. 3—Francis Alexander at the Palace Hip. 4—Ray Conlin, who comes Announcement te made of the a¢ tive entranc into the field of theat rical production of a new firm of in depen atrical producing man agers composed of Wendell Phillips Dodge of David Helasco's executive staff, just resigned, and Will Pogany Siamer Or af aye by Cran? 019 aw NEA 2% t id famous artist 4 denigner of sta etary aah, ecdtum (Dorothy, aged 26, is spending the summer at Lively Dodge and Pogany have forme Beach, having staked her job and $500 savings on the chance corporation to produce plays and of winning a suitable husband during the summer. These a vi the: i wt t manage theatres, and they will start! are her letters home to Joan, her chum.) to work at once on the production they have No, 12 door mat, refreshed and ready for been acquiring during the past two The Orcharé Inn, works” years, area bok | Forest Valley, N. J., | He turned again and looked | the 7th Jearnestly at me Nora Payes recently lopted a) My dearest Joan | “What a wonderful girl you baby, from a New York orphan asy I have your letter and most| are!” jum reverently thank God for giving me| “Are businesslike secretaries #0 Paired an understanding friend. To reas-|*arce then?” I smiled. “Of your sort, he answered Irving Berlin ix to reenter vaude-| ure you, dear, for believing I have yen,” ville at a salary of $2,000 a week not done a foolish thing, let me tell| &ravely. “To have a face like that ok you how sanely it has worked out.| 40d intelligence, and kindness and Of course Capt. Wallis met me | Character and ee hear me vege in! at the station "The instant I Jaid and—?" I found mynelf asking jeash and several diamond rt when . én him 1 fet dt. ease His > toner boots Snte One dreasing room| wuiet manner was at ita quietest tn Mow ork Curing tee aieencs There was an air satisfaction rie) pout him as he greeted me, cor Mme. Sarah Bernhardt in resting | dially but not effusively, gratefully at her hor at Isle, off the Brit-| but n as though I had performed Theatre CONTINUOUS DAILY, 1 TO Spring TOMORROW TO WEDNESDAY KING BAGGOT in “The Man Who Staye VAUDEVILLE Smith & Lawrence “The Minstrel and the Maid” The Three Macks fj Comedy Novelty Acrobats lolph Gray and Elinore Jackson You;” Three Roma: ence Rayfield, Conlin, Mats. 2:30—Nights, 7 and 9 BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOON “PERHAPS YOU'RE RIGHT” A Snappy Musical Comedy in Two Scenes In Gems L QU Opera Ray and Emma Dean, in mano Sisters, dancing beauties; Flor- Ly the Little Sunshine the Acme of Sub-vocal Comedy.” “Let Me Alone, Darn Girl,” and Ray coast. a miracle of self-sacrifice in com. | 8 | ing tenor,| “I knew I could count on you,” rormerty an Opera | said, as soon as you realized company daughter| how terribly up-againstdt I really ot a Havana sug anter, were| Was. Gosh, how helpless a man is married last month in Newark. The| nowadays without the expert hand tenor was divorced by Mme. Mar-|of the secretary! Might as well try | garet Matzenauer, contralto, of the| to go to a fire on a hobby-Norse as | pera, last April, the| dictate 30,000 words to yourself on| custody of their G-year-| the typewriter. Here's thi Fierce | Arrow!” He led the w with a comic rish toward a battered tin liz » which is part of the furnishings of his borrowed camp “What place!” Osteopaths Select sociation Chiefs a heavenly was all “Ou he hoad to Wenaeo” Abeggien, of Tekoa,|I could find to remark as I climbed “ - 1 the Wash- | into the clattering car, I had rather Adolpho a selation at| braced myself for—I don't know The Vizard of the Accordion” 7, Frye hotel,! what—some sign of embarrassment Francis & Alexander Other officera elected were Dr. W. On his part perhaps, or a trace of pe RL RT Vancouver, first vice | too-personal ap tion Three Morris C. Mayo, Walla, “It sure is,” he answered heart. | Novelty Danc ts pre ily, finally getting the oo wand ——-"7 7 = started with much rasping o ers Melville & Evans and barking of throttle. “Old Ma Songs, Talks and Steps Porter did all his best writing out = 4 here. When he went to the coast | le, wil on & special mission for his maga. | at Home” national convention in| ine he turned the shack over to ; Chicago in July, 1920. ne 19th| me. Tt has saved my life—it and fi s sendays onal annual convention of the associa-|¥ou together—tor I could no more | . fiom wih ¢ to. an official close |! got out this order in a summer | oF Courme Capt. Wallis Met Mo at the Raturtay evening hotel or a city apartment than a Station 4 rabbit!" We went on a straightaway bit/ with an odd, tight sensation in the HE GOT A KICK of road, and he turned from | throat HARRISE Pa 9.~John | the wh 1 moment to look at me Yall it charm,” he answered Bush disco’ ay to get a kick | It is this restrained, observing MAN-| brisxiy, adding in the same brisk out of “near beer.” Helping unload| er of his, Joanle, that gives me tone: “we're almost there. Inn's just 1 cargo of the stuff Lush got in t those sudden inward thrors—like round the turn.” way and a keg knocked him into a| When Caruso lets out one of those) we woishea the drive in allence cellar, fracturing his leg noft, tense, long-drawn velvet notes! At the quaint little hostel built of ye eg set wi Les cpaagioate cement and rough logs an elderly colored woman came out to welcome ° over his phonograph records sa in me and a boy took my bag. Watch Our Windows ee Ww reli ‘ust, have been | “I'll stop for you, then, Miss Var . looking to neo whether there waa| ick, at 2 o'clock,” said Capt. Wallis This Week «mut on my nose from the long train| and with a friendly, though haif formal wave of the hand, he chugged off in his rattly old machine ride, Or wondering whether I was expert enough for his purposes. Or For Big Reduction Prices on mountain—and only a totter. ing old Maya knowing the secret. Read how he led the man and the being able to think of a more bril Mant remark There's rather a decent little room I. M. BENNETT for you at the Inn.” he went on.| girl to the hiding place over the Manufacturing Jeweler “We'll drive straight there.” barking sands, dack London's | Plaza Hotel Westlake Near Pine “And after lunch,” said I, “your| “Hearts of Three’—Monday in secretary will appear upon your’ The Star, ELKS TOTAKE UP S, A. DRIVE Lodges of Four Cities to Handle Campaign The Elk lodges in Bellingham, Anacortes, Everett, Port Townsend and Port Angeles, have decided to} take over the Salvation Army paign for funds during the week be-| ginning tember according to Charles F, Ma ot Ev president of the Washington Elks’ association Manning, in company with Dr. W. & Kennedy, of Portland, president of the Oregon at Elks’ ascocia tion, and O. C. Bortameyer, Western iirector for the alvation Army home service campaign, returned to Seattle Friday from a trip thru Northwestern Washington in the in terests of the Salvation Army cam paign and the state convention. “I expect the Washington Elks’ convention held in Yakima Aug. 21 to be the great eat ever h Manning KILL THE RATS ld in the state,” declared | By Using STEARNS’ PASTE International exterminator for Rats, Mice, Cockroaches and Waterbugs. It creates ® desire in these pests to run from the build. df dying outsi «HE BIRD AND THE SER- PENT” fs a deadly game, which results in death and jus- tice in Central America, Read how an American played the game and won, “Hearts of Three,” Monday in The Star. AMERICANISM and The remedy for Bolshevism and W. W.ism will be my subject for next Sunday, August 10th, at 2p. m. on corner Virginia street and Fourth avenue, under auspices Soldiers, Sailors and Workingmen’s Council. Edwin J. Brown Solid Gold Agate Jewelry Oh, anything. One never knows what| I will write the rest of the first Moss Agates ‘thinks. One moment you'd swear | chapter tomorrow, dear; it was late Mo ne » waa going to make the most vio-| when I got to my room and h Lavalliers lent love to you. The next he is|ribly late now, and I must be early Rings back in his shell again leaving you|awake and at my work—I almost Pins ull at wondering—half disap-| wrote “my novel.” ” uit ae, pointe Devotedly, Reduced k rices on All He turned back to his driving DOLLY.ON-THE-JOB. Watches “We—the shack and I—will do our Pa et Ges ebeahaseet 4: Sale 1s progressing rapidly beat to help.’ I said, feeling T must e Don't delay. businesslike and casual, and not NTOLD riches hidden in a | Out of the high rent district, per- sonal service and moderate advert ing enable me to make you thi Go to any dentist, get his prices, come to me and get 20 per cer from his figure, with careful, painless methods and personal attention. Dr. J. Brown’s New Office a ORPHEUM BUILDIN Third and Madison, Every Woman Should Hear “AFTER ALL I'VE DONE FOR YOU” Sung by J. MURRAY |Want Magazines PAGE 5 — Earl ‘Williams Vivid portrayal of roles of dramatic power and vigor in Mrs. Wilson Woodrow’s great story— ‘ al i | Aly AT RE) A {LTT ai | Let's go buy Boldty French try. Uptown, 1414 34 Ay | town, 913 2d Ave. be for the Loggers An urgent appeal for more mag azines for the logging camps of the state was issued Friday by! Capt. John Andersgn, director of the Americanization campaign for logging camp workers thryout the state. “These magazines combat the doctrines advocated by I. W. W | Hterature The merly now for t declared Capt. Anderson. blue boxes on the street for used for war work should 7 be filled with reading matter LUCIO'S JEWELRY 00, logging camps.” 3 SKCOND AVENUE Ga he TREMENDOUS DRAMA OF ALASKA THE BRAND Love—Sin—Ambition—Muscle and Might North of 53°

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