The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 27, 1919, Page 5

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THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, SEPT. 27, 1919. The Romances Dix! WHITE, Popular Seattle Girl, C is Sau TTT d Ime The Boldness of Terror the Goshawk BY THORNTON W. BURG Wilkes to Present “Fair and Warmer,” S r Girl ere Lew White, Comedian, Starred in Musical Ny Zoe Neckley Copyright, 1919, by N. BOA | Northern New York somewhere (Copyright, 1919, by T. W, Burge | the 6th Yh, it was good to get your letter R in his life had Reddy Fox , se a hen in his great clawa onty | 2 . : pbs 1 pha mr ; my darling Joa en Kimoto More uncomfortable th fect from whore Farmer brough t ir ale t kissed him. he dia — he stole up thru the Old NR was standing, Before Farm: | | a in “ pr onomp Mowe’ neha toward Farmer Brown's |er Brown could move he was in the| 5 (iu'h J) Salk AVS Kernen the hse] im broad daylight. Terror|air again, carrying away that fat the Goshawk had dared him to vi hen, Farmer Brown yelled, All the} what hy yard and steal a hen while | hens screamed and raced for the hen. | Skalnst him. Kimoto ta fir te tees poll Brown was about. All the sg are beh writin Pina Way there Reddy hoped that Farmer M would not be about. He Hoped that no one would be about Wished with all his heart that he tire Chinese and Russian arr But think of at to whom bust iw the wine of Ife and every & mere dilutic Of course t of business, He Had kept his tongue still when he Poggrryenebegtine yma +, Met Terror, and so have avoided Ah ea-enttet te Me Wass Bek ous Wenlel Wiis unpleasant scrape Wallis is in his, Wallis builds cantles | The truth w, Reddy didn't dare the air—in the imagination of his Wisit that henyard when Farmer reader Herron creates them on or Farmer Rrown’s Boy was @bout. He knew that he wouldn't Bo beyond the old stone wall on the edge of the Old Orchard if he find that any one was near that henyard. So he hoped and hoped that when he got there the Way would be clear, for he knew that actual moun on bare He ts maddening. His speed and effictency are maddening. Hin vast power, He has good cause for his self-sufficiency, yet I have a wild desire to shake him up, to startle him into nv wing what to do, if on’ the Goshawk was sitting in for a moment. I'd love to throw him | the top of a tall tree, where he could <a ot tie etnslandiariiite wareneen | Wateh all that went on hs When Reddy reached the old stone | Refore Farmer Brown could move| It is the impulse of a devil, txn't it poe Da the edge of the Old Orchard he was in the alr again, carrying re to jolt the hand of the} ind Peeped over, his heart sank, for away that fat hen. Well, whatever it fs, 1 hase Brown himself was in t : | Henyard, feeding the hens. Reddy house ferror p attention el At dinner last night I ylelded for] Stopped right where he was, Noth: | ther to Farmer I a moment to this wild temptation IME could have induced him to go ajened hens. On t promptly paid back for my Step nearer, = “Anywa: muttered | just over ddy’s head, and once let me tell you a Reddy to himself, “Terror won't dare | more cried, “Coward!” “ fields | low hen swiftly he dir wolf. ®O Any nearer, and so we'll be even. | disappeared over the Green Forest The colored silk curtains were | No one would dare visit that henyard | He had made good his drawn over the adows of the car shuttt put the vastness of the world we were fying thru, and mak Ing a sharp contrast of coziness. The mps threw a warm pink living room.” ‘The f SBd steal a hen right under Farmer! As for Reddy Fox, he at Brown's nose. No one is bold enough | away toward the Old Pasture pt do a thing like that” his heart he admired the boldn | Reddy looked back to where Ter | o¢ Terror the Goshawk, but he ha slootete For the Goshawk was sitting. Sud-/ nim more than ever, and that hate | glow r Genly Terror spread his great winks | grow as he thought of the fine break: | table wa culate with thick | SBA shot out from that tree straight |fast Terror was enjoying, while he glossy damask, bright silver, thin y foward Reddy. Reddy could not but | himself could find nothing to put in |< and a crystal vase with a | Admire the speed at which he flew. his empty stomach (Kimoto te far too Jap-| t over the Old Orchard he a > tolerate a BUNCH of flow game, and, swooping down just above! Next story: Danny Meadow Mouse ers) Reddy's head, he cried, “Coward!” | visits the Smiling Pool, He ‘and then shot up into the aiir and over Farmer Brown's henyard. Then shot down like a thunderbolt, cooked a wonderful dish} and rice, slightly browned | Let's MM 34 Ave: downtown, 913 ta Ave. | (1) Alexis Luce, popular leading man with Wilkes Players; (2 Next Monday in Musical Comedy Act, “Revue De Vogue” Orpheum; Blind Pianist Featured at Palace Hip. Pauline Arthur, charming little sou- omes to Pantages SN BASIN (4) Carena Diamond, clever mu- coming to Pantages Monday. yee Te “WaT |brette of Midsummer Folly Co; (3) The Ross Brothers at the Palace Hip fil! fii a) |siclan at Moore; (5) Two of the leading players In “The Reyue de Vogue, iH } \- ~ — Ribera - CO » @dil are 4 1 | . . acs wv) w AN | | ral ) Ta win CZ Re DAYS STARTING F TODAY MOORE Martelle wi Orpheum Vaudeville at The Moore | Will amuse Jack Bidne and lmbel Townh only flirtation of its kind & Gain vaudeville. Both are excel . Marie t dancers as well |This is a twohour girl show bolled| Donald E. Roberts, “The Strolling down to vaudeville size, It is aj| Tenor,” has a voice of concert stage brilliant little musical story featur-|And grand opera caliber, jing Wiliam Cotton, William Ed Billy Fern and company will offer | |munds, Hazel Boyne and Mary Don-|A story abaolutely without words lahue, Scenic Investure and costumes|Tho only sound in this act ta the are things of beauty laughter of the audiences: That music will be one of the fea | Jack Morrisey and company are) jtures of the week is evidenced in a|Australian ropers and whipcrackers. | survey of the bill The African! Kinograma and Topics of the Day Duke” is another musigal act given |are the usual attractions. | by Farrell-Taylor and Company. A mes: distinguished lady trombonist and! WILKES lady harpist are heard in the offer-| Following up the splendid dra- ing matic offering, “The Boss,” this for the week beginning tomorrow DAYS OF THRILLS DE LUXE DAYS will feature as ute muateal corm “When the problem of a woman comes up before me,” he said, “I (shall give it my full attention.” RED LETTER DAYS IN ' opm ; Pall be tamakivoens.* Kia sande 60 4 | divine; he crispest nm stuff, he HUMDRUM Lfesationt trait and © pewserine iat EXI NCE | mut meats on top of the smooth mayonnaise | The punch was his own invention | DAYS —a delicious compound of grape juice, orange and one or two mys-| | ALMA |there didn’t half make the most of |it, commercially, my long’ ‘o strike |at him got the better of my discre- | tion | : “If you were cast upon a desert ty . island with a woman,” said 1, sipping f my nectar, “I believe your first and| . last concern would be to make it a vy v, ¥ STARTING Py SUNDAY no business to bring a} jarring note to this perfect’ repast. | But once, when Kimoto was out of | |the room, and Mr. H n remarked | that we must be passing thru the| | vineyard belt, and that the people terlous ingredients, served in a a ed Tiffany the littl cups we drank station for some line of} IN THE GREATEST | owcaps i | WESTERN EVER MADE It was wicked of m t brought }a wicked light into his eyes. | | “When the problem of a woman| | comes up before me id he, lifting | — |his glass, and regarding its lovely | - | color appreciatively, “I shall give it} | my full attention.” | The “Ace of the Saddle” HARRY CAREY —in—- That was all Kimoto returned. passing coffee and little cakes, and} we talked of the town we were ap- proaching, | But I got more than I bargained for, I tried to disturb him. Instead, | I got @ scare myself. If ever “the| problem of a woman” should come before him, it would be good-bye woman! Unless she happened to agree with his every idea Thy lovingest DOROTHY. AMUSEMENTS PALACE HIP Continuous Daily, 1 to 11 or Hard-Riding, Straight-Shooting, 100 Per Cent Story of the Cattle Country Feature Vhotoplay Bessie Barriscale MOORE THEATRE ORPHEUM VAUDEVILLE d Arman Kallis e Hughes Harry Breen—7 Honey Boys Maleta Bonconi—Bell and Wood ights lhe to $1. Mats. 160 to bic METROPOLITAN Norman Friedenwald Pr “MY HONOLULU GIRL” Nights 600 to $1.60 Today, 60c to $1. Plus War Tax AN EIGHTH OF AN INCH TO THE RIGHT |two most respectable young per- day on Wednesday and Saturday |the production will prove one of —-—_--* “rat | | ‘Oliver Morosco Is Sued by Hi LOB ANGELES Annie temporary Hilarious Comedy; Mite Comedy at Levy’s | «-.. fering in th roseo theatre | injunction fot! main conspired to ex world nasiunt 57 and the other performers PANTAGES tages bill opening with the matin and the wald implies, word in smartness, ing, musse jest of the Webster the among position, and mandolin. | Heorax as the feature or Two »# title of the Miss Gertrude and with her ts Mr fine Wife Oliver held a today Fifth at University her husband from inter Mo The Morose® haw Along with a li will present a audeville which The Best School of Dane Hundred Years and Clara La Tour hav act full of comical stunts. Nut”) Miller the comedy offers Pan Monday © promises one of the prettiest entertaining ume last atag: the new Victoria ora For Rent musicians, will present music of their own com played on bass viol, guitar thrills thene for rent Ruth t of Long and Ward. to the coast, Ward and his|owner, not a renter. My free @f and Mae Laurel will present their latest comedy playet and the H. C. Peters 716 3rd A’ Three Bartos will d demonstration and agility. pletes the bill artistic of physical strength The Pantagescope com- ry SONG REVIPWS MUSIC MOTION PICTURES h with a WHILE YOU DANCE great EVERY NIGHT re welgh —also— ing Instruction in the elty is maintained in conne -” Beginners’ classes Monday's ine a of n in This 2-room unit house on % pere ground in West Seattle. I am won= dering how ma cople in Seattle would be anxious to rent this place I would bet there are several hune dred. And it might pay me to bull as of-| you buy and per month will make the owner of this home. 1 build th Just a Word | 4 -room unit on my %4-aere Lite * alluring | tle Farms (2 big 60-ft. lots and you take possession and fini it at your leisure. | Complete pla also furnished free. Be |cular will solve your home probe lem—or see me. Brown Seattle's Leading Dentist : = 106 Columbia St UM — Midsummer | he Naughty Elope- | BB — Vaudeville featuring De Vogue.” } Vaudeville featuring | | PALACK Har Davis and Castle, Musicians. ——9e | St.Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co,” and connec! 608 PIKE ST, Main 875 week at the Wilkes theatre, the Zz ry popular Wilkes players will offer for their attraction next week, starting with matinee Sunday, “Walr and Warmer,” one of the funtest comedies that has ever been offered to the American pub- Ue, In “Fair and Warmer” the author uses just the idea he knows best how to put thru its paces— & satiric and richly humorous com- plication arising from the fact that sons try to be wicked without knowing how, and end by covering themselves with ignominy, while the pair at whom they aim their wickedness, as retaliation go scot tree. “Pair and Warmer" begins in the early evening, stays up all night and comes to a fes clusion at noon of the day, after having disrupted two households, devastated ai “tame robin,” reassorted four people who then repudiate the reassortment, and finally hall blessing and bene- directions upon righteous and un- righteous with an impartial hand. The engagement will be for all next week with matinees b: Sun- eee Y'S ORPHEUM An unusually good musical comedy is on tap at Levy's Orpheum for next week, starting with @ continuous performance Sunday in “The Naughty Elope- ment,” with Lew White, popular Hebrew comedian, being starred in the main comedy role and sup- ported by Bill Blask, the other He- brew comedian, Bob Sandberg, Laura Vail and Pauline Arthur in the main parts of the play, while Floy Ward, Corey Hunt, Ert Hunt and Lawrence Orth will have sup- porting parts The plot of the offering in itself is a seream, and added to that the splendid comedy work of Lew White, there is little doubt that the funniest of the number of mu- sical successes presented by Ert Hunt Lew White, thru a mix-up, clopes with his intended mother-in- | law instead of the young maiden, | while his son, Bob Sandberg, cops| off his father’s fiancee. They meet in the same hotel, where they go to secure a minister, unbeknown to each party. There White dis- covers his error, and then the comedy situations ensue that will provide plenty of comedy for the audience. FI Ward has arranged al number of pretty offerings with the large Folly chorus, of which no doubt the prettiest of these will be Laura Vail's number—with the girls “Chin-Chin,” Bob Sandberg, Pauline Arthur, Corey Hunt and Lawrence Orth will also be heard and seen in catchy numbers, with the girls forming a pretty and striking background ee | PALACE HIP Decidedly unique will be the mu- sical offering of Davis and Castle, | who are to present one of the head jline features in the new show open- |ing Sunday at the Palace Hip. Davis is a blind pianist whose extraordi- nary musical ability has Mfade him a sensation along the circuit thus far. His program is varled, including the classical, popular and jazz selections, stle is also an accomplished musi n, playing the cornet and saxo- phone. “Three Boys and a Girl" is the | billing of a mixed quartet who pre: |sent a melange of youth, pep, har- |mony and jazz in great quantity, and with plenty of comedy. The ‘famous “Ross Brothers,” ‘“champion hairweight boxers of the PLAYERS THE HIGH SPOT OF HILARITY T. SUN., 27 to 50c IGHTS, 31 to 75¢ MATS. WED. & SAT. IT STARTS SUNDAY FOR THE WEEK WITH A MATINEE THE FUNNIEST COMEDY OF THE TOMORROW TO waemepay x-Act Show of Hippodrome Vaudeville DAVIS & CASTLE (featuring world famous blind pianist); “THREE THE CROSS BROTHERS; ANDRUS & LA TOURS, KATHRYN “NUT” MILLER, BOYS AND A Ne (Monday to Wednesday) Feature Photoplay “BREAK THE NEWS TO MOTHER” Founded on the famous song by Chas, K. Harris G MONDAY AFTERNOON Pepple & Greenwald Present Vaudeville’s Smartest Musical Comedy “REVUE DE VOGUE” Dashing Girls and Gorgeous Duds Cast of well-known Broadway Funmal!s DAILY MATINEES —CHILDREN 106 ":.,sx! PANTAGE Matinees 2:30 _BEGINNIN __Nights 7 With THREE WHITE KUHN “A Breeze From the West” With Their Own Novel Musical Interprations THE LEORAS An Aerial Sensation Stan and Mae Laurel L | THR Mother to Guide Them” “DON’T MISS THE PANTA@COPE. | LONG A¥ WARD ust a Word’d ® Song or America’s,

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