OCR Text |
Show newspapermen's Pet Now A Star on Old Broadway ,;; V .,. FA TBI CIA IALMOX. . gffKLBY. Mont., Aug tl Ko more no-nlght stands foe Patricia Salmon. They re cheched off her tbU Cor ge4. (Vru betcha. Today ahe ca lift a scornful eyebrow pn the tent hew aad Its sew tows ! gallery. It a Broadway for her now. Then the 1 grat theatres In the big cities from coast t coast. And with n Klegfeld a 'Telll,' too. (Ton botch.) Aad then Perhaps her name will be embtaaoned In twelve-Inch letters oa hug ltrfe signs. Hut b tr.at es It may, she's said faro-well faro-well to Shelr-y forever. It wse batJc Is Shelby's palmiest days the week before .tvk Dempeey and Temmy Olbfcnne answered their curtain ealle ht "Pat" blew into tnwn. She wae the Cinderella of ths Hytaid Welty i comedians then, - The tent was pitched oa a hllletde. I Helns converted ths aisles Into ditches The dressing room, where "Pat" made up. waa flooded every sight. Special writer snd dramatic critics from New York snd Chicago, whe um out to eee Jack and Tommy perform,, dropped In at the teat one night. "Pat. in her role ef "The Princess of Petcaee. mad her entrance In a barrel. bar-rel. She caurht the fancy of I aba newspaper gus. They adopted to how, "We'll have ou la Broadway with la a ycer." they told her. "Pat" thought ther were bidding, snd told them so, Bui bow mi knows they weren't. For Zt-year-otd Patricia Salmon, who stormed the British Isles, while yet a nr baby, wltb bor Irish act or father. Is n Broadway new. fcay Pet: You betchs |