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Show PANTAGES WITH bewitching grace and en-chantingly en-chantingly gowned, Mile. Bianca whirls and undulates through a routine rou-tine of amazing dances at the Pan-tages Pan-tages this week. Her rendition of some of the most difficult of terpsichorean masterpieces is superb, and she is capably supported by Monsieur Man-thay Man-thay and Mile. Charlotte, who also are dancers worthy of the name. With a bag of jokes and a brace of songs Mel Klee, of the wide grin and dusky countenance, Julia Gilford, the widow of Bob Fitzsimmons, has a charming personality and a pleasing voice an dan array of fetching frocks, while Valentine Vox, ventriloquist, keops the crowd wondering and laughing laugh-ing with the jokes and songs his dummies dum-mies put over. The Tuscano Brothers Broth-ers have a rare juggling offering, in . which they also whirl around battle-axes battle-axes with an ease that proves their dextrous skill. New views and a snappy photo comedy, as well as the usual entertaining musical numbers by Eddie Fitzpatrick's orchestra, conclude con-clude this bill, which runs through Tuesday night. "Miss 1920," a sparkling little musical musi-cal play, bubbling with class and lots of pretty girls, is due to arrive here as the stellar feature of Wedensday's new bill. Other acts will be Murry Voelk in "Who Is He?"; Mclallen and Carson Car-son in "Oh, Sarah!"; Irene Trevette, "Maid of the Allies," and the three Weston sisters in "The Musical Maids." SQUELCHING THE PREACHER. A fool has seldom been answered "according to his folly" with more appropriateness ap-propriateness than was the local preacher avIio boasted at a dinner table that the Lord had opened his mouth to preach without sending him to college first. "Indeed," replied a curate who was present, "how very interesting. A similar event happened in Balaam's time." London Tit-Bits. |