Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 130, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 June 1914 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 6 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Creamery Notice On account of the death of W. H. Dexter the creamery in Rensselaer will be closed from 2 to 4 o’clock Thursday afternoon, June 4. ‘The Call of Youth,” a new comedy by Frederic and Fanny Locke Hatton, authors of that famous success, ‘‘Years of Discretion,” op eniiig at the Blackstone June L promises to be the all-summer sensation of Chicago. The demand tor seats has been so great that the seats for the first week’s performances were practically sold out on May 25, when the box office sale commenced, mail orders swarming into the Blackstone all during May. *The celebrity of the playwrights, as successful dramatists and as social favorites, the fame of ‘‘Years of Discretion,” the proved brilliancy of the new comedy which had a fortnight tryout in neighboring cities, and above all, the extraordinary youth, beauty and distinction of the great cast, must explain the great interest manifested in the new Hatton production. Theatregoers everywhere will recognize the unusual eminence of the following list of youthful and popular players: Gertrude Ooghlan, Virginia Hammond, Vivian Martin, Elsie Weston, Hazel Kelly, Walter Hampden, Arthur Stanford, Forrest Winant, Edgar Norton, Schuyler Ladd, William Lewera, Curtis Cooksey, Redmond Flood and James G. Morton—such a eastall principals would not be possible in one company at any other time of the year. The distinguished director, George Foster Platt, steged and directs the remarkable production. ___ .•••.•«
