Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 245, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 October 1919 — EXCHANGES BABY GRAND AND WAXED DANCING FLOOR FOR HAND ORGAN AND DUST. [ARTICLE]
EXCHANGES BABY GRAND AND WAXED DANCING FLOOR FOR HAND ORGAN AND DUST.
From the intoxicating strains of high-priced violinists to the razz of the hurdy-gurdy is the switch in life’s position taken by Mary Pick-1 ford, as Amy Burke in “The Hood- ' lum,” the second production from I her o\fn studios, which will be seen commencing tonight at the Princess theatre. When Amy goes to live with her father, a sociological writer, in his East Side location, she eschews a trip to Europe with her grandfather, ■ Alexander Guthrie. Instead of Fifth avenue acquaintances with long names, Amy meets; Dish Lowry, a little fellow with big Ideas; William Turner, an artist* who can draw everything but a check, and old Peter Cooper, hasn’t an ythintr bui=a—mean diapo-4 sition. 7 Kow a gefieral reconciliation of ; the Burke family revolves about Amy’s acquaintance with Peter Cooper ends the story after a long series of remarkably laughable incl-| dents.
