Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 123, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1923 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3,1923
TIGHT SILHOUETTE DRESSES FORCING RETURN OF SLIT SKIRT
Modiste Says They Couldn't Be Made Shorter, and, Really, Girls Must Walk, So Sheath Is Only Way Out, t ' By RODNEY F. DUTCHER United Xeies Staff Correspondent Mary has a little calf, It’s just as white as snow; She’s slit her skirt a foot-and-a-half, And that is how I know. \/~y jHICAGO, Oct. 3.—Briefly, this is the latest development in I I the whirligig of chance in feminine fashion, except in most cases Mary wears a dainty silk casing which must be silk all the way.
This is no forecast, but a statement of a fact being noted by observant citizens on the principle promenades of the bigger bailiwicks. In a few moons to come It will doubtless produce much hue and cry from the “whither-are-we-drifting” element. Leading modistes and designers knew it was coming, but are expressing surprise to see the length to which it has gone, as they had prescribed but a few Inches of slit, whereas most of the new skirts—goodness only knows whether by accident or design—are bound to give the wearers water on the knee on a j rainy day. Madam Rose Tells How It remained for Madame Rose, a modiste and a widely-quoted author- 1 ity on gowns, to tell how this came . is a very young man Indeed does not remember a year or so ago the short, full skirt which just tickled the knee was one of the first things upon ‘the ship news reporter- York asked every distinguished visiting foreigner his views. Now, it seems, according to Madame Rose, the short skirts were not lengthened merely because the girls thought the men had tired of them, but mere- j ly because the dressmakers had point-
SOCIAL ACTIVITES
T“7] ISS DOROTHY TEST, whose marriage to Walter Hiatt will 1 occur Oct. 16. was guest of honor today at a charming luncheonbridge and handkerchief shower given by Mrs. G. A. Pritchard, 3360 N. Meridian St. Chrysanthemums decorated the rooms. A color scheme of rainbow shades was used in the baskets of garden flowers which graced the luncheon table in the sunroom at which the guests were served. Covers for twelve were marked with place cards in horseshoe design. The guests: Skiles Test, L. R. Johnson, E. H. Brown, Donald Test, William Mick, Ralph Knode, E. F Rowe, Rex Boyd and Misses Marian Messick and Katherine Turney. Shades of yellow and gold were used in the decorations for the bridge and miscellaneous shower given this afternoon by Mrs. James Morris Edfds, Gladstone Apartments, In |r of Miss ■■Margaret Davidson se marriage to Alfred Henry Case take place Oct. 10. The gifhts b presented by little Miss ervieve Adams, niece of the hostess. There were four tables of bridge. The guests: Mesdames Mrs. James Norman Bird, of Buffalo, N. Y., and Misses Marie Field, Margaret Williams, Florence and Grace Hackleman, Meta Hilda Lleber, Madeline Hine, Mlldrede and Louise Stockdale, MarJorle Davenport, Virginia Moorhead, Marjorie Hendren, and Edith Hendren. Mrs. Edwards was assisted by her mother, Mrs. J. W. Adams. • * • Mrs. Chester Bradford, 10 W. Sixteenth St., has issued invitations for t he marriage of her daughter. Hannah Mary, to Roscoe Cameron Johnson, Oct. 17, at the Second Presbyterian C-.urch, the Rev. Jeon S. Milner officaiting. Miss Ruby Claypool BradfffS, sister of the bride, has been chosen l. ild of honor: Miss Elizabeth Clay- ■, ol Hillerary of Louisville, Ky., and iss Ernestine Elizabeth Bradford, 1 idesmaids, and Miss Anne Tennant, t -wer girl. Howard Meeker will be b sc man and Howard Stanley, James ri-orge. Rogers Hand George and Harry Metzger will be ushers. Immediately after the ceremony there will be a reception at the home of the bride’s mother for the bridal party and immediate relatives. wedding ceremony will take place tonight at the home of Mrs. Vincent Keller, 19 Woodland Dr., when her niece. Miss Ruth Thatcher, daughter of Mrs. E. C. Thatcher, will become the bride of Julian Barker, son of Mr. and Mrs. V. R. Barker, 1012 W. Thirty-Fourth St. The Rev, J. Ambrose Dunkle will read the ceremony before an altar of palms and ferns and baskets of goldenrod and delphinium. Miss Julia Williams will play the bridal music.. Miss Dorothea Crist of Gosport, In CL, will be the bride’s only attendant. She will wear a frock of gold taffeta and carry an arm bouquet of Sweetheart roses and delphinium. The bride will wear silver cloth and laoe-trimmed with crystal beads and a bandeau of pearls In her hair. She will carry an arm bouquet of bride’s rosea and valley lilies. At the reception Mrs. Keller will be assisted by the bride’s mother and Misses Ann and Betty Keller. Mr. and Mrs. Barker will be at home after Oat. 10 at 307 W. FortySecond St., Apt. 6. • • • The Wednesday Afternoon Club opened the season today with a President’s Day luncheon at the Spink Arms. At a table arranged with a centerpiece of fall flowers, covers for twenty were laid. Mrs. C. M. Steffy, outgoing president, talked on “Thus Far Have We Come.” and Mrs. Frank Driver, incoming president, responded with "The Way Opens Up.” Mrs. E. Lm Thompson, club Bible teacher, the year's work. Mrs. R. Hi Blake, of •Lo grille, Ind., accompanied by Mrs.* alp h EBwell. also of Louisville, sang several numbers, and Miss Marguerite Cam, gave readings. • • • Miss Victoria Montani, 3246 N. Illinois St., has returned from New York, where she has been studying harp under A. F. Pinto, of the New York College of Music. > • • • Mrs. John T. Wheeler, 3961 N. yenasylvapla St , entertained this af-
ed out an even more intriguing method of attracting masculines interest—namely the slim silhouette type of gown, which is now being used by the erstwhile flapper to vamp from the knees up instead of from the knees down. The suggestion of the entire figure: which is perhaps more than a suggestion with the current tight skirts, is much more potent in arousing male interest, according to Madame Rose, than the calves and ankles of yesteryear. A Girl Must Walk “But,” Madame Rose continued, naively, “this 'torso method’ of vamping had its drawbacks, for the skirts became so tight as to permit of little movement of the nether limbs, and really sir, a girl must walk. We couldn’t make these slim silhouette skirts shorter or we'd be half-naked. Thus, the slit was the only way out, and there you have it.” Madame Rose’s succinct and wellchosen words eliminate all doubt that the above quatrain about Mary's calf has completely wiped from the boards those well-known, but now old-fash-ioned, lines of tender memory which went: “The devil sends the wicked wind. “That blow 9 our skirts knee-high. “But God is good and He sends the dust, "To blow in the bad man's eye."
ternoon with a reception in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Charles Mason Wells, who was married early In September. Mr. and Mrs. Wells are making their home at 3515 N. Pennsylvania St. The rooms were attractively arranged with baskets of yellow and white chrysanthemums. The dining room was lighted with yellow tapers In silver holders. Silver baskets of yellow and white chrysanthemums decorated the table at which Mrs. Allan B. Philputt and Mrs. John R. Barrett presided. Assisting them were: Mesdames Oral Mansfield, Myron Hughel, Edward Mitchell: Misses Louise Wills, Harriett Dithmer and Rosemary Bosson. Receiving with Mrs. Wheeler and Mrs. Wells were Mrs. Homer H. Wheeler, Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb and Miss Marjane Gladdes. Assisting hostesses were Mesdames H. G. Couglen, Ellis Hunter, A. D. Hit* and Emma K. Doney. • ♦ • Out-of-town guests who have come to attend the wedding of Miss Marjorie Jane Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Stewart. 2439 Broadway, and Gilbert Hector Fuller of this city, which will take place tonight at the Third Christian Church, are: Mr. and Mrs. John L. H. Fuller, Yonkers, N. Y.; Hector Fuller, New York City; Miss Florence Fuller. Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kehl, Conr.ersville, Ind.; the Rt-v. Warren Grafton, Hartford City, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Willis B. Conner. Jr., Bloomington, lil-: Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Cariln, Kqkomo, Ind ; Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Hill and Edgar Hill, Knightstown, Ind;. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Yebo, Richmond, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Horace G. Murphy and Betty Murphy, Muncie, Ind.; Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Bloomer, Rockville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. G. Stewart and YUss Mary Louise Switzer, Wabash, Ind.; Alice Edna Walsh, Plainfield, Ind. • • * Miss Enid Hodson, 49 N. Tacoma Ave., entertained the Entre Nous Club Tuesday night with a "kids” party. The guq/sts, dressed as little girls, enjoyed games and contests during the evening. The house was decorated with toys and balloons. The favors were kewple dolls tied with bows of pink and blue tulle. The guests: Misses Lois Baker, Ada Withers, Mary Boles, Mary Qulllan, Helen dark, Florence Lighthlser; Mesdames: Geneva Aukenbauer, and Allison Jones. The hostess was assisted by her sister, Miss Gwendolyn Hodson. • • • The L&velle-Gossett poat of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will give a card party Thursday evening in their hall, 908 Pershing Ave.
Choice of 300 AUTUMN HATS Wh 'lLast > — 00C Th '* rsday Included in this lot are many Hats that have been taken from our regular stock and marked for a great one-day’s clearance at this ridiculous price.
HE W?kBLOCK C?
Os Course Early Shoppers Get Best Choice
Charming Bride of Fall Season
Mrs. John Paul Rich was Miss Helen Pedlow daughter of Mr and Mrs. Benjamin Pedlow, 1509 W. Twenty-Seventh St., before her mar-
Angle
TEIJ2GUAM F R O M SYDNEY CARTON TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT See by papers Ellington decamped. Hope you got your money out of Lackawana before .his happened. SYD. Letter From John Alden Prescott to Sydney Carton That’s just what I didn't do. Told Ellington to sell at the peak. This he evidently did and damn him, decamped with that Chapman womani As you see, I am in New York. I have been trying to raise six thousand dollars which I must have the last of the week. I have lost fifteen thousand more which I put up on margins. The six thousand dollars I have overdrawn on my commissions. It would be Just like old Bullock, under the circumstances, to have someone examine the bookß, because ho knows I was one of Harry's best friends. This thing Is going to get very’ hot In the newspapers and if he does, God knows what will happen to me. Ijearns Lesson Leslie tried to tell mo the other day something about Ellington, but I wouldn't hear It. I've learned my lesson now, Syd, and I'll take her advice always after this—provided she doesn’t advise me to dabble In stocks, for I promised myself solemnly today never to gamble In that way again. And to think that I sent that last five hundred dollars, which In reality belonged to little Jack, to help that man make his getaway: It Is a good thing I haven't met him in New York. If I had, I think I would kill him. I haven’t had much luck trying to borrow the six thousand, but I have one more place to go tomorrow. It is to a man for whom I have done many favors. I have let him have money at least once when he was In a similar plight. Decides He’s Rotter I’m beginning to think, Syd, that I am more of a rotter than I ever dreamed. Will you tell me why a man with a beautiful wife and a dear baby as I have —speaking of the baby onjy piles my remorse to higher heights—should get Into such a mess as this? I was beginning to think that I didn’t deserve to be married and now I know it.
TUI BASEMENT STORE
MRS. PAUL JOHN RICH.
riage two weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs Rich will be at home at 3204 N. Capitol Ave., after Oct. 15.
Wish you could come down to New York while I am here, but probably that isn’t feasible because if T get that money in the morning I shall start home at once. Every minute I am away from the office I am expecting a telegram from Bullock saying that he knows what I have been doing and that I am to come home and get my blue ticket. Just what I am going to tell Leslie I don’t know. In fact, at the present moment I know less than I ever did before in my life and you know that is needless. JACK. (Copyright, 1923. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Mrs. Hamilton to her daughter, Leslie Prescott—A motherly chat.
Household Suggestions
Dissolve Bluing Use bluing that dissolves in the
water and it will not leavo streaks on your clothing'. Utility and Beauty Earthen crockery food containers are the .-.lost practical for storing food and thuy actually have a decorative value as wall. Clean Furniture It will save your furniture and lessen the period of dusting If you put sheets or other largo covers over your furniture while sweeping. Saving Work Electrio or gas Irons save running
back and forth to the stove and make the weekly Ironing much less arduous.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Os Course Early Shoppers Get Best Choice
Martha Lee Says Child’s ‘Duty’ at End When Mother Deserts
The natural mother instinct, which even an animal obeys, is to cherish her young until they are able to get along without her. The human heart is supposed to be so much more tenderly strung than that of the lower animals that, even after a child has developed its own character and is ready to go out into the world alone, the mother clings to it and holds on as long as possible.
When a mother's heart is warped and she deliberately deserts her child long before it is capable of any selfsupport, she relinquishes all claim to the child. Never thenceforth has she a right to claim the child's love and respect just because she is its mother. Every man owes his parents a duty, but only so long as the parent recognizes his duty to the child. It is the love and tenderness with which a normal mother follows her child through life, not just the fact that she gave him birth, that give her the right to demand some return. Mother Makes Claim Dear Martha Le: I am 10 years old and have been married almost three years. My husband and I have been separated about a year. He came to see me last week and wants me to come back to live, with him. I love him very much and' am not satisfied away from him. He says he feels the same way about me. But my mother and eledst brother object to my going back to him They say lam foclish and need never expect any more help from them if I do go back. My mother ran away and left me when I was 16 months Old and my father had all the care of me. I never knew my mother until about five years ago, and since then she thinks I ought to listen to everything she says. She has been married three times since she left my father and she does not want me to have anything to do with him or my relatives on his side. She never did anything for me until last year, and she has not done very much since then. Do you think I should listen to her altogether. or go back to my husband and try to get along and hare a home, if she does refuse ever to speak to me again? WORRIED. It is hard to speak harshly of any mother, but I think yours deserves little consideration. She failed to make a success of at least three marriages, so she hardly is the one to advise any one in this matter. Ypu are fortunate, I think, to have discovered that you and your husband can find happiness together, after all. You are old enough now, as you were not when you married, to know something about how to go about making your marriage happy. So I think you have a greater chance of happiness with your husband, and your father, than with your mother and brother. Regarding Gifts Dear Miss Lee: 1. If a gentleman friend sends a girl a gift, should she telephone him Immediately, or wait until he calls her. to thank him? 2. Should one stand when Introducing two or more people? MISS ETIQUETTE 1. Unless the girl Is sure she will hear from the man within a day or so, she should write him a note of thanks. 2. A woman always stands when introducing persons in her cwn home. Otherwise, she stands for introductions unless she is making them between men who are her age or younger. Fickle Man Dear Mine Lee: About two months ago 1 met a young fellow 24 years old He always had wanted to become aquainted with me , We went together these two month* He had been going with someone else. H* told me lie cared for me very much. You know how fellows will talk. But with all that ardent wooing, he has gone back to the other girl. I cars very much tor him. We see each other all the time. We are frlende. He stands and talk* to me on odd nights, and sometimes comes in. Do you think it la all right to talk to him, or should I treat him cold? I want his love very much, but am willing to give him up ts he loves someone else. He says he does not know whom he loves. He Is very restless and never works long at one place Now he says he is going away He acts as thourh he care# very much for me Please advise me how to win him back. I do not run after him, but every time I go out of the house, I meet him. Do you think he loves me? You will find, I believe, that men who change positions frequently, very often also axe changeable In love. This mah probably Is telling the truth when he says he does not know whom he loves. Treat him as a friend, but don’t be too cordial. A LOYAL TECHITE: 1. Tailored, “mannish” coats are very good this year. However, they are being made in soft wool materials, usually plaids, rather than in the heavier, men's materials used for several yeaxs. They are worn for almost all occasions. 2. You should not go to the skating rink except with a well-chaperoned group.
AMUSEMENTS
SHOBC RT JM
TODAY, 2:30, B:3O—MAT. SAT. The Lint Comedy Sncee** TIME By Arthur Henry ' Produced by STUART WALKER Note Prlce*t Evening*: Entire lower floor at #1.50. Matinee*: Entire lower door at SI.OO. Balcony: Eve., BOr. 75c, sl. Mat*., frOo. 75c. Seal, gelling,
A Fantastic Lone RevueVlasta I M,k , I Frlsh, Howard A Maslova I Tooiin and Cos I ( ' onnel, y * FranRALPH WILLIAMS BAND Leon and Mitsl. Dancing in the Lyric Ballroom Afternoon and Evening.
BROADWAY ALL THIS WEEK PEPPY BURLESQUE AND VAUDEVILLE Admission 25c and 50c PLUS TAX This coupon and 10c Entitles lady to Choice Scat Any Matinee Exoept HoliI
Stoat h(Dr. CCRobinsorv FURUNCULOSIS I |—• 1 URUNCLES or pimples together I U with their little darker brothI 1 ers, comodonea or blackheads, decorate the faces of altogether too many people, young and middle aged, women as well as men. Through pinching and squeezing their pus-producing organisms are sometimes forced into the venous circulation. The blood stream may then carry them to other organs or tissues of your body, where they may do serious harm. Sounds Unimportant Their presence is usually the sign of a lowered bodily resistance. Perhaps your diet is not evenly balanced, containing too high a percentage of carbohydrates, such as vegetables, starch and sugar. If your skin is naturally oily, you may be forcing this unnatural suppurative condition by oating too much of energy or fatforming foods. Carelessness lr. bathing or avowing the pores to become clogged by lack of proper exerclso or free perspiration, may also encourage pimples. Try Treatment To get rid of pimples, try the following treatment: Do not squeeze, pinch or puncture them. A mild, simple ointment or a zinc ointment should be smeared on them to cause a gradual drying up or ripening of the pustules. When ripe open carefully with a sharp sterile instrument. This will result in a small scar which may eventually disappear. Be careful not to cut or scratch your skin. If the pimple is a deepseated one, try the application of a small, hot compress. “FREEZONE" Corns lift right off A / Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freozone” on an aching corn, instantly that com stop* hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard com, soft oorn, or com between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation. Advertisement.
AMUSEMENTS
?: KEITH’S Raymond FAGAN And Hl* nano* Orchestra With Pom and Peggy Garvin ME I. KLISE j GAUTIERS The Joy Boy I Bricklayer* SEWELL SISTERS Throne of Terpsichore C roo T n°ev* j PArL NOLAX After Park I J—ting Swede Added Attraction Dooley & Sales IMS Edition “Will Yer Jtrar Motion Picture* JAPANESE EARTHQUAKE Pathe New*—Topic*—Fables
PALACE 1:00 to 11:00 P. M. ‘LAGRACIOSA’ In an Electra-Heenlo Production ••VISIONS OF FAIRY LAND” Murdock & Arthur Devoy Kennedy Bitor* & Cos. Spider’* Web Offer Parnell A “Mother's Florence Diary" PHOTO FEATURE “The Rapids”
CAPITOL Washington St. and Capitol Ave. Matinee e-uVo" Every Daily THIS Night ♦ < WQKK a# 8i; COLUMBIA BURLESQUE “The Bon Tons” WITH John Barry ~l#rLADiEs 1 every week. Thi* coupon and 250 will admit lowly to best reserved •eat, any inat.ln*^
wSisterfkrVsKitchen.
LEFT-OVERS E EFT-OVER bits of meat have a way of accumulating in a truely maddening fashion some times. The “tail” of a porterhouse steak, scrag ends of the Sunday roast, an old chop and a scrap of bacon are too “good to throw away” and yet seem hopeless to the Inexperienced housewife. Beef can be used in hash, lamb or mutton combined with rice, : veal or pork worked up In croquettes, a meat pie or a cream sauce on toaßt. A combination of meats can be made into any of these dishes with very satisfactory results. The secret of successful : left-over dishes lies in the care withw which they are prepared and served!'Every particle of gristle or skin should be removed from the meat, the bone* cut away and if the family.-objects to fat, this should be trimmed off. Serve hash or croquettes garnished with parsley on the best pflatter. This has a psychological effect on the family which is worth dollars and cents to the cook. Hash One and one-half cups chopped left-over roast beef, 2 cups chopped potatoes, *4 onion (minced), 2 tablespoons bacon fat or drippings, % cup boiling water, 1 tablespoon butter, salt and pepper. Cooked or raw potatoes may be used. Pare potatoes and put through coarse knife of/ food chopper. Mix chopped meat, potatoes, onions, salt and pepper. Melt bacon fat in frying pan and when very hot add meat mixture. Pour the water in at one side of the pan, cover closely and cook over a slow fire for twenty minutes. Remove cover and cook until hash is dry.. Add butter and turn frequently with a spatula to prevent burning. The hash will become brown and crisp and quite light and fluffy made this way. If wanted folded, do not stir, but let brown on the bottom. Then fold like an omelet. Cooked potatoes should be used. Meat Croquettes Two cups chopped meat, % cup dried bread crumbs, 1 egg, salt and pepper, milk. Put meat through fine knife of food chopper. Mix meat, salt and pepper and bread crumbs thoroughly in a deep mixing bowl. Add egg.
MOTION PICTURES
APOLLO HAROLD LLOYD "WHY WORRY” Film Novelty "IS CONAN DOYLE RIGHT?"
Now Showing Second Week RUPERT of HENTZAU Sequel to “The Prisoner of Zends" ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN BEET LYTELL LEW CODY CLAIRE WINDSOR HOBART BOS WORTH BRYANT WASHBURN MARJORIE DAW MITCHELL LEWIS ADOLPHE MEN JOC ELMO LINCOLN IRVING CUMMINGS Time of Shows i 11:30, 1:30, 3:80, 5:30. 7:30, 0:30. First Showing Japanese Earthquake Pictures Palais Garden Orchestra Harry Bason Jack TUson
ISIS Thursday, Friday and Saturday NOAH BEERY And An All-Star Cast in “TIPPED OFF” - An Amazing Melodrama of Frisco’s Chinatown MONTE BANKS COMEDY “EAST IS WORST” 10c ALLSEAIS 10c
TPTI’O beginning sun. night next 1* |\ 11 1 |\H Twice Daily Thereafter * VJUIUII kJ Mats., 2:30; Nights, 8:30 ROMANCE, ADVENTURE AND IDEALISM STUPENDOUSLY BLENDED BY MASTER HANDS
I e Tho Groat Piy'turtr a* /'*st/ -■ ,1* S,s* l’ A*K,v if * .0 : ' (7 r Pura maun {'/Xl /nre .....
This Will Positively Be the Only Showing of This Picture in Indianapolis During the Season of 1923 and 1924 -
Accompanied by Special Symphony Orchestra of *0 Pieces PRlCES—Nlffhta, 50c to $1.50; Slat*., 500 to SI.OO, Plus 10% C. S. Tar. All Seats Reserved. 5,5^ TB n NOW SELLING—MaiI Orders Pilled In the Exact Order mt Their Rcoelpt.
unbeaten and mix well with a fork. Add milk slowly, beating constantly. The mixture should be quite moist, the bread crumbs will absorb quite a lot of milk. Pack mixture in a big iron spoon and push into a frying pan containing about one-fourth inch depth of hot fat* The mixture should be too moist to form into balls with the hands. Cook until brown on one side, turn and brown on the other side. Serve with tomato sauce. This is an excellent way to use up several kinds of meat.
“No, No, Nora” Your ear knows that this a hit when Eddie Cantor sings it and The Columbians . * fox-trot it across on Columbia Rec- * At Columbia Dealers VSa Colaafcia ) CnpbophtM 1 1 11,1 Compaay
MOTION PICTURES
Now Showing RICHARD BARTHELMESS HIS FINEST ROLE IN HIS BIGGEST PICTURE “THE FIGHTING BLADE” A Drama of Hearts and Swords NEXT SUNDAY THE GREATEST COMEDY DRAMA OF THE STAGE
Potash and' Perimutter
NOW MADE INTO A GREATER MOVIE
Potash and Perimutter
ALL THE HUMOR AND THRILL OF THE GREATEST CHARACTERS OF FICTION, BTAGE OR SCREEN HAS EVER KNOWN.
Potash and Perimutter'
WITH THE ORIGINAL STARS, A STYLE SHOW; A FOLLIES SHOW; D A2Z LI N G BEAUTIES; ALL THE STUFF THAT MAKES A PICTURE WONDERFUL
Potash and Ferimutter
If you liked it on the stage, don't miss It on the screen. Better, Bigger, Funnier Than Ever Before.
™ - ‘s. Potasn and Perlmutter
STARTS SUNDAY AT THE CIRCLE
Now in Its 30th Week at the Criterion Theater, New York City
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