Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 29, 1921, Page 11, Image 11

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JANUAKY 2!), mi.-
Drama Real Life
For Russian
; Sajis Lecturer
Denied .' Right to Exnr4
88
Selvcii Elsewhere, People Use
Stage for This Purpose, De
clares Former Official.
V
The former czar of Russia ceni
sored all dramas given in Russia,
according to Dr. Gregory Zilboorg,
who spoke before the Omaha Drama
1 I r. . tiTL.
league l iiudy aiKiuouu on inc
Moscow Art Theater."
The Russians, being denied the
rinht to express themselves in real
life, did so through the drama and
t lie stage, -he said.-iThis, in the
speaker s opinion, caused the Rus
sian theater to take on peculiar char
acteristics. It became the .veritable
"life of the people instead of mere
play. ' ,
'.'Under the guise of .drama, ,one
'fild cry, could protest,"' he said.
"The stage became the chief channel
culture ran . t
"Supcrindividualism kills .. art; we
ua .. :.. U. Af .. A. t
theater," said 'Dr.' Zilboorg. "This
. theater was instituted in 1898. It
r was passing 10 years ago. Today it
is only a reaumui mausoleum, a liv
ing monument of what we had.
1 rut... ..... u.... . u i c
it. It is to be studied and under-
stood, not imitated."
The Moscow theater was not re-
alistic in the sense of beinsr natural.
according to Dr. Zilboorg. , - ,
ivc nuuic tmnirs so simnip inai
, wc did not feel it was a theater," he
-' said. "It was natural in the sense
of not looking like a theater, but
' art rather than H physic! naturalism
Dr. Zilboorc was secretary to the
minister of labor under the Keren-
1 , .. - 1 '. I - c
i ne committee appoiniea to . receive
und. inform the Root commission
' froirf 'the United States concerninsr I
' conditions' in Russia.
f liartr-r Won't Aid
Salaries
Named
in Revised
City Document Remain
Same as Formerly.
Citv Commissioners W. G.' Lre,
R. Ni Towl and H. B. Zimman, the
committee named by Mayor Ed
Smith to take the revised city charter
lo the state legislature for considera-i
Commissioner Ure reported that
: the charter was unrevised so far as
tTie firemen and policemen were con
cerned. It left ftie muximum pay for
v ponceNat 13U :i niontn ana nremen s
pay at $100 to 5125, to be raised after
io mourns scrvvicc ai ine aiscretion
r .1.- :i r !. . tt
says the charter )iasbeen endorsed
real estate board.
Commis;iioner Zimman had hoped
to obtajrt. minimum 'wage for ponce'
of $15(Tafter three gears' -scrvke,
wjth no niaximum. .
The charter was delivered to Sen-
"And towns committee in the senate.
Commissioner Zimman gave hia
modifications to Robert Druciedow,
chairman of the c!tv and town rnm.
niitfee of the house, and says they
numbers.
Movie Theaters Will
Give to Relief Fund
Admissioli ices to Omaha mo
tion picture houses 'between 10 a.
m. and 1 p. m. today have, been
" changed. Matrons may , pay any
amount they wish, the receipts go
ing to ttfe fund to be used in feed
ing starving children of Europe. At
the Strand, Sun, Rialto, Moon and
Tirana, aun, kwiio. juoon ana
Muse no tickets wi.lt .be sold .during
Ik r T KeP.rfetsenlVVuS J, j
the Omaha committee of the Euro
pean Relief council will be in the
ticket offices. Special features have
been arranged for many vofthe
;theatefs.
E. J. Brandeis Home Is
Bought by Grain Man
' ; - . " 1 'r
' George Roberts, Omaha
grain!
irtan, has purChasea the Fairacres'
home of E. John Brandeis. He will
' take possession May 17
t- " The home was the first one built
in Fairacres. It was constructed by
George H. Payne, who mapped out
"the district. .
The consideration was -not given
out, but is said to have exceeded!
$100,000. ,
Two Firms Seek to Recover
Car Woman Would Retain
May-Zahn, Keystone Park, is ex
periencing difficulties in regaining
possession of an automobile which is
entangled in law procedure in munW
-ipal court before Judge A. i.. Bald
win. The car was . attached while
in storage by the O'Keefe . Real
Estate company, which claimed $275
unpaid commission. The Nebraska
Oldsinobile company also makes
claims on the car. :
Harry Zahn, husband of Mrs.
Zahn, ij being held by federal au
therities on charges of violating the
prohibition amendment. He v was
formerly in the postal service and
his shome, was' a. Meadow Grove,
. Neb. Mrs. Zahn has said for djvorce.
Moonshine Cases Increase
- 100 PeCent in Last 3 Months
As many liquor complaints have
been1 prepared for the federal grand
;..rv Htirin? November. December
and January as have gathered dur-J being charge of the Onaha c
-ine the six months prior to the lasffand Mr RooseyL ortsidmg
grand jury session in November,
Assistant United States Attorney
Uoyd Magney declared yesterday.
Federal grand jurygoes into ses
i s!on on February 2. -Every one of
the liquor complaints- to tie in
vestigated . concerns ' "moonshine
hisky or operation of stills,! xs
,Magney said.( .' ;
Bee Want Ads Are Beat Business
Getters- . , , . -
THE GUMPS
ma. KM. 'Set
VLL N XA THAT
wow po oO ue MOME
MoreTruth
By JAMES J.
y v ucce$$
Pnn Stt Unircnity has epend department of epokery for its male students.
Where is poor old Billy Brown .
Who spent four years in Yale, 1
And lernd to speak and think in Greek N.
And other languages antique, '
But never found out how to Seek -
The rather needful kale? , "
He's keeping books in Kokomo, ten hours every day, '
- ' And earning just about enough to keep the wolf away.
' Where is Jeremiah Green, the dear old Harvard Grad
A pallid grind who bent his mind ' "
On labors of , a bookish kind,
" But which were wholly undesigned
.His bank account to pad? . "
. He's private tutoring, a job that Jeremiah loathes,
And making just about enough to get his board and(clothes.
-Where-is Grover Cleveland White, who came from old Perm State,
v Where he made bread and pies instead, ' ) r
-Ot filling up his bullet head
With languages that have been dead '
Since Greece and Rome were great? s ,. . ,
He's chef f big at the Hotel Riche a -cuisine engineer 1 (
And drawing for his services ten thousand' bucks a year. .
- BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
If the Chicago Opera Company would put MarjGarden and Dorothy
Jardop on the Btage and let , 'em talk it out, it wouldn't have to be
financed so often by Chicago millionaires. .
', - . JUST THE GUY
If it iireally important to have As secretary of war a man who has
never been connected with the" army, why not appoint Jack Dempsey?
, WHAT'S THE DIFF? ' Y
We do not believe that the disclosures of crookedness in base ball
will keep away the crowds next year- People still, throng .towxestling
matches, don't thev?. . . t-.-. . .'. :. "u-i'P
(Copyright. 1921, By the
Common Sense
By J. J. MUNDY. 'r
Cash in on Your" BriJJL -When
a statement is madwto you
how much of ft do you take in and
comprehend without asking to have
it repeated?'
Do you get just a few words
which seem to stand out and lose the
connection entirely? .. ' - j
jjo you una inai oniy ine last iew
words are impressed otiyour mind?
There are some persons who can't
be told as simple a thing as the time
of day without asking two or .three
times to see whether Jt is so many
minutes before or after the hour.
Do you open your mind wide
when when you are spoken to or do
ou clff the ,id on the dooff
brain ater locki it t Jour.
self to push the informion through
to the place where it must go before
you can use it? . ;
You have heard : persons . shake
their heads and say "rooms to rent
vp there." '
But it is not nearly as funny as
it is intended.
It is a fact that most of us hav?
rooms in our' brains which might
better be rented, as the saying goes,
than to have thent shrivel -no and
srrow together because they arc
never used. ,
Get some -Interest on . your gray
matter. .
Dotft let a lot of valuable infor
mation get away because you shut
your ciind instead of opening it.
(CopTrlfht, 1?SV International Feature
Service, Ine.) , .
Parents Problems
Should a girl of 12 be allowed
to spend as many as three or four k,.
evenings a week withj(ricnds, away
from home? ,
No, decidedly" fWt. Only as a
great and rare treat should a little
girl of that age be allowed to be
away frpm her own home In ' the
evening. ' The brief hours . before
her bed-time ( nine o'clock) are best
spent with father, mother, and 4he
rest of the family at home, reading,
or playing a jolly game. Keep the
children at ho,me; to do it happily
make home attractive.
Two Vice Presidents
- . T Meet in Baltimore
Harry S. Byrne, vice president,
will -meet Franklin D. Roosevelt,
vice president, in Baltimore next
week, f . 'H - --.'"
It happens that they-are vice presi
dents of the Fidelity aid Deposit
Company of Maryland. Mr. Byrne
being in charge of the Omaha offices
1.
ana Air. Rooseveit presiding over
the New York offices.'
. This is the same Mr. Roosevelt,
who was not elected vice president
of- the United States last November.
Mr. Byrne will leave Saturday
night -to attend a meeting oi officers
and general agents of his company.
He will visit New' York during his
eastern sojourn. . -
Bee-Want Ads Are Best Business
Getters. , "
ii ii ! i i i 1 1 1 j
" I r i I I " . . ; w. i , tv - I J II
FO NOV-
Than Poetry
MONTAGUE
Bell Syndicate. Inc.)
WHY
Is a "Chancellor" So Named?
Even when we find that the title
"Chancellor" is derived from the
Latin cancellus, a grating which is
also the root-word of our verb, "to
cancel" it is still puzzling to trace
the connection between a lattice
work- and the office of lord high
chancellor or the chancellor of the
exchequer. But the application of
the name and the gradual evolution
of the office came about in this
maner:
Originally, in the Roman empire, a
"chancellor" wasa petty officer sta
tioned at the fence or lattice-work
of a law. court in order to see that
unauthorized persons did net pass
this boundary line. The Emperor
Carinus. the immediate predecessor
of Diocletian, caused a great deat of
adverse criticism throughout the
empire by appointing a "chancellor"
to office, of prefect of Rome.
Later, in the eastern empire, a
"chancellor" was a secretary who sat
inside the lattice-work and who was
hlso invested with, judicial functions.
snd, .ultimately, with the work of
overseering the other officers of the
empire. From this high dignity to
that of an ' English lord chanceltor
Is only'a simple step, but it isinter
esting to note that throughout this
entire process pi evolution, the name
gained from thes proximity tef the
lattice-bars of the court should have
persisted to the present day.
(Copyright. 1K8, by the Wheeler Svndl
. . t cate. Inc.) V
Romance in' Origin
Of s upersbtions
" May and June Marriages.
The idea that it is unlucky to be
married in May is not so prevalent
as it was formerly, but the supersti
tion still lingers.. We get it from
the . Romans. , Ovid mention? it as
being a vuigar superstition in. his
day. The Romans apparently got i
from the Greeks and brought it with
them to Britain, whence we inherit
it ' l shows how a train, of super
stitious thought once set going wi'.l
persist through .the ages.
The curious thing about this
superstition i that it should evef
have originated; for the month ot
May in ancient times was dedicated
to the goddess Maia, the mother of
Mercury and the goddess of growth
and increase.
The popularity of June as a month
for marriage is. likewise inherited
from the Greeks and Romans for
the goddess Juno, to- whom the
month was dedicated, was the spe
cial patroness of marriage, Perhaps,
the discrimiation between May and
June had its "origin in the fact that
while Juno was the lawful wife of
Jupiter Maia wis only Jiipiter's
"affinity." 7 ' V
(Copyrlthtr HSl, by the McClure KeJre
... paper Syndicate.)
A ' decorative shield, t easily " re
moved, has been I invented for, ex
cluding dust from telephone mouth
pieces, j '
V THE OWWCRSC IN viT" T-A TTX
POOR ANDY,
vm PA.MVI ihlfc ucrt AnfN I V OU- "' . "Y. lc UOWE
r lVE". TBC . ' v . '
)EPY-TIME TALES
THE TALE OF
GRANDFAM
Mil 9.
CHAPTER VI. ' - ,
t A Hearty Eater. ; -
A great eater was Grandfather
Mole. And having an enormous
appeitehe was .fortunate in being
expert at finding angleworms..
To be sure, he had one advantage
that the birds, for instance. d;dn't
"Wig. certainlg! CerHinly! said,
Grandfather Molsr .
cnjoy:.he was able to prowl about
his galleries through the ground and
find the angleworms right- where
they lived. He didn't need to wait
as- the birds did until an angle
worm stuck his head above ground.
Mrs. Jolly Robin had often wished
when she was trying to feed k
rapidly, growing family that she
could hunt for" angleworms as
Grandfather Mole -did. And this
summer it seemed to her that she
never would be able to take proper
care of her nestful of children.
There , was one of her family- in
particular that was especially greedy,
Mrs. Robm had begun to-' suspect
that he was no child of hers, but
a young Crowbird. Almost as
soon as she had finished building
her nest she had discovered a strange
looking egg there. It had been the
first to hatch. And now the
youngster that came from it was
just enough older than the rest of
her children .to jostle them, and to
grab the biggest worms for him
self. y
It was no wonder that Mrs. Robin
needed help. And seeing Grand
father Mole one morning, she ex
plained her Uilriculty to him, asking
if he wouldn't be so kifld as to cap
ture angleworms for her. v
"Why, certainly! Certainly!" said
Grandfather ' Mole." . '
And Mrs.. Robin breathed a sigfi
of releif.- She felt that her troubles
were ended.. '.. '
"Will you. begin to helpme at
bnce?" she asked Grandfather Mole
Vl'm sorry that I can't do that,"
he told .her. -; ''You see, I haven't
had mj'. breakfast yet. So of course
I must catch a few angleworms-for
myself.'" ;t ,
Mrs. Robin was 'a bit disappointed.
But she told Grandfather Mole that
it was-all right that she knew a
person of his age ought not to go
without his. breakfast. "
So . Grandfather Mole went back
into the hole through which he had
lately : come up, first saying, how
ever, that he would return after he
had breakfasted.
. Mrs. Robin then set to work her
self, to' find what she could to feed
her clamoring, family. Though she
hurried as fast as she could, by the
time the morning. was almost half
gone her children were still hungry;
and to Mrs. Robin's distress Grand
father Mole had not yet showed
himself again.--
Mrs. . Robins had been watching
for him. And she had bout givcli
him up in despair7Whenll at once
he rose out of the ground.
"Good 1" she cried. "Now you
can help me, for you must have had
your breakfast by this time."
"Yes, I have!" said Grandfather
Mole. "IVe just .finished. But I
always begin my luncheon at this
hour. So if ypu don't mind I'll go
down into my galleries and hunt
for a. few angleworms; and when
I've had a good meal I'll come back
here.1'
Well, what could Mrs. Robin say?
She nodded her head; and she
Jjoped, as Grandfather Mole van
ished, that perhaps he would eat
only a light lunslieon.
But he never reappeared until mid
afternoon. And since he announced
then that he was ready to begin his
dinner Mrs. Jolly Robin saw that
she could expect no help from him
whatsoever. '
She was terribly upset. But there
was nothing she could do execpt to
tell herhusband that he would have
to spend all his time catching angle
worms for the family. , And" since
he waj glad enough to do that, Mrs.
Robin, managed tp feed her children
all they needed. Even the young
Crowbird in her nest had all he
wanted.
cAnd Mrs. .Robin remarked that it
was lucky her husband hadn't such
a terrible appetite as some people's
meaning Grandfather Mole's, of
course. .
(Copyright, Qrossot ft Dunlap.)
5LE
POOR MIN
HOLDING A HUSBAND
Adele Garrison's New Phase of j :
" Revelations of a Wife s;
"The Third Great Adventure'" Lil
lian Explains What it Is. -
- "Now," said Lillian from her seat
beside me in the car my father had
given me," now for the third great
adventurel" ''
"Why third ?"v I spoke without
turning-"my head, for if I have
learned no other lesson in motoring,
I have mastered the rule which
keeps a driver's eyes on the road in
front,, especially through village
strects.,.
"Because there are three," she re
torted, "Death, Marriage and House
Hunting, and to judge from the little
pieces you see standing in. the papers
nowadays, the greatest of these is
house hunting." V
"You sound discouraging," I Said
disconsolately.
' "I don't mean to," she returned)
quickly, "but I do "want to prepare
you just a" little for the. conditions
you are apt to meet. Now that we're
out of the village on the country
road, drive as slowly as'you can, and
give me those clippings I put in your
hands this morning. Did you look
them oyer?"
' I shifted my grip of the wheel so
that I could -manage it with my left
hand,- inserted " my right in the
pocket of my motor coat, and drew
out the long, flat purse which I take
with me when driving.
"Just look through that," I said,
holdingrtoward her. "I looked at
most of them. There are two attrac
tive ones advertised by Jones of
Hempstead."
No Improvements, But
I felt her take it from my hand,
and it was but a minute later before
she said briskly:
'have them. Suppose I . read
each slowly. Will-It distuprb- you?"
"Not -a bit. I can talk or listen all
day, ju,st so I'm not asked to look
aroundi" "
' "Don't lose any sleep about- my
asking you to look around." Lillian
commented dryly, "If there's any
thing that makes me break an avia
tion altitude record itjs to sec one
of these would-be demon drivers
with eyes traveling anywhere but
where they should be. But listen to
this:- . 1
" " 'For Sale. Fine acre property on
one of the best residence ""streets of
Hempstead. Old colonial 1 farm
house type; no improvements, . but
easy to remodel.' Fine shade trees
and shrubs. Large, open space suit
able for tennis court and gardens.
Five minutes from station.' "
f'l wonder if that , five minutes
means on foot or by fast motor," I
observed with a cynicism horn of
reading our leading American hum
orists, who have educated the pub
lic pretty generally as to the h'dden
snairs in real estate advertisements.
"Motor, of course," .Lillian an-
AMCSEMEXTS.
EMPRESS
LAST
TIMES
TODAY
SPECIAL MATINEE
TODAY
From 11 A. M. to 2 P. M.
for
STARVING CHILDREN OF EUROPE
All Proceed to Go to European
Relief Council
PERRONE & OLIVER
Presenting "A Song Symphony"
PRINCETON & WATSON
' ( In "Brownderby ville"
1 MILLARD BROTHERS '
"Village Cu'tupa"
BUCH BROTHERS
"The Ship Ahoy Boya"
Photoplay Attraction
"Milestonea"
Century Comedy 1 ' : '"'
LAST TWO TIMES "
MATINEE TODAY 2:15
EARLY CURTAIN
TONIGHT AT 8:15
MISS KITTY GORDON"
JACK WILSON
Dale A Burch; Bigelow eV Clinton; Hu
bert Dyer; Murray Girls; Garcinetti
Bros.; ' Topics of the Day; Kinorrams.
Matinee ISc to 50c. Some at 75c; $1
Saturday and Sunday. Nights, 15c to
11.25. I
A TONIGHT
ZJ . Last Time
Henry B.Wa.tha:iHuH)
And Hia Superior Company
Aet'&mdy" "WOULD YOU"
Prices SOc, 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00
"OMAHA'S FUN CENTER"
5r''Sf Nltes, 2Se to
fNltes,
$1.25
JAMES E. COOPER Preunts
Tii nrcT cunui m tauju m-i
ii w atav vis vn tn I V it ll
Burletk
With FRANK HUNTER,
A Capable Cait anil a
Big Bctuty Chortll. It's a Rlppla', Plpsla,
Rol-
llokla' Rsvoe.
LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS
IHIr-V .1"
A A A I &
tob OV
K CHAKCE. Mi LAV
swered. "What else, do yon expect?"
"Nothing'," . I replied truthfully.
!So improvements. 1 hat s'.bad, but;
if i the place , is possible tve could
(tamp out thfs summer if it. were re
modelled to our fancy in time for us
to live comfortably this wiuter. It
sounds most -attractive.' I think
we'll take a look at that."
"Here's another one advertised Jby
the same man," she went on. "This
sounds too good to be true. . .
"'Wonderful tyrie of old colonial
manor house, with all modern im
provements. Immense old fireplaces,
beamed ceilings, large plot.' '
"That probably means about 75
feet front, but sometimes they really
tell the truth. , It. might mean large
grounds at " that. At any rate, we
tan snatch a glimpse of it from the
outside even if we tlon't want to go
in." I 1
"I warn you I'm, going into every
house we look at today," I answered.
"Sometimes the ynqst unpromising
exteriors hide wonderful possibilities."-
- v-r", ' 'I. - -
""You're an incurable romanticist,
aren't you, my dear?" Lillian quer
ied mockingly,i -but there was tender
ness in her amusement, and I was
not -in the least disturbed by it.
"I admit it," I laughed.
' "You glory in it, you mean," She
retorted. "But aren't we almost in
Hempstead?" -
"Right around this curve in the
road," I said,, "we'll see the outskirts
of the village. But I haven't the
slightest idea where this man Jones
is to be found." . . '
"Near the railroad station," Lil
lian rejoinetf practically. "You never
saw a real estate office in your life
which vasn't-o near the station that
the agent could- sit behind his win
dow and see prospective purchasers
alight from the train." "
"To the railroad station we go
then," I laughed, guiding the ma
chine into the long, beautiful road
which led toward the station.
"There '. .What did I tell you?;'
Lillian crowed, as we reached ft.
Across the street was the sign,
"Jones & Bisgood, Real Estate
and Insurance."
(Continued Monday.)
Where It Started
Carpets were not originally intend
ed for use on floors. The word "car
pet" means simply a heavy cloth; it
is defined' m a dictionary dated 1727
as "a covering for tables, trunks, etc.,
and occasionally for floors." Its use
as a floor covering came from the
custom of laying down cloths for
pcopl of royalty 'to. walk on, as a
symbol of respect. . '
(Copyright, 120, Wheeler Syndicate, InV.)
FlfOTOFLAYS.
STARTING
ZANE
GREYS
mightiest melodrama
the world
hM ever
known
With ROY STEWART
MARGUERITE DE LA M0TTE
JOSEPH DOWLING
KATHLYN WILLIAMS
' v ROBERT McKIM v
The World9 s Greatest Cast
Prologue by Roland's
v Metropolitan Quartette y
Drawn for The Bee by Sidney Smith.
Copyright, 1921. Ctiicmin Tribune Company
&.,ir IC Vrtll UAh C.l
. . ,tv , r- . j. . . . A
VsOVU?rVT GIVE IT
Dog Hill Paragrafs
.. By George Bingham
Columbus Allsop's chimney, is
againv leaning. He propped it up
good last fall and thought it would
Stay that way through the winter,
but he has had a whole lot of com
pany this winter and the' straiu has
been' too great on it. 1
Sile Kildew looked into a cistern
this morning and talked back at
himself until he almost got mad.
Cricket Hicks continues to gain
renown as a footraccr, and by
spring he herpes to be able to chal
lenge any swarm of yellow jackets
in the neighborhood.
Copyright, 1,921, fleorge Matthew Adama.
I'M THE GUY
I'M THE GUY; who fights with
his wife in public. s.
Yon would fight, too, if you had
my wife. She is always loking for
trouBle, and her specialty is to Avait
till she's in a crowd taiiiull some
thing. '
If I let her get away with, it,
there'd be , no .standing" her.
Nf matter -what I sav or do, she
wants to let the world know what
she thinks of it. She w'ants the last
word, and nothing stops her from
trying to get it.
So gently but firmly I have to
put her in her place.1 I'm thejiead
of my house, and I'm not going to
permit anybody to rule inony place.
I've told my wife to be seen and
not heard. Women oueht to be like
children in that respect, I j figure.
Now it's none of your business if
I choose to deal firmly with my wife
in public. It's too bad, if it upsets
you. -Take
yourself away where you
won't hear it.
People who attend to their own
affairs have no, time to bother with
other folks' troubles.
PHOTOflW'S.
TODAY
aw n
Jewel. Flower, Color
Symbols for Today
By MILDRED MARSHALL.
The talisituuic gem for today I
the emerald, which oi. this occusioii
is most potent in bringiii to those
who have passed middle ago a re
juvenation of spirits and reawaken
ing of love. .
The natal stone for today is the
topaz, which, freeing its wearer front
the effects of old frars and past tin
happiness, aids in restoring the
happiness of. youth. , ,
The color for today, det-p green,
is also significafft for today, deep
green, is also"" significant for thoso
who refuse to welcome old age,
since it is symbolic of spring- and
new growth.
Today's ilowt-r iS the jasmine,
potent in creating an 'atmosphere or
peace, affectionate comradeship and
beauty. , , .
(Copyright. 12 Whoolir Syndicate. Ine. I
PHOTOPLAYS.
Now Playing
'Hiimoresqut,'
r-
" The Most Wonderful
Picture in the World!
Srst ' Showing in
naha With Music
SPECIAL
ORCHESTRA
"1
Loges May Be Reserved
No Advance in Prices
LAST TIMES TODAY
v Douglas MacLean -
in
"The Bookie's Return"
v COMING
Sunday and All Next Week,
OTIS SKINNER
in
"KISMET"
m tMF" V M a
. LI LA LEE
LOIS WILSON
JACK HOLT
CONRAD NAGEL
"fttymmer
Madness"
LAST TIMES TODAY
TOMORROW
VIOLA DANA
High Class'
DANCING X;AFE
DANCING MATINEE
TODAY
Admission 25c
Private Dancing Lessons
by Appointment S
I
OEATTY'S
Co-Operative
Cafeterias
Pay Dividend to Thsaa
Who Do tha Work
a 1 VI "!
1 W Qk Til T
XV
ll '
4aV km
IrfiMU ...
lEiP'MSs!
I Rusftk Garden !