The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, May 21, 1922, SECTION FOUR, Page 7, Image 63

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    THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, MAT 21, 1923
7
"POTASH AND PERLMUTTER"
BACK ON NEW YORK STAGE
Barney Bernard Is Abe and Alexander Carr Plays Mawrusa in Clever
Comedy Making Hit With Gotham Audiences.
ft 'Stl
it, n n
mmm
s? .sit . '
BY ELIZABETH LONERGAN.
NEW YORK, May 20. (Special.)
Our friends -"Potash" and
"Perlmutter" ar with us once
more, much to the delight of New
York theatergoers. The new vehicle,
"Partners Again," is playing at the
Selwyn theater, and the authors, Mon
tague Glass and Jules Eckert Good
man, the Portland favorite, have lived
up to their past successes.
Barney Barnard is again Abe Pot
ash, while Alexander Carr is once
more Mawruss Perlmutter. Other ex
members of "Potash and Perlmutter"
casts that I recall are Lee Kofclmer
and James Spottswood.
We have seen "Abe" and "Maw
russ" In various spheres in life, from
"society" to "movies," but the present
offering deals with what happens to
them when they go into the automo
bile business.
Our heroes start In to promote a
car which apparently has excellent
prospects, but It develops that it is
nothing more nor less than a fake
stock-selling proposition, and as sev
eral hundred thousand dollars' worth
of stock has been sold, Abe and Maw
russ face a trip to Atlanta and an
indefinite stay there as guests of the
government. This situation, of course,
is productive of much laughter, not
the least of which is Mawruss's ob
servation that as the meat packers
have been able to obtain delays, per
haps before they are brought to trial
their youngest children may be grand
fathers. Abe has an interesting theory con
cerning the distribution of passengers
in an auto, i. e., to seat the fat cnes
In front with the driver, while Maw
russ's opinion of Abe is Illuminating,
"My partner may be a lunatic and a
damned fool." declares Perlmutter,
"but he's got a heart like a water
melon."
The whole show 's one succession
of hearty laughs, highly disconcert
ting to fat gentlemen whose buttons
are not sewed on securely. The sup
porting cast, which includes Adele
Holland, Lee Kohlmer, James Spotts
wood, Jennie Moscovitz and Edwin
Mo r daunt, do full justice to their
roles.
The Theater Guild, having finished
Its presentation of George Bernard
Shaw's "Back to Methuselah" at the
Garrick theater, is now showing
"What the People Want" at the same
playhouse.
Our old friend Arnold Bennett is
responsible for the plot, which deals
with the conflict of intellectual cul
ture against a personality who pos
sesses, in addition to wealth and
power, a colossal ignorance.
The play gets jts title from the
fact that the central character. Sir
Charles Morgan, has achieved wealth
and power by printing in his numer
ous publications, "what the people
want," which, from his success seems
to be chiefly scandal. He is never
able to understand the prejudice
which cultured people feel against
him, although he aids the little
theater movement because he ap
proves of its commercial possibilities.
The g'rl to whom he is engaged is an
Intellectual," and of course Sir
Charles gives her up rather than sup
press the articles in one of his papers
tr -T frA
i urn.,? i - ;s ir
r
to which she and her family have
objected. It is the centuries-old con
flict between culture and ignorance,
and makes excellent drama.
We viewed another version of the
eternal triangle this week at the
Greenwich Village theater, where
"Creditors," by August Strindberg,
translated by Edwin Bjorkman, is
shown. It is a three-character play,
with certain elements, but a very
morbid climax.
The heroine Thekla, played by El
len van Volkenberg, is a very fickle
wife, who falls in love with Adolph
(Maurice Browne), while Gustav, her
husband (Reginald Pole), is Jiway
from home. Gustav returns heme,
finds out the true condition of af
fairs and a divorce results. Thekla
marries Adolph, and writes a novel
holding Gustav up to ridicule. The
divorced husband becomes a second
Iago, doing his utmost to punish
Thekla. This he does by making the
new husband distrust his wife, and
at the same time succeeds in win
ning back Thekla's love. This results
in Adolph overhearing a conversation
between Thekla and Gustav. The
realization that his wife still cares
for her ex-husband causes him to fall
dead. The wife is heartbroken. She
not only loves him, but Adolph as
well.
The annual show of the Actors'
Equity association, which will be held
at the Metropolitan Opera house next
Sunday, includes a satirical sketch by
Ralph Stuart, entitled "This Is a
Tough Season," in which will appear
actors from a number of the most
successful shows on Broadway, in
cluding "Back to Methuselah," "The
Hairy Ape," "Captain Applejack," "He
Who Gets Slapped," "The Czarina,"
"The Demi - Virgin," and "Anna
Christie."
to drop the ault after the first lead
md endeavor to get the lead to one's
partner that it may be continued by
him through the possible queen' or
Jack, or both, in the hand of the de
clarant. To this end. If one lacks
any definite knowledge as to the
partner's suit, the best lead generally
Is a lead through broken strength in
the hand of dummy.
It would be a poor partner, indeed,
who would fail to get correct infer
ences from a shift of this nature and
neglect to return the suit first led
as soon as obtaining a lead. '
To be sure, if the suit were so
long as to make it seem apparent that
the lead of the remaining commanding-
cards would fully establish the
suit, the player himself should con
tinue. ' From the combination, ace, queen,
jeck, etc. (three honors), ace, fol
lowed by queen in the hope to force
the fcing and at once establish the
suit, is the correct lead if one has
re-entry in some other suit. Lacking
re-entry and therefore dependent
upon, one's partner to put one again
in the lead, queen should first be
led. If this forces the king, as it
frequently does, but one card of the
suit has been played by one's partner,
and he is generally In position to re
turn the suit as soon as himself
securing a lead.
As all players of experience know,
situations often develop which no
rule seems to cover, and which call
for Individual judgment and common
sense correctly to meet. When a hand
Is in process of play, developments
are often of help in enabling one to
solve the difficulty, but when, as in
the hand which appears below, the
game has not yet started, it is often
dependent upon chance as to whether
or not one hits upon the best ex
pedient: , Q J 10 8 6
74
A 10 8
10 9
a lead from his three-card club suit
containing a minor tenace, at
Trick 6 he puts the dummy in the
lead with the ace of diamonds, and at ;
Trick 7 leads dummy's queen of I
hearts. B again holds up the king. '
Onppn wirta and la nllfiTOari at I
Trick 8 with a small heart, to which
B. per force, puts up king and de
clarant the ace. Declarant is now
compelled to lead his clubs. A wins
the first round with the 10, and at
Trick 10 leads a small diamond,
which he knows will force a trump
and compel another lead in clubs. It
turns out as he expected, and he
makes three tricks In clubs.
B's play throughout showed excel
lent judgment, but I should not wish
it understood that such play would
always, or often, be right. It was
the developments which in this case
made his play Bound, which, in fact,
would have made any other play ex
ceedingly bad.
The player who, knowing rules,
knows when to depart from them and
shapes his play according to develop
ments and disclosures from dummy, is
the player who will not go far wrong
in his play.
Tfeltet Joke IEver Heard
Hayes' Mexican Policy
Viewed by Historian.
Contrast With Present Attttnde Is
Declared Pertinent.
C( k RTHUS," said a young artist
to a friend, "do you see tuat
" couple looking at my picture
and talking in such low, earnest
tones?"
"Yes," replied the friend.
"I wish you would saunter by and
find out what they are saying. It
looks like business."
The friend returned quickly and
said, "She is calling him down for
staying out late last night." H. M.
84 T K93
AQ10 8 A B 9 6 3 2
7432 Z QJ9
8 7 5 K63
A7 2
KJ6
K6
A Q J 4 2
Z, the dealer, bids a spade and holds
the bidV ' A is the player to lead.
With the many excellent rules gov
erning the original lead, it would
seem one should never be in doubt
regarding a lead; yet even on this
point rules at times seem Inapplica
ble. A holds two four-card suits, but
both are undesirable suits to open,
the one because of its exceeding
weakness, the other because it con
tains that worst of all combinations
to lead from, a tenace more par
ticularly a tenace double, the best,
third best and fifth best cards of
the suit. -
A singleton lead would solve the
difficulty, but the hand does not
contain a singleton. A doubleton lead,
the lead of a two-card suit, though
advocated by some players, is not as
a rule a desirable lead, as by the
time the player's two cards have
been played and he would be in a
position to ruff In more cases than
not he has been led out of trumps
and the lead accomplishes nothing.
Viewed in all its phases, however,
the dobleton lead in this particular
hand seems the best available lead,
or, to put it somewhat differently,
it seems the lead to which the fewest
objections can be offered. The'player,
therefore, leads the higher of his two
hearts, the 6. The play went as fol
lows:
Trick. A Y B Z
1 6 10 K A
2 2 A 9 5
3... S 10 K A4
4 7 9 3 Q
5. 8 4 6 J
6 3 6 J K
7 4 JV 3 7V
8 44 8 Q 2
9 7 Q 9 2
10 8 8 2 6
11 10 EV 3 J
12 Q 10 5 K
13 A 7 9 4
Denotes winner of trick.
IOWA CITY, la., May 20. Compari
son of the Hayes policy relative to
recognition of Porfirip Diaz with that
recently adopted by the United States
relative to the recognition of Obre
gbn "is pertinent and interesting,"
Professor OharleB W. Hacfcett of the
University of Texas, Austin, Tex.,
told the Mississippi Valley Historical
association at its meeting here. The
Hayes policy, he pointed out, was for
mulated on the only occasion between
the close of the American civil war
and 1911, when the United States had
to consider the recognition of a Mex
ican government.
The announcement by the state de
partment in 1877 of its Mexican policy
for fairness and lucidity may be
considered a classic among American
diplomatic papers,' .froiessor aacK
ett said. . -
Mexico was assured at this time
that the United States was in no
wise Interested in passing upon the
legality or illegality of the Diaz or
any other government in Mexico, but
was content to know that such gov
ernment was stable and in reality
the de facto government of the
country.
However, the United States did
concern itself with the rights of its
citizens and the protection of its ter
ritory and insisted upon some guar
antee for the preservation of peace
and the protection of life and prop
erty along the border as precedent to
recognition. Diaz insisted, pleading
grounds of self-respect, that any con
dition precedent to recognition should
not be made. On April 11, 1878, the
Hayes administration receded from
its original position in demanding a
treaty as precedent to recognition
and through Ambassador Poster for
mally recognized Diaz as the de
facto and constitutional president of
Mexico.
"From that date until the assump
tion of executive authority by Madero
in 1911, as a result of a revolution,
the succession of Mexico was peace
ful and constitutional. The policy
adopted by the Hayes administration
may, therefore, be taken as the pol
icy of the United States with regard
to the recognition of Mexican gov
ernments between the years 1878 and
1911."
-q
Aue
BY ANNIE BLANCHE SHELBY.
THE leads at a no-trump declara
tion differ materially from those
at a trump declaration. A mo
ment's consideration will make the
reason fully apparent. At a trump
declaration the adversaries' control
ling motive is to make their high
cards early before the declarant gets
a chance to make discards and per
haps be in position to trump their
good cards when the attempt is made
later to make them'
At a no-trump declaration one suit
Is as good as another, so far as trick
winning properties are concerned, and
the player, be he adversary or de
clarant, who secures the lead after a
suit is established makes every card
remaining of the suit. In order, there
fore, the sooner to establish a suit
one plays a backward game, holding
up high or commanding cards (un
less the suit be exceptionally strong)
until it becomes established.
As an established, or nearly estab
lished, suit at the start is, however,
the exception rather than the rule,
the most common lead at a no-trump
declaration is the fourth best card
of one's suit. Many players seem to
be of the impression that a fourth
best should always be led at a no
trump declaration, but this is erron
eous. When one's suit is very strong,
either established or nearly so, not
the fourth best, but a high card,
should be led from the suit. Take, for
instance, a suit of four more cards
headed by ace, king and queen. The
lead of fourth best from a combina
tion of this nature would be utterly
absurd. King should be led just as
it would be at a trump declaration.
then aueen and then ace. By this
lime the small card or cards of the
ult are generally good and every
card or the suit makes.
The rules governing the lead at a
no-trump declaration are as follows:
Lead a high card (generally the
same high card that would be led
were it a trump declaration) when
the suit contains three honors, at
least two of them in sequence.
Lead a high card when the suit
is exceptionally long, containing
se'-i or more cards, and it would
Z-Y make a grand slam, and the
question naturally arises, "What is
the difficulty? Is it owing to the
doubleton lead? Would it not have
been better had A in reality led his
ace of clubs and thus saved one
trick at least?"
The trouble, however, is not re
garding the lead, but it lies solely
and entirely with the leader s part
ner, B. He, unfortunately, was one
of those inelastic players, who, know
ing a few rules, are unable to detect
the times when they are for more
honored in the breach than the ob
servance.
Z played his hand well; on this
point there can be no doubt. B,
however, had it in his power seriously
to handicap him, and not only to
save a grand slam, but to save three
tricks to the side.
Properly played, the hand should
go thus:
Trick.
be a high card lead 'at a trump dec
laration. When the suit does not conform to
one or the other of the above named
requirements lead a fourth best card,
counting from the highest down.
Lead the highest card one holds oi
the suit which the partner may have
bid when it seems desirable to lead
his suit rather than one's own. The
choice depends usually upon the
strength of one's own suit. If it be
established or it seems likely one
round will establish it, it is often
well first to lead one's own suit;
lacking this amount of strength, to
lead one's partner's.
The following combinations call for
the lead of a high card at a no
trump declaration:
Ace, king, queen, jack, with or
without others.
Ace, king, queen, with one or more
smaller cards.
Ace, king, jack, with one or more
small.
Ace, king, 10, with one or more
small.
Ace, queen, jack, with one or more
others.
Ace, queen, or ace, jack, with five
or more smaller cards.
Ace, with seven or more small
cards.
King, queen and five or more
smaller cards.
King, queen, jack, with one or
more small.
King, queen, 10, with one or more
small.
Queen, jack, 10, or queen; jack, 9,
with one or more small.-
Jack, 10, 9, with one or more small.
King, jack, 10, with one or more
small.
Ten, 9, 8. with one or more small.
If the student will carefuly review
the above combinations, he will see
that the lead of a high card in each
case conforms to one or the other
of the above named requirements;
either the suit contains three honors,
two of them in sequence, or it con-
I tains seven or more cards and is so
made up as that It would call for a
high-card lead at a trump.
From the combinations, ace, king.
jakc, or ace, king, 10, it is usually
best, In case the intermediate card,
queen or jack, as the case may be
is not with dummy sufficiently
guarded as to win a trick in the suit,
A Y B Z
6 10 3 2
5 10 3 2
7 9 6 4
2 6 9 K
8 4 K A
3 A J4 b
4 Q 9 7
8 B K AO
10 7 2 6
4 84 Q J
Q 8 3 J
A JV 5 K
74 104 94 Q
Denotes winner of trick.
A, as before, leads the higher of his
two-card heart suit, the 6, and Y, as
before, puts up the 10. B, however,
instead of playing the king, which
he can but know will fall to the ace
and fully establish the suit in the
hand of dummy, this player at the
same time holding re-entry, should
play a low card. In thus playing
he departs from two time-honored
rules, one to play a high card third
in hand, the other to cover an honor
with an honor. Blindly to follow rule
in this case would, however, he real
izes, but work to the advantage of
the declarant, so he uses judgment
and departs therefrom. By the rule
of eleven he knows his partner's lead
is not from a long suit, but rather
that it represents a short suit.
Whether or not it is a singleton he
cannot definitely say. The ace, how
ever, he knows, is with declarant, as
it A had held the ace he would have
led it. It therefore becomes B's pol
icy to withhold the king as long as
possible in the hope thus to prevent
dummy's suit from becoming estab
lished while there remains the chance
of its being brought in through the
aid of his re-entry card.
Trick 2 Dummy, who has won the
previous trick with the heart 10,
leads the 10 of spades, trumps. To
this trick also B fails to cover, as to
do so, he sees, would but make it all
the easier for the declarant, and to
hamper him, not to assist him, is his
aim. (Whether or not B puts up the
king to this trick does not affect
the result, simply the order or play.)
B's strategic play has already been
attained in his failure to play the
heart king to his partner's lead.
Trick 3 Dummy leads the 9 of
spades, which also holds the trick. At
Trick 4 he leads a small diamond,
declarant gets in the lead with the
king, and at
Trick 5 leads the ace of trumps,
dropping B's king. Dummy's suit,
however, is not established, and the
situation is very different from what
it was in the hand as first played.
Wishing: to defer as long as possible
Mummified Body of Fat
Man Now on Exhibition.
Early Resident of Philadelphia
Becomes Rare Example of AdU
pocere.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 20. The
mummified body of a fat man, an
eaily resident of Philadelphia, is be
ing preserved at the Wistar Institute
of Anatomy and Biology as a rare
example of adipocere, a substance
which Is a soft, waxy mass resembling
soap. According to officials, the man
was Wilhelm Von Ellenberger, who
lived In the citv when it was the caD-
ltal of the United States and George
Washington was president. In 1792
Von Ellenberger fell victim to the
yellow fever plague and was burled
in Potter's field, then on the outskirts
of the city. Many years of burial in
the moist soil of the field gradually
converted the body into an adipocere
mummy, and when the field was
turned into a public square the body
was exhumed by workmen and identified.
Dr. Henry H. Donaldson of the Wis
tar institute staff said recently that
the mummified condition, while not
common, sometimes occurs when
many bodies are buried together and
that the specimen, while not unique,
is unusually good."
The mummies of three Egyptians
which occupy a place at the institute
with Von Ellenberger are not as well
preserved as thd latter. This was
accounted for in that they were dried
while being mummified and the tis
sues shrunk.
Did He Change His MIndf
A caddy at the club, ordinarily quite
normal in his speech, was apt to stam
mer badly if excited or surprised.
One day he was caddying for a well
known player, who, arriving at the
seventh hole, a particularly difficult
one, remarked, "I did this hole in
three the other day."
"What?" said the caddy. "Well,
sir, all I can say is that you are a
1-1-1 "
"Steady, boy, steady." interrupted
the player, in a reproving voice.
i ou re a 1-1-ucky man. sir, con
cluded the caddy. C. E. H.
Repnrtee.
"Doin" any good?" asked a curious
individual on the bridge.
Any good7" answered the fisher
man in the creek below. "Why, I
caught 40 bass out o' here yesterday."
say, do you know who I am?
asked the man on the bridge.
The fisherman replied that he did
not.
"Well, I am the county fish and
game warden." x
The fisherman, after a moment's
thought, said, "Say. do you know who
I am?"
"No," replied the officer.
"Well, I am the biggest liar in
northern Indiana," said the crafty
fisherman, with a grin. H. C. K.
On the Job.
A man who was wanted by the po-
Hce had been photographed in Six dif-
ferent positions and the pictures were
circulated among the police. The chief
in a small town wrote to headquarters
a few days later, saying, "I duly re
ceived the pictures of the six miscre
ants whose capture is desired. I have
arrested five of them; the sixth is
under observation and will be taken
soon." C. T.
t No Trouble at All. ,
An ex-service man was telling of a
corporal in his company who was a
quick thinker. One day during drill
the corporal was standing on the side
lines of the parade grounds. A pretty
girl was eagerly watching the' drill
when a rifle volley crashed out. With
a scream she shrank back into the
arms of the young corporal standing
beside her.
"Oh, I beg your pardon!" she ex
claimed, blushing "I was frightened
by the rifles." .
"Quite all right," the corporal gal
lantly replied. Let's go over and
watch the heavy artillery." T, E. M.
. She Meant Well.
Two golfers sliced their drives into
the rough and went In search of their
respective balls. They searched for a
long time without success. A dear old
woman watched with kindly and sym
pathetic eyes. At last she spoke to
them.
"I hope I'm not interrupting,, gen
tlemen," she eai-4, "but would it be
cheating if I told you where they
are 7" M. S.
So It Is.
A number of years ago before mo
tors were much in vogue, the Me
thuselah of an Indian reservation
journeyed to a distant town and law
for the first time a bicycle. To him
it was another of the white man's
miracles. With a bewildered look and
a shake of his old head, he exclaimed,
"White man smart! Sitting down run
ning." F. O. E.
jinks, stunts and special A-V1
Y.""fnR?fr Clam Bake and SalmonDlnner PicS.JsW 1
Jki W HI Klks Band Concert .1 VdrQL AlilftlP J
! f!i7 w I Saxophone Band Concert I S CPvWw AlKlPgUJ
' VISIC Ek Ladies' Glee CInb B Ai S !S!I
'fc-;JSlJsLjljvjl Starr's Famous Clowns . ft PJfjJvlWfl rllHj
Arei Jn- You can't go wrong withS'jiMia
fflj the Elks at "The Oaks." wIjPIImI
iF ere e no moments. lijk&l
s0 Bff C'mon out! Fun for jrf
I VplRSTfii ALDFR ' sao,Nner Ji
Preparedness Believed In.
- Passing Show, London.
"Barbara is very well, thanks, but
she is worrying horribly Just now
over where she is to spend her honeymoon."
"Honeymoon? I didn't know ' she
was engaged."
"She isn t. But she a thought of
such a topping idea for her trousseau."
Heart of the Joy Zone
THE ROSEBUD GIRLS
WITH
MIKE, IKIE AND INY
is
"TWO OLD
SPORTS"
A Laugh Show .
Extraordinary
AKttrOIJJiCIITG
Amateur Night, Monday
Country Store, Tuesday
Chorus Contest Friday
Shows:
EVERY AFTERNOON AT 2
EVERY EVENING. 7 AND 9
Grand
Entertainment!
Informal Social Affair
Cinema Art Club
Monday, the 22d of May, at 8 o'clock P. M., SHARP ! !
TEA GARDEN ROOMS
MULTNOMAH HOTEL
18--Excellent Program Numbers--18
All Club Members and Their Friends Cordially Invited.
Admission Free!
Cinema Art Club, Portland, Or...-.,
- President,
HELISH. DE VALLIERE,
Motion-Picture Director.
Entertainment Committee, ANDREW S. EVANS, Chairman.
Executive Secretary, JILL COSSLEY-BATT, O. B. E . Sc.
Headquarters: 413-14 Worcester Building, Phone Bdwy. 4941
iiniiiiiiiiRmmtmiiiiimimimntiimiiV;
AFTER
NOONS Child lOe
Adults ZOe
EVENINGS
ChUd 17c
Adults 38c
Vaudeville
3:30,7,9 P.M.
Pletorw 3.
4:30, 8. 10 PJ4.
Continuous
Show
1 to 11 P. H.
WEEK OF MAY 20 TO MAY 26
VIOLA DANA
NOW
PLAYING
IN HER NEW SPARKLING COMEDY
"SEEING'S BELIEVING"
DOROTHY SHERMAN'S
CAMEO REVUE
Portraits Framed in Music, Song and Dance
FRANK CORNELL LESTER & MOORE
& COMPANY "GENTLEMEN FROM
IN "THE JOY RIDERS" NOWHERE"
BART DOYLE " BENDER & HEER
"THE BOY FROM EQUILIBRISTS
DUBLIN" SUPREME
COMING NEXT SATURDAY, May 27 to June 2
BERT LYTELL in "THE FACE BETWEEN'
cittcwt n-VoSlNG SHOW
r 1 A Jr ",
tf, -C.ejONHOAdLAMO 'PRC
OF'TW
jCMLejONHOAdLAMO iNtCSCMTS Us.!'-
Lpm PINOLE aniPATSYDELANEY I n j
10VE SISTERS cM
ryrg&rtjZ jres.mv SIX SLICK CHICKS KTr? )V
SIS
MV-;J. .'lv x
' RAY FERN & WA ITiT-"' MASON&SKAWl
gf MARIE f U, I feaaggf fraOiriiy ;
it3 fXTM
rtte otsTimotSMta artist
DON ALFONSO ZELAYAS
SON OF tX-PRfSIDlHTcf NICARAGUA
WIT, MUSKwidPHIlOSQPHY..
BERT &
H.0RD1CE
MAYO
5.
Boa
o)
STOCK COMPANY
Starting
Sunday Matinee
TODAY
IF
Edward Locke's
COMEDYDRAMA SUCCESS
In Which Louis Mann Starred
for Nearly Two Seasons
Closing Week
Season 1921-1922
THE BUBBLE
A RIP-ROARING FUN FESTIVAL FOR A
GALA STOCK WEEK
The Story of a Delicatessen Dealer Who Aspired
to Social Triumphs
AND THEN THE BUBBLE
NIGHT3 7A.9
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VAUDEVILLES POPULAR COMEDIAN
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DISPENSING
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THE ICE.
AUDITORIUM
I FRIDAY
MAY 2 6
Alys May Brown's 8th Annual
SPRING FESTIVAL of
DANCE and PANTOMIME
Dancers 150 Performers
An elaborate production of Oriential Splendor, Ballets and Stage
Settings vUn an array of talented Juveniles beautifully costumed.
Prices, Including War Tax:
FLOOR $1.10. BALCONY, FRONT, $1.10. BALANCE, 850
Seat Sale Opens Thursday, May 25, at Sherman Clay Co. at 10
A. M.
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HUNT BIG GAME IN AFRICA
WITH
CARL AKELEY
Famous Sculptor, Naturalist and Hunter of Big Game
MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM
TOMORROW NIGHT, 8:30 O'CLOCK
Lecture illustrated with 3000 feet of thrilling
motion pictures.
Direction Ellison & White
Prices $1, 75c, 50c
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