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The Evening Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 5

Publication:
The Evening Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE EVENING SUN, BALTIMORE, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1933 5 Society Christmas Week-End Calendar Filled With Family Dinners, Cocktail Parties And Informal Entertaining FAMILY DINNERS, cocktail parties and much informal entertaining are scheduled for the Christmas week-end. Among the many who have chosen Christmas Eve for entertaining are the Richard N. Jacksons, of the Green Spring Valley, who will give a luncheon for Miss Jane Keyser, 1 the debutante daughter of Mr. and 1 Mrs. William Keyser and Mrs.

Henry May Gittings, who will entertain at tea for her visiting nieces, the Misses Audrey and Hermione Barret, who have been spending the winter with their mother, Mrs. Cecil Barrett, at Villanova, and for the Misses Betty and D'Arcy Hilles, the debutante daughters of Mrs. William S. Hilles. On Christmas Day the Charles Butler Alexanders will entertain for 1 Miss Anne McLanahan, whose parents, the Austin McLanahans, are giving a dinner-dance honor tonight at the Elkridge Kennels.

Miss Fanny Lyon Pearre, a debutante of last winter, is ntertaining at a buffet supper and dance at her Pikesville home Christmas night for four of this season's buds, Miss Amo-: ret Fitz Randolph, Miss Elizabeth Handy, Miss Elizabeth Rouse and Miss Charlotte Blanchard. ANOTHER DEBUTANTE PARTY, for which invitations have just been issued, is a dinner at which Mr. and Mrs. F. Furnival Peard will entertain.

It is slated for Wednesday night at their home in Roland Park and will be given in honor of Miss Mary Russell Stevenson, the debutante daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Hays Stevenson. Following the dinner the guests will attend the dance Mr. and Mrs.

dison Armstrong will hold at the Baltimore Country Club to honor their debutante daughter, May. ONE OF THE MANY FUNCTIONS on today's program is the Christmas Eve luncheon at the Merchants' where a committee, including Messrs. Walter B. Brooks, Morris Whitridge, R. Walter Graham, William T.

Shackelford, E. Stanley Gary, William L. Marbury, Summerfield Baldwin, J. J. Nelligan, A.

H. S. Post and Gen. Francis E. Waters, has been appointed to receive the guests.

Other hosts are the officers of the club: Mr. Carter G. Osburn, president; Mr. Robertson Griswold, vice-president; James A. Gary, secretary; Mr.

Howard R. Taylor, treasurer, and the Messrs Laurence Buck. William S. Blackford, John Gregg Thomas, William Rawls, Charles McPhail, A. L.

Stephens, Arthur G. Turner and Robert A. Dobbin 3d. A junior reception committee to welcome the debutantes and their younger sisters of the subdeb set also has been appointed. To this committee were named the Messrs.

H. Warren Buckler, James F. Turner, A. H. Michaels, David G.

McIntosh 3d, Lawrence Perin, John J. Hurst, and Philip W. Ness. MISS SOPHY HOWARD WALKER, who is taking a course at the Church TrainSchool in Philadelphia, is ing the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

John Moseley Walker, at their residence in Guilford. MRS. W. TIPTON CONN, of the Northway Apartments, will chaperon her niece, Miss Helen R. Hoen, to the musicale President and Mrs.

Franklin D. Roosevelt will give Wednesday at the White House. Miss MARY TRAILL OFFUTT, of New York, is the guest of her parents, Judge and Mrs. Thiemann Scott Offutt, over the holidays, at their home near Towson. Mr.

AND MRS. THOMAS LANE EMORY EYSMANS, of Haverford, will arrive Tuesday to spend several days with Mrs. Eysmans' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor, at their Green Spring Valley home.

Before recent marriage Mrs. Eysmans was Miss Polly Taylor. Mr. AND MRS. JAMES TREAT CARTER, of Longwood road, are receiving congratulations on the birth of a daughter at the Hospital for the Women of Maryland.

The baby will be named Rosamond. Mr. AND MRS. JOHN ALEXANDER MAGEE, of Roland Park, have, issued invitations to a tea they give Wednesday afternoon their home on Hillside road in honor of Mr. and Mrs.

Howard A. Kelly, Jr. Mr. JAMES McLANE TOMPKINS, junior at Yale, is spending the holidays with his mother, Mrs. John A.

Tompkins, at her apartment in the Allston, where he has as his guest Mr. Robert Parrish, of California. Mr. AND MRS. GIDEON N.

STIEFF will entertain at a theater party at the Auditorium Wednesday night in honor of their niece, Miss Edith Alford, and her fiance, Mr. L. Fauth Ross. After the theater the Stiffs will entertain their guests at supper at their home on Ridgewood road. MR.

AND MAS. JOSEPH P. SOLLERS have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Emma Cornelia Sollers, to Mr. James Benson Robertson, of Denver, Col. For the past four years, Miss Sollers, who is a graduate of the Hannah More Academy, has been making her home in Denver with her uncle, Dr.

William Alexander Sed-1 CULBERTSONThere's More To It Than Players' Usual Bidding Playing The Hands, Considerably Neglected, Needs Concentration As Well As Initial Effort By Ely Culbertson DUE to the have fact that been Contract concentrating Bridge players on bidding, which has advanced to the point where games and Slams are reached with accuracy by even average players, the play of the hands has been considerably neglected. It is far better to merely bid a game when sixodd is in the hand than to bid six and only make five. When the good card player reaches a game or Slam contract, he has many dinerent tricks up his sleeve which will enable him 1 to fulfill his contract a very great percentage of the time even against bad divisions. Witness today's hand: North, Dealer. Neither side vulnerable.

83 Q10 AK743 Q865 4 92 KJ1064 52 K98643 10 9 8 6 5 J943 10 6 AQ75 AJ7 Q2 AK72 The bidding (figure after bid refers to numbered explanatory paragraph): North East South West 14. 6 NT (1) Pass Pass Pass 1-Naturally, this bid is not to be recommended. South, however, was a very fine player, playing with a very weak partner, and, as he explained later, he preferred to bid and make a Small Slam with himself as Declarer rather than grope around and try to get a Grand Slam with his partner as the possible Declarer. Alas for human conceit! West's opening lead was a spade, which Declarer won in his own hand. A glance at the Dummy showed him that six could easily be made either if diamonds broke 3-3 or if the heart finesse, worked and the diamonds 4-2.

South immediately tested out the diamond situation by playing the Queen and another diamond, East showing out on the second round. Naturally, the diamond suit now had to be abandoned, and heart finesse taken. East covered the lead of the Queen of hearts, and Declarer won in his own hand. At this point, it looked to South as though his only hope was that the club suit would split. Groping for more information, he now laid down the Knave of hearts, and to his surprise, West showed out, discarding a spade.

South now stopped and took stock. East, who had bid spades, had showed up with 6 hearts. Accordingly, his original distribution must have been 1 6-5-1-1. West, therefore, in addition to the remaining diamonds, must also hold the remaining clubs. Similarly, East's play of the ten of clubs on the previous trick must have been a singleton.

South therefore laid down the Ace of Spades to squeeze the West hand. West, of course, was forced to let go of a low diamond. A low club was now led by South, and West was helpless. He made the correct play, hoping that South would not have an accurate count--that is to say, he played his lowest club But South, with complete assurance, finessed the eight-spot in Dummy. The eight, of course, held the trick, and six-odd was now a lay-downdiamond tricks, three heart tricks, two spade tricks and club tricks.

Of course, if West plays the nine of clubs on the low club lead, the Queen is played from Dummy, and West will then be thrown in by the lead of the Ace of Diamonds, followed by a small card of that suit. West will then be forced to lead away from his Knave of clubs into, South's tenace-the A A well-played hand, indeed. 1933, by Ely For Film Fans HERE hearted is a satire photoplay and that uproarious for open- fun deserves to be rated as one of the outstanding comedies of the season and, incidently, emphasizes once again in eloquent terms that the cinema is actually going places. The title refers to Atlantic City and, while the boost-and-boom gentry of that somewhat depressing resort have cans expertly tied to their tails, it is the high-pressure salesmen and the feverish go-getters when assembled in annual convocation who are really put on the pan. And fried to a nice, hilariour turn.

Archie Mayo, the director, had exactly the right idea, apparently having taken a tip from the American Mercury and Sinclair Lewis, and his carefully chosen cast leaves no joke unturned. "Convention City" -By Gilbert Kanour. CONVENTION CITY" in form is modeled along the "Grand Hotel" lines. There is, for instance, a lot of variegated characters whose various predicaments ordinarily would repel a straight out-and-out story, yet Mr. Mayo has composed these situations into a well-rounded whole that is without confusion.

To go down the program there is the predatory chorine and the boy friend who are always conspiring to get some backhome mogul into his pajamas and then surprise him with an irate "husband" with a palm itching to be bribed. There is a tomcat with ideas about being made salesmanager, whose wife is trailing him with detectives, and a saleswoman determined to drive him down the paths of rectitude. There is a fat bozo with hardening arteries and a toupee, always casting furtive eyes at sightly wenches and always being chased into his kennel by his shrewish Mrs. There is a congenital souse who gets the coveted salesmanagership by the simple, accidental expedient of catching the president of his firm in the act of poking out; and another "horrible example" who never sobers up sufficiently to know what convention he is attending. There are all the stock characters of antic Babbittry, from paperhat wearers to asparagus-tip throwers.

All of the above and more of the same are presented in such a ridiculous, but at bottom faithful, light that "Convention City," while possibly over the heads of the casual mob, should delight the critical and the discriminating no end. Miss Joan Blondell, Adolphe Menjou, Dick Powell, Miss Mary Astor, Guy Kibbee, Frank McHugh and Grant Mitchell are among those involved in the proceedings, and their teamwork and their impersonations are altogether splendid throughout. In brief, we recommend "Convention City" as one of those pictures which should by all means be seen. Century Stage Bill Benny Davis, famous as a song writer since his smash -hit written back when college boys were young cut-ups in broken-down automobiles, is back at the Century week with his talented youngsters recruited from the coming generation of vaudeville performers. Well known here for years, Davis makes it seem almost like old home week.

Pete, the dog star in Our Gang comedies, makes a personal appearance and gets a hand from his admirers. In Davis' revue, Block and Sully are particularly well received. Donald Novis, well-known tenor, appears on the bill. "Man's Castle" DIRECTOR the FRANK tear-jerking BORZAGE, "Seventh who Heaven" into something 1 many folk constantly refer to as a cinema classic, has turned much of the same sort of trick with the photoplay at the Hippodrome. Of authentic drama in the picture there is only a negligible quantity.

There is very little conflict, the essence of drama; and no climaxes except those that are placid. But the simple little story, so improbable as to be beyond the belief of even those with energetic imaginations, is told with such tenderness, with such wistful and at times poignant charm that is deserves approbation as a holiday diversion. There is a certain gentleness about the whole thing, such an honesty of emotion despite the dishonesty of the characters, that compels one to warm to it. Briefly, "Man's Castle" is about Bill, a footloose, shiftless sandwich man who lets every locomotive whistle get into his blood and make him restive. He lives in an Old Deal village--a huddle of makeshift shacks along one of New York's waterfronts.

Meeting Trina on a park bench he takes that sweet derelict home to share his bed and board; and the results are eventually obstetric. When Bill learns that Trina is preparing to knit on tiny garments, he bundles her off to a parson, and then arranges to crack a safe and scram, as he would say. Fortunately certain things turn up to postpone such a tragic parting, and in the end Bill and Trina, rolling contentedly in boxcar hay, apparently are being carried off to new delights. LORETTA YOUNG MR. BORZAGE'S direction is ably aided and abetted by four fine impersonations.

Miss Loretta Young has never given such a sensitive, compelling performance as she gives in the role of Trina, and Spencer Tracy, while a mite too tough as Bill, proves again that he is one of the most competent actors in all Hollywood. And there is that old reliable, Walter Connolly, in the part of the parson fallen upon evil days, and Miss Marjorie Rambeau as a faded prostitute willing to commit murder to save for Eill and Trina what happiness they have encountered and what she has always missed. Jeanie Lang At Hippodrome Jeanie Lang, songster, and her Radio Rascals, a trio of harmonists, head the bill at the Hippodrome Theater this week. The diminutive demoiselle offers, among others, "Sittin' On a Log" and "Pettin' My Dog." Toe, taps and other types of dancing of five, are presented by a mixed group Dorothy Lawrence. Two somewhat out of the ordinary acts are those of Johnny Hyman and the team of Willie West McGinty.

The former, a chalk and blackboard wordbuilding affair, finds Hyman with a glib tongue and a versatile mind. Roars of merriment greeted the trio who display by means of constructionjob characters of a carpenter, a bricklayer and a hod carrier, what last night's audience whole-heartedly accepted as heavy slap-stick comedy. Without a word being spoken the three clowning laborers experience all the dangers and pitfalls that waylay the scaffold worker at every step. mas." Is there anything in the life of a child like the hushed expectancy of Christmas Eve? Christmas Day, with its presents and guests and lavish dinner, has an excitement of its own, but already the sense of let-down has begun after the first thrill of realization. The real essence of Christmas lies in Christmas Eve when the secrets are still hidden, the anticipated joys in the future.

For hundreds of years before the Christian era man celebrated the winter solstice throughout the Western World, with varying rites and ceremonies. Christmas trees and Yule logs, feasts of plenty, mumming and good cheer have given gayety and laughter to mankind from time immemorial. With the birth of a little child in Palestine about 2,000 years ago, a child so poor and insignificant that history failed to record his birth, the whole meaning of the celebration changed, and the child, any child, became the center and reason for its existence. To this feast the pagan world gave its rites and customs, its Christmas tree and Yule logs. And to all of these were added as a crowning touch, the eager, wide-eyed expectancy of little children.

Only the grown-ups who can "become as little children" can hope to taste the real joys of Christmas and to know the rare beauty of suspense, of unreality and incredible glamour of the before. It is a time when parents and children can meet on common ground, forgetting differences in age and interests for the moment as they celebrate together the touching helplessness and poverty of childhood which depends on others for all it has. -YOUR CHILD The Expectancy Of Children's Christmas Eve Real Essence Of Holiday Lies In Time When Secrets Are Still Hidden And The Joys Still Anticipated By Brooke Peters Church the night before Christ- Going Shopping ALMA ARCHER NEW YORK. shortened purses came the WITH appreciation of shortened hours for the feed- bag and simpler hospitalities. Penthouse apartments or unpretentious cottages have their cookless, maidless moments now, and the buffet type of entertainment is accepted socially, says Emily Post.

With the picnic as its antecedent, the buffet supper right from the kick is bound to be a success. Anything that's easy and informal and friendly usually is. The table that was intended for six easily accommodates thirty when one knows one's buffet equipment, and that almost amounts to glorifying the cafeteria. Start with a chromium viewpoint and then buy first of all an electric buffet server with plenty of compartments for everything from curried chicken to peas l'etuve and hot chocolate fudge sauce. Poem For Today Till the birds come back, smile on.

While the flowers are away, be Build in your heart your own bright dawn, Bring the bloom to your own tired feet. So, each one doing his part, There'll be no winter to start, No bitter blast as the days fly pastSo the birds still sing in your heart. -F. McK. THE BUNGLE FAMILY Anyhow, Merry Christmas GEORGE I JUST' 1 LISTEN JO, AS GEORGE BUNGLE AND HERE'S YOURS! OH I'VE EXPLAINED, OLD LOOK! A SALT CAN'T TELL YOU HOW YOU' FORGOT MY LET'S STOP THIS AND PEPPER YOU FRAUD, MISERABLE I FEEL PRESENT AND I FOOLISHNESS! SHAKER.

FOR, FORGETTING FORGOT TO GET HERE'S YOUR THE REAL ALL ABOUT A NICE ONE FOR, YOU TOO, STUFF. MERRY PRESENT SO WE'RE BOTH IN NICE BOX CHRISTMAS! FOR, YOU. THE SAME OF CIGARS. 2 BOAT. MERRY CHRISTMAS! A SALT AND PEPPER CIGARS! BIG SALT AND CIGARS! AH I WAS SET! OH AREN'T BABIES, TOO! AND PEPPER SHAKERS! AFRAID IT WOULD THEY NICE! SUCH WHAT FINE BIG IMAGINE! AND HE BE ANOTHER, DOSE FANCY SHAPES! GOLD BANDS! ALSO, MUST KNOW THAT OF THOSE SMOTHERAND HOW THE COVER ON THE I ALREADY HAVE ING SPELL SPECIALS HIGHLY BOX LOCKS, ABOUT A DOZEN AGAIN THIS YEAR.

POLISHED DOESN'T IT? SETS OF WHODIE! THEY GREAT! THEM. SUCH ARE! VERY LUCK! GREAT! REG.US PAT OFF 12-23. N. MoNaught WINNIE WINKLE, THE BREADWINNER The Forgotten Man WELL PERRY, YOU'RE THE YEAH WELL, BEST ASSISTANT SANTA YOU AIN'T SO CLAUS HAD THIS YEAR! BAD YOURSELF, MR. BIBBS! I FORGOT TO WRITE A LETTER TO PINS SANTY CLAUS BIDES PINS FOR MYSELF! WELL, THERE GO' Toys ALL THE POOR BIBB5 CHRISTMAS GIFTS! TOYS CHILDREN'S PIN GOOD GOSH! I W-WHAT IS IT FORGOT SOMETHIN' THERE'S A LOTTA KIDS AWFUL THAT ARE GONNA IMPORTANT! AN HAVE A MERRY CHRIS'MUS THIS YEAR PINS Reg.

by U. S. The Pat. Chicago Copyright, Tribune. 1981, of the---MODES This dress is good in light shades and is equally as nice in the darker shades for town wear.

Mustard green and Mandarin rust are especially good colors. For resort wear white, green, yellow, coral and blue are emphasized. A one dress. of frilled boucle. The vampa of the frown kidskin oxford worn with it is.

smartly decoratid. Liana Blowing TOR wear at resorts and elsewhere, The brown kidskin oxford shown is the attention is turning strongly to a very attractive and unusual model. the new knitted dresses and suits. The vamp is appliqued with brown lizIllustrated is a wearable frilled bou- ard and beige silk kid is used for one-piece dress with wide revers ing. While the warm clothing and thick and a sash to accent the waistline.

furs are comfortable just now, the de- MISS MARY RUSSELL STEVENSON wick, who formerly lived in Calvert county, Md. The marriage will take place January 2 in Denver. Upon their return from a honeymoon, Mr. Robertson and his bride will make their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he is engaged in the practice of law. Mr.

Robertson, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Benson Robertson, of Denver, and formerly of Laurel, was graduated from St. John's College at Annapolis and later studied law at the University of Denver. What Paris Wears By Mary Knight PARIS (U.P.).

has come and spring seems million miles away. And with WINTER winter here in Paris comes a varied assortment of receptions, cocktail parties, theater and after-theater functions. What do people wear to such affairs? Viola, a few examples: The Countess de Billy (that's really her name) wears for her receptions a night blue velvet evening gown with a coq-feather cape shaded from dark to pale blue--from Molyneux. Madame Claude Farrere, for important dinners and receptions, has a stiff black moire evening dress with material molded over the hips and the fullness at the hem. White violets trim the waist and a short black moire cape lined with white moire accompanies the gown.

Mrs. Holder (Mrs, ex-Enrico Caruso), who is living in her house in Fontainebleau, for cocktails has a plain black crepe dress with an orange moire belt--bright touch of color like this considered very smart. For dinners she wears a black lace frock trimmed with white violets at the waist. This outfit has a black lace cardigan with large stiffened For restaurant wear Mrs. Holder has a Molyneux dress of black satin with a rose satin vest.

With this she wears two blue fox scarves over her shoulders. Smart, mmmhhh? Gavel Made From Tree Where Lincoln Debated HARTFORD, CONN. (U.P.). A gavel, made from the wood of the linden tree under which Lincoln and Douglas held their famous debate at Quincy, has been presented, to Gov. Wilbur L.

Cross. a beautiful example of the art of wood turning, was made by Charles E. Griffiths, of New Haven, and presented to the Governor by him. signers are talking about beach clothes and deciding on colors, lines and details for spring. Among details buttons are getting larger and larger.

Doublebreasted coats and jackets give play to numerous buttons again. Your Health By Dr. lago Galdston MUCH has alleged been harmful written effects of stroking tobacco, but very few solid proofs have been brought forth to substantiate such claims. That the smoking of tobacco will "shorten one's wind," will accelerate the heart beat and cause a few other minor physiologic disturbances has been reported from everyday experience. However, to measure the significance of these disturbances and to weight them against the satisfaction which smokers claim they get from in their smoke is no simple task.

indulging There is one serious condition in which tobacco is looked upon as the responsible agent. This condition, known as thromboangiitis obliterans, consists in a narrowing of the caliber of the arteries of the extremities. This narrowing interferes with blood circulation and results in the victim's suffering excruciating pains. The use of tobacco for a long time has been suspected to be in some way related to this disease, for in the main it was found confined smoking men and, strangely, to to tobaccoJews. In the tobacco it was the nicotine element that was thought to be responsible for the injurious effects.

Recently, however, a group of New York scientists have brought forth evidence to show that it is not nicotine but other elements in tobacco which are injurious. Thirteen patients suffering from obliterans were tested AMUSEMENTS A LOEW'S XMAS MERRY SHOWS CENTURY STAGE SCREEN In Person Whatta Hit BENNY with the DAVIS 1 CONVENTION BROADWAY CITY' STAR REVUE First Nat. Hit featuring Joan Blondell BLOCK SULLY Dick Powell "PETE" Adolphe Menjou Dog Star of Our Guy Kibbee Gang Comedies Extra Attraction DONALD NOVIS ADDED Walt COM. Stage Disney's Nat "NIGHT BEFORE Orchestra XMAS" STANLEY Get Happy! Shuffle Off to See MARION DAVIES BING CROSBY Singing and Dancing in Hollywood MGM Hit with FIFI D'ORSAY STUART ERWIN ADDED Walt FRI. Disneys DINNER AT 8" Popular BEFORE XMAS" VALENCIA PARK WAY JOAN CRAWFORD CLARK GABLE In MGM's "Dancing Lady" NEW THEATRE WILL ROGERS Greatest Holiday Treat on the Re Screen! with Zasu Pitts and Harry Green Mr.

Skitch for sensitiveness to nicotine. The results were negative. However, 77 per cent. of the group was shown to be sensitive to other elements in tobacco. Fifty-eight healthy non-smoking individuals showed that 16 per cent.

had a hereditary or acquired sensitiveness to tobacco. Ninety-five healthy smokers showed that 36 per cent. were sensitive to tobacco. was shown also that not all individuals are sensitive to every type of tobacco. Flowers Defy Winter In Fields Of Oregon FLORENCE, ORE, (U.P.).

Oregon coast vegetation has defied winter. While rains descended and a terrific storm roared off of the sea, residents picked flowers from their gardens. Dandelions and rhododendrons, ordinarily spring flowers, are blooming near here. Single Seed Produces 562 Pounds Of Citron MENA, ARK. (U.P.).

From a single citron seed, John E. McKinney, farmer, who lives near here, grew a vine that produced fortyeight citrons. They weighed More a quarter of a ton, or 562 pounds. thane fruit is known as "pie melons" in this section. AMUSEMENTS "Easily falls among the best 10 pictures of this or any other year." DONALD KIRKLEY, THE SUN.

Alice in Wonderland with CHARLOTTE HENRY on RICHARD ARLEN ROSCO ATES GARY COOPER LEON ERROR LOUISE FAZENDA W. C. FIELDS SKEETS GALLAGHER CARY GRANT RAYMOND HATTON EDWARD EVERETT HORTON ROSCOE KARNS BABY LeROY MAI MARSH POLLY MORAN JACK OAKIE EDNA MAY OLIVER MAY ROBSON CHARLIE RUGGLES ALISON SKIPWORTH NED SPARKS FORD STERLING PARADE Of The WOODEN SOLDIERS' BING CROSBY in 'Please' HIPPODROME Merry on STAGE Xmas Jeannie and her 3 RADIO RASCALS WILLIE WEST MCGINTY DOROTHY LAWRENCE OTHER ACTS SCABEN Mans Castle SPENCER TRACY YOUNG THEATRE PALACE Fayette Eutaw at Opening Sunday, Dec. 24 First Showing in Baltimore CHARLIE RUGGLES in "GOODBYE LOVE" 11 A.M. 6 P.M.

10 6 P.M. P.M. Children 10c CLARE TREE MAJOR' CHILDREN'S Theatre of N. Y.4 DEC. 28-4 P.M.

PRE A Xmas Gift They Won't Forget Tickets, 250, 50c, 75c, Bureau, $1.00, 327 Plus N. Tax T. Arthur Smith Charles in Kranz's Music Co. Pl. 6829 TONIGHT AT 8.30 AUDITORIUM $1.00 LAST MAT.

TODAY-256, 500 "DINNER AT 8" with BLANCHE RING--NOEL TEARLE NEXT M. BARRIE'S What Every Woman Knows" With EDITH TALIAFERRO SAT..

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