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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 58

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Los Angeles, California
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58
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16 SUNDAY HORNING. SEPTEMBER 1023. PART IH.J OF ART AND ARTISTS School Hosiery, 35c Pr. Regular 60c Richelieu ribbed" toolings. In black, beige, grtj and camel at 35c pr.

Woman' Pure 6Mk Stock- 1.00 Women's Rayon and Silk Hoee 50c Women's Bloomers, 35c A dandy bloomer for the school girl! Made of pressed crepe In 27 and 29-inch length. Well made and reinforced. Hand-made Philippine Gowns 541-343-345 SWRQABWAX ANDKRSOX and attractive, not too latge, and a very pleasant hour may be apent there by the lover of good pictures. Among the painters represented on the wall are William H. Chase.

Frederick .1. Waugh, George H. M. Kltchell, Henry W. Ranger.

Edward Dufner and Ernest Lawson. not a few of whom have an International reputation And the pictures shown ere not indifferent examples, "itudlo sweepings quite the contrary. Hale's will be closed all day Monday to observe Labor tiay. This advertisement is for Tuesday it V'- ii -ys i Jltia "Zfo Ulj i Fashion's Latest Whims Trimmed Hats "Whaling Bark Canton" I oho an who is exhibiting twelve jialntlngs of ships at the Biltmore salon this week. A Hundred Beautiful Coats Specially priced at $39.75 The types of coats well dressed women are choosing for their Fall wardrobes.

Many remarkably good looking styles to choose from. Luxuriously collared and cuffed with fur, and some have borders of fur around the bottom. THE FABRICS are the lustrous Pin-point, and suedelike woolens which are so smart today. In the important new colorings as well as black and navy blue. THE FURS Mandels dyed to harmonize with the color of the coat, and other popular furs.

As soon as a new style is established, as soon as it is accepted by the arbiters of fashion, we take pains to secure it for our special $5.00 line. We are specializing: on hats at $5.00, offering values away above the average, and a large assortment that includes all the newest style ideas. (Hale's Second Floor) Handkerchiefs 5c White and dainty colors, with embroidered corners. Men's White Handk'fs 5c (Hale's Main Floor) Junior Coats at $25, $29.75 to $39.75 Coats for juniors and small women. Irresistible in style and charm and extraordinarily varied in type.

(Hale's Second Floor) Just Arrived! Children This new shipment consists of children's union suits Fleeced Underwear or separate garments ALL SPECIALLY PRICED. BY ANTON lic Toad Napoleon turned his horse about And down the steepest path set out. Letting the horse go on alone, vtrkinir tt av from stone to I Btone. The trees stood leafless on the hill. The puddles In the clay lay still.

Napoleon set his ge below; The west was streaked with after- Slow. I They struck the highway up ltf I side The horse, without a warning. I shied In scarlet water on the rond. Still as a sea-rock, sai a toad i.ieorge Stendahl: Landscapes by ''lauds Monet. Cannell-Chaffin; Paintings by American artists.

los Angeles Museum: Cailfor-nia Water Color Socletv Alfred Havward. Dorothy Kent. Biltmore Salon: Paintings by Duncan Glenson. Southwest Museum: Old Euro pean masters. Kanst, Hollywoodland: American paintings.

Pasadena Art institute bv Pasadena 'Art land Club. Puintt Modern Works rs' and Sculptors' Club. Y.W.C.A.: Wmi Coast Arts. tnr SUMMER ASSKMIU.Y AT CAISNKIX-CHAFI IN A collection of pictures from1 everywhere is being exhibited for tw.i weeks in the Cannell-Chaftln galleries. There are twenty-six canvases in all.

by almost as many painters. It. therefore happens that not every one of the pictures can he mentioned, however hrieflv. But we will touch upon a few of them this week, reserving olhets for future consideration. This is entirely a landscap" -show.

There are no fits urea, though there are two still life studies, one being hv Carle Blenner. the other by Hovsep Push man. Doth of these are excellent, for the makers of both are fine craftsmen, who sc dom or never fall down on their lobs. Pushman's pictuf, indeed, "The Sacred Green." is an exquisitely subtle thine, one of the best in a show that hoH an Inneas, a Keith, a Twatehnian. a Ryder and two Morans.

The porcelain plate that his ben ts-t up ngainst a gray-pink background gives the title to Push-man's studv. an arrangement of a bronze Buddha, an iridescent vane and a few trinklets. Simple. But art And seductively beautiful art at that. Blenner's picture of lilac spravs ii a large pray vase Is also very' intriguing.

The artist is past master in the painting of flowers. The Inness. a preen and orange scheme. Is not. it seems to me, a very good example of th.s artist's work.

It is harsh, painty. The canvas was probably dug out from some corner of the painter's studio after his death. The Keith, "Golden Symphony," Is typical, a good, but not a strikingly good, example of this American master's later work. The sun has not vt set and the sky Is luminous We come upon the usual foreground pool and oaks, all dark brown. The Keith formula.

The two Moran are of first-rate qtialitv and represent two distinct periods of the painter's lone and distinguished career. "A Cloudv Dav in Old Mexico." rich with summer's and showing- an opalescent sky. was painted as late as 19 lit. when Thomas Mur- an venn almost KO years or age. is very tender In feeling.

"Ilnicr- aid Pool, study rrotu me uranu Can von, was painted in wnen Moran stood at the apex of his imaginative and technical power. It. has strange and haunting beauty. It Is nature In one of her sublime moods, but nature transmuted Into art. tiiWi Vnnnoh's "Stotelv Pop- lars" has the refinement In ieettng color, the compositional dg-and beauty, that distinguish and ilt all th's artist's best achievements lsmtcranK l-Vw men interpret New Knsland's autumnal subtleties with understanding and sympathy than Vnnnoh.

Another profoundly penetrating revealer of nature's secrets was Twarht-tnan. What suavllv of brush work we find in "The Old Mill Cos Cob." what a sense of flowing rhythms in line and color. Still another such painter was J. Alden Weir, whose "Truants." remarkably orig inal in composition a seinlclrclo of rtro.r ot -n rn tin 11-, rf hill has all the elusive qualities rnlor rtA tone thst became so of marked in all Ins later work, Weir was a painter whose fame Willi grow with the years. i The canvases by Kyder.

Rnrg, Hunt and other painters' will come up for discussion Inter. VARIOt AMERICANS SHOW AT ll TF1EEI) The Hatfield galleries, on Wil- I fhire Boulevard directly east of Vermont, rommnd.ous. well and agreeable to loiter in, are also holding th customnry "hummer I ehow" of works bv American painters. The exhibition is varied Vest and Pants Special will be included. The bulk of the exhibit however, will be made up of his ili'lii iously humorous carica-turcH of celebrated people and flg-ui es in Kuropean society, politics and ait.

and a generous number of Americans, and not a few of los Angeles interest. These he has executed "li heavy paper of good sire, many of them In color, somewhat after Ihe manner of Max Heerbohiu. The caricature shown here is of Merle Armiage, impresario, who associated with the Biltmore salon, and was made by Major last epring when he was doing the series for The Times. WATKK-COLOR SOCIETY. I.OS ANGELES MUSLIM The fifth annual exhibition of ihe California Water Color Socl-ciy open od yesterday at the i.os Angeles to continue to the L'Tth lust.

The jury on selection met so late In the week that It Is impossible for me to tell you exactly who will show and who wild not. but these are lew of the I.os Angeles and San Krnnelsco painters who undoubtedly will the list would have been a longer one If some of the artists had nut been so dilatory' In sending their work in: Rowena MeHcs Abdy. Carl Oscar Rorg, Val Costello. Anita Delano, Henri De Krulf, K. Vernon Hunter, Charles A.

Smith. Htniiton Macdonald Wright. Karl Yens. At the same time there will be two water-color exhibit one-man shows. Ihe exhibitors being Alfred llayward and Dorothy Kent.

Miss Kent will also exhibit drawings in several mediums. llayward showed his water colors last spring in th't Denver Art Museum, and at that time G. V. Kggers. director of the museum, wrote of them: "Alfred llayward's water colors aro fine -xamples of the way In which water color would reveal lt-slf It it lui'.

the power of choosing. They epitomize the possibilities and realties of the medium Rut above and beyond this stirring certainty of markmanship, there is an Intelligence In their organization ar.d a passionate intensity In their vision of the rugged world they depict SAN FRANCISCO SHOWS WALKER COLLECTION Kditor Times: Kor the benefit of art lovers and the interested public generally, who may intend to visit San Francisco this fall, may your paper be utilized to call at-lentlon to the rare collection of paintings now open to the publlo in the new Region of Honor Memorial Building. San Francisco? There are li'fi canvasses In the collection, and most of tham masterpieces. Dolcl, Tlntorettl, Van Dyck, Rembrandt, Turner, Constable, Lawrence, Oalnshorouifh, Reynolds. Corot, Preton and other artists of equal ability are represented.

They present a group of such beauty and merit that it ia a privilege for art lover and students to be able to fcee them. The collection belongs to Mr. T. H. Walker of Innes polls, and 11 is due to his love of art that they are In California and open to the public.

In addition to ihe paintings, Mr. Walker hIso loaned his rare collection of jades and antique necklaces, which are also open to the public view in the same building. I have been advised that these pa int tngs will remain until Decern- Girls Union Suits Dutch neck, elbow sleeves and knee length. Si7.es 2 to 4 85c Sizes fi. 8, 10 $1.00 Sizes 12, 14, 16 $1.25 (Hale's Third Floor) Dutch neck and elbow sleeves or high neck and long knee length style.

Ankle length style. any size Special Tuesday at 50c. Though not so large as the Can-nell-Chsfftn exhibition of pictures by Americans, this show upholds the sain high standard. Indeed, our local gal'eries are certainly "toeing the mark" with the precision of the. i competitors farther east, those of Chicago, New Yi.uk and Boston The.

I'hase picture is one of (lie most interesting and attract ive in the collection, a pastel portrait of the artist's wife seated In hla studio. The costume of the sitter Is guaint and old-fashioned and. according to modern Ideoa of rtret.fi, rather ugly. Vet the picture is charming, all the Mill-life accessories bet njt painted with the technical bravado. the triumphant mastery that wa Chase's.

A painting hanging over the mantel in the studio repeats ihe green of the plush of the sitter's chair, and the aitlek red rnlor notes so typical of Chnvc are found In an ernbt oideied coat thrown carelessly or carefully- over a screen, and In the small rug on which Mrs. I'hafe's feet are placed. Th.s picture whs reproduced in The Times last week. Waugh' pictnia. "Gull Moohegan." ha also been repro dii'-ed In The Times Is well vtoith your further study, even If you have seen It before, for It Is a superb p-oe of painting and reveals Waugh' power In rendering the viiiae and rush of the sea along the ruggest coast of Maine.

The Bugert offering Is a typical eventide of this painter's well-known Venetian sunsets with their full quota of bellied sail aglow with many coiots. Kitchell 1ms chosen for his subject a forest clearing, the afterglow suffusing Ihe scene with golden radiance. Indians have erected their wigwam under some trees at the right, and a canoe Is drown op against the bank of a lake, whose edge form the foreground of the picture. Iiwson shows a landscape painted among the hills of evv Hampshire. A little church and a few outbuildings are huddled among the trees.

Hig white Ootids are massed on a clear blue sky. The picture, painted with sweeping freedom, displays a clear not" of modernism. The exhibition remains at the Hatfield for some weeks. PERU FOR MUSEUM Cable advices received at the I.os Angeles Museum atate that the quota or paintings assigned to Peru was ready to leave l.jmn on August by the first boat sailing for the Htatcs. This marks the nest step jn (nn.

nectlon with the plans for the large exhibition of paintings by the leading artists of the two America which Is to open at the I.os Angeles Museum on November 1. remaining on exhibition until January 1, l26. Kadi South American republic was allotted a. quota of paintings based on the population, and relative artistic importance of the country. The quota for Peru was set at twenty paintings.

Gulllermo Salinas Cossio of in cooperation with a committee of artists, has been in charge of the selection of ihe paintings from Peru. One painter. lOnrique Rarredn, who is at present In Europe, will he included In the Peruvian representation and sends word from London that he is greatly Interested In the exhibition, and has arranged for one of his most Ini-pnrtant canvases to be forwarded to Angeles from his studio In Paris. Through the Peruvian Consul at York a number of Permian painteis who have studios in York have been invited to Rend paintings berore the jury meeting in New York. I'aintings so accepted will then be sent to I jOs Angeles to come before the final Jury here.

MAJORGRAPHS WILL BE AT THE BILTMORE one of the early fall exhibitions which will be held at the Hiltmore is a group of caricatures by Major. This celebrated caricaturist came to I.os Angeles for a few mouths last spring to make "Ma.lorgraphs" of many of our well-known men and women of affairs, motion-picture stars, etc. While here he for a showing of some of his tinet portraits and sketches at the Hiltmore salon, and the work of this artist in several mediums will be disclosed in this city for th first time. In Central Kuropc Major has a splendid reputation as a portrait painter, and several portraits In oil ow her 1. next.

fit. R. I'nderhlll (Berkeley, i Don't Forget the Fair Painters and sculptors who are intending to exhibit in the art gallery of the coming Log Angeles County Fair in Pomona are urged not to forget the last date of entry. They may send canvases or sculptures not later than September 15 to the Otis Art Institute, Log Angeles, or to the fair grounds in Pomona no! later than September 16. The jury on prizes Andrew Bjurmsn, Roscoe Hhrader, Karl Yens, Theodore B.

Modra and Antony Anderson meet on the 21st, the day before the opening of the show. The indications are that the exhibition will be an unusually strong one. with many new riatnea on the walis. Modra, guiding genius of the exhibition, believes that the sculptors are coming to the front this time, and that there will be "some surprises." And some prizes, too $100, $25, and Ji'O for oils, $l'0, $25 and $25 for water colors and pastels; $100, $26 and $25 (or noulptureu. Ten student prizes of $5 each will also be distributed.

The Mndlo Inn The Studio Inn. conducted by Henrietta Shore. Annette Shoro and Helen F. Schock at the corner of Sixth street and Xew Hampshire avenue, opened Its hospitable and Hrtlsllc door lo the public lust Tuesday with a special dinner from 6 to 8 o'clock. The Studio Inn will serve lun cheons, teas and dinners, with accommodations for special parties.

In conjunction with It there is the Studio Gift Shop, displaying imported curios or rare and beautiful design. Paintings by Henrietta Shore will be on exhibition. Miss Shore's prowess and reputation as a painter are known to us all, for she was an Angeleno for some year before she went to New York. We are glad that she has come back to remain with us. Success to the Studio Inn! Arts and Crafts Society It is pleasant to record that the Arts and Crafts Society of Southern California has been successfully launched, and that the dreams of Its founders arid members are realized In the assurance of its future success.

The past ten months, since the opening of the shop at 2B08 West Seventh street, has shown a steady Increase in sales. Public lntotc'it Is Increasing rapidly, and expresi'ons of gratitude are general for the fulfillment of a long-felt need in supplying; a center where the finest of handcraft work may be obtained. The society is seeking for a new location In which It will be able to take over the entire management of the craft shop. Went Coast Arts West. Coast Arts Incorporated is holding an exhibition of paintings at the Young Women's Christian Association Ruildlng.

fifth floor. This society of women painters and aculptors holds interesting and comprehensive exhibits once or twice every year. The present show will be reviewed next week in Art and Artists Manolr Shows Panels On the afternoon of September 4 Irving Manolr, Whose show nt Cannell-Chaftin's will be remembered, held an exhibition of hi decorative panels, landscapes and screens of brilliancy In color and charm in at his studio, Fairywoods, l.aguna Canyon. Desmond Next Attraction for the Hillstreet William Desmond relehraled stage and screen star, returns to his first love, the legitimate, at the Hillstreet this week, where be will be seen In a comedy-drama playet, "Do Your Stuff," which was specially written for him by Ethel Clifton. In support of Mr.

Desmond there is a company of well-known screen players, which is headed by the heaififn! Mirv Mar-Ivor, who is none other than Mrs. William Desmond in private life. Jerome Sheldon and Jerry Cook are also cast In prominent parts. The old timers of the lilatto will remember Rill as the hero of the old Morosco stock company that held forth nt the Rurbank Theater some II teen years ago, when Main street wus the principal street of Is Angeles. "Do Your stuff" i niled with action, thrills and comedy In abundance, and the star is given an opportunity to display hia ability the speaking stage nB well as the screen.

Mr. Detonnnd bus made an enviable reputation for himself on the screen, nnd has been crowned as the king of "thrillers" by Carl Raemmle of t'niversal for his heroism and ability enact all the dare-devil stunts required of such a star, without a "double." In "Do Your PtufT' Mr. Dssmond portraa the part of a "tough" Mexican. Smart Neckwear $1.00 Collars and cuffs, vests and frills. Made of net and lace.

(Hale's Main Floor) WAS NOT FIT TO DO HER WOR Dreadful Condition of Mr Fullerton's Health Remd died by Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound Clearfield, Pa. "I cannot begin i tell you how much Lydia E. Pinkham I Vegetable ton pound has helpi me in every wa; Before taking it couldn't stand my feet withoi. paina runninar through my who Dody trom waist down, iu; like threads pul ing.

I was not 1 to do any worl' My mother eotni to try the Vegetable Compound ai I have found grest benefit, and I only recommend tt for such trouble but to build up the whole system. have used it for most everything thai gets wrong with me. when 1 brgi to feel nervous and irritable I don stop long in getting a bottle of th Vegetable Compound if 1 haven't go one in the house. It gives a fine app tite and makes a new woman of nv You may use this testimonial in own town or anywhere else, and will answer any letters I receive. Mrs.

Rush Fcllerton, 625 S. 2n Street, Clearfield, Pa. If vou are suffering from nervou troubles, irritability, give the Vegi table Compound a lair trial. Wrinkles Removed in IS Minutes Cost 3 Cents! Quite a sensntlon has been create' In certain social circles over the won derful rejuvenating effects of a slnipl-tarkroot mixture which any woman can easiiv apply at home. 'J'hf result-are so remarkable that one ia lH others, who In turn have told more, and now the new method hie fair to supersede all the patent wrinkle removers," massace and otiirt things used for the purpose.

This Is the procedure: A si oor. i I powdered turkroot Is rnlsed 1 1 spoonful of lemon and tins spread over the face. An ut.uu transformation takes place es tin mirror shows. In loss Han mmuu wrinkles, crovvsfeet nn 1 creases liav, completely vanished! Facial improved and t'te 'ears younger. The most skill erect as remains after tt 4 mlstuie lias neri on.

iii.m. Ts co use perfectly harmless, fnev r.ensive, to. r- druggist contain sunn tni lo brln in con per uauntnt undtr I ecnti. 50c I A I' "A Children Vests in sizes 2 to 10 sleeves. Pants in sizes 2 to 12 Pants in sizes 2 to 6 Any of these garments in sonal letters of praise to the author.

George M. Cohan is more generous than the announcement promises. Besides the tuneful music, the singing and dancing, he gives us a real something about valuable stolen necklaces. This plot is at no point permitted to become dangerous to the singing and dancing novelties, which are swiftly supplied. Nor Is It allowed to obscure the other allurements, yet it is not once lost complete eight of.

There are twenty song hits, any one of which is worthy hearing, to say nothing of the various styles of dancing by several youthful terpsichoreans. Macloon selected a fine cast of New York players for "Little Nellie Kelly." Alice Cavanaugh, Lester Cole Joseph Netmeyer, Franklyn Farnum, Robert Carter, Fugene Rorden, Joseph Grlffln. Get tie Gal-laghar. Clav Hill. I'na Fleming.

Catherine Ward and a mng usi oi others. Pangborn Says He Never Will Pine For Home "As long as I have a ihanre to piny in Ixs Angeles the year round, they'll never get me back to New York and Newark, New Jersey's my home town at that." The speaker, as Harold Bell Wright would say, was none other than Franklin Pangborn. who Is scoring a personal hit second only to thst of Kdward Kverett Horton In "The Sap," William Grows hilarious comedy now entering its second week of full houses at the Majestic Theater. And Mr. Pangborn can give voice to such sentiments after play ng for an entire season with Francirie Urrimore.

the New York star, in "Parasites," In a role for 'hlc. Pangborn was personally picked by the playwright, Cosmo Hamilton, and Miss Irrimore. Not onlv did Como Hamilton pick Pangborn for the part he rewrote it completely to fit the syelte Pangborn figure. The role originally had been intended for a fat man, end "Pang," as his fellow-actors at the Majestic, dub him. hasn't shown signs of corpulency Pangborn opened with Miss Mrrlmore in "Parasites" In his aforesaid old home town, Newark, N.

and was accorded the ovation that home towns alwajs give to thespinns with whom they grew up. After the try-out the play opened verv successfully in New York the Thirty-ninth Street Theater, after two months going to the Princess Theater In Chicago, iind then back east by easy stages. Panshnrn whs vacationing in Los Angeles, nnd had even bought his ticket to return to New York this fall, when Michael Corper took over the Majestic Theater and ssked Pangborn to become a member of tht stock company he had engaged to support Edward Everett Horton. "Words can never tell," said Pangborn, "how glad 1 was to turn in thst return ticket and stay In Los Angeles, particularly in association witli Mr. Corper." Thespians Born and Not Made, Vignola Holds "No director ever made an actor." This Is the comment of Robert G.

Vignola on recent charges from abroad that American movie folk merely animated sticks who go through their parts mechanically with the megaphone as their mainspring. "If an actor or actress has talent." said Mr. Vignola, "a capable director can help to bring it out. Rut no directing genius in the world can make a good player of man or woman who has not the histrionic instinct to begin with. "What is more there is no director who would waste his time on a screen aspirant who had nothing but looks.

There ere too many capable people' available. "Directing at best Is not an easy job. and we directors are always looking for players who can sense a part themselves and relieve us of the tedious task of interpreting it. Occasionally, some genuine 'dumbbell' rises above the extra ranks. but she seldom stays there.

Making a picture under such a handicap is so nerve-racking an ordeal that no director will tackle It more than once. "The idea that screen stars are lacking in real talent probably originates In the lact that many have risen rapidly from humble beginnings. "But this Is due to the fact that the motion picture itself is a new art, with a technique of its own. That technique was naturally acquired by those who broke into the game early, even though they wet in minor roles at the time. It furnished them with a background which enables them to compete successfully now with younger, perhaps branlcr players.

"Of one thing the 'nublic can be sure. The director advises, but it is the actor or actress who must create, whether the play be on the screen or the speaking stage." BITTKH ITXPKRIKNCK Alice Calhoun knows what it is to go through a gruelling cross-examination in a courtroom. She spent three whole days in the witness chair being cross-examined by the District Attorney in her part of the misunderstood wife In R. P. Pchulbcrg's production of "The Other Woman's Story." in which she enacts the leading fern-inine role.

Kleetric lights were Installed In the lis Angeles courtrooms, which were loaned to Director Gasnler for the occa-elon. (' Campaign for New Talent on at Universal A campaign to find new material tor future screen star is be ing conducted hy Universal Plrtures Corporation. Working on the belief that there are snany potential stars in the rising generation, Carl I.nemmle, president of universal, has ordered a policy of granting film tests, and giving parts to promising newcomer. More than a score of screen aspirants who are considered possible material for future picture personalities have been placed in the Universal Stock Company, and ore being trained in small parts and bits. Fourteen girls, all comparatively unknown to the screen, are now iii the Block company, playing and comedy leads and small tarts In feature productions.

From these girls. Universal hopes tr find stars as Mary Fhilbln. Laura I.a flante. Marian Nixon and other, were discovered. The girls some of whom will be the Marys, Normas and Tolas of tomorrow, are Caynor, Olive Ilasbrouek.

IsanbM Stlefei. Fay Writv, Ors Teague, Blanche Fisher, Dorothy Gulliver. Vanna Carroll, Virginia, Bradtord. FIMe Tarron, Thelma 11111. Adrirnne nor.

Verna Dooley and Heglna Doyle. A similar campaign is hpinc conducted to find fuf.re male stars of Pictures. Raymond Keane was picked from the extra -anks by Diniltrl Buchowetrkl. and given leadi-g Juvenile role in the Suner-Jewel production. The Midnight Sun." Lewis was ven his first hlg opportunity with fhe jHV-nlle lead in Teople." Matty Kemp.

lnis Freelander Tack McGraih. Ruddy Phelps and also hsve been placed I In the stock company, and are bring trained In small parts. Cohan Musical Show Called World's Best George M. Cohan's American song and dance show, "Little Nellie Kellv," Is roming to the Playhouse on Monday evening. Ihe 14th Inst.

This Is Louis O. Macloon attraction, and It is being staged by I lllian Alhertson, who is responsible for "No. N. Nanette" nnd Lady. He Good." mil ml til.

musical P'y 1,1 111 It, not an individual opinion: It is Ihe fjpressipn of thousands of playgoers who have written ir- a.

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