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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 32

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Brooklyn, New York
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32
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Till: HH00KLYX DAILY K.U.LE. XKY YORK. MONDAY. JANUARY 25. 1020 10 A 1 A NEW O'NEILL DRAMA ARRIVES NOTES ON PLAYS AND FILMS Leona Hogarth Shirley Booth P.laito Is presenting Tom Mix In "Ths Yankee Senor." These will he reviewed In this column later.

The Cinema Circuit Plays and Things Br MARTIN B. DICK3TEIN Bv ARTHUR POLLOCK: Caroling the Charm of Carol Dempster in "That Royle Girl" at the Jed Harris will offer "Love 'Em and Leave 'Km," by George Abbott and John V. A. Weaver, at Atlantic City tonight. Following a week by the sad sea waves, the play comes to New York at a theater to be announced Euscne O'Neill's "The Great God Brown" Comes to the Greenwich Village Theater and "Shelter" Ha? Its Chance at the Cherry Lane.

Brooklyn Strand IlltoriKI.rN HTH AND "Thnt jTlryp Oirl." tL Htory by Kdwln lnlmr. by W. (irlfflth fir Kamoim rUyTs-Luiiky, ffaturinif Carol tifinpHter. TMK CAHT: by tt'Nriil, tupsfiut 1 A MI'SFM FATS UHOOKfiV.V. lyn Strand presents this week a "Bevue Populalre" In which appear F.ldora Stanford In "When the One Vou Love Loves You." Theodore Alban in "Then I'll Be Happy" and the Mark Strand Dancers In "I Wonder Where My Uahy Is Tonight." Tllli Ak.

r. LBEE A fi. TrlnniclB 1,1 fro. II r. 1.

1, F. A It It I) IIKKT. (IHIIKTT ft HAKKV, ti I ft 8 I) A ft HIKKH, I'KAKSttN IlKd-t, Othrra. tuit Ttmrr i.Ur' Can- The overture Is Freedman's "Slavonic Tonn Tnly Itoylo. I It Put her 'Hlvln l''rMk Kcllnr Ad-lrt KlNir i Hh n-t la Mm Hrnnlitnnii llurr-tttt'fl Pempufr W.

Fll.l Klrkwood llarrlHon Fortl Marie Chimhwra Paul Kvrton tiaoru" Hlina Klort-tu-a Auer 'THK riP.KAT unn Ilii'jWS" Yill.ca Tln-nlfr. William A. IHh fjitlHT, a ClintlM.to 1 i 1 mctliir 1'lon Anlln.ny Urn fat lu-r. luulilAt Ilia mother i t.cl MarRflret lor Hrnokli un nnit rAriniplon Alfl. hntinnt Sow nt Mfl Atom.

Kiotmrr Your William MiirrlBun Mlluno HHIm Ilnbrt IIiibIi Kl.l.lfr Klfiinor VV onm Hmr I.funa IliiKiirlli Anne NlmtMnHkfr Hliirr Jumn 1'aill rrfilrkk r-arkaril Jr John Maliin Hclh Kfn.liill Stanley Harry A.lilun MamU William Slulil Kllmvorth Jonon A VISIT to the Brooklyn Strand Theater this week, where I). W. Griffith' production, "That P.oylo (ilrl" Is the muin film attraction, should arouse more than a feehlo Interest In Carol Dempster. lth Annlnrrmtru Crtrhrntton. SMITH ft It.M.K I.

Illi AVON COMMIT Hl It. IIKAI.V ft IIONH, KIT. HKHK. tllKKH. I HON.

,1. HVAN ft I Ollirr Rhapsody. These musical incidents, as usual, aro up to the par excellence of Edward L. Hyinan's presentations. Oilier Films.

"Danro- Madness" Is the new photoplay at the Capitol Theater. At the Strand Theater in inhattan may be seen Uelle Ilennett und Lois Moran In "The Reckless Lady," and Peggy Hopkins Joyco makes her first rcreen appearance this week in "The Skyrocket" at the Colony. The 1 i-Jt'r- Two PraiiKhtsmon Id m. There will he those, probably, who lum. hiiKfflM A i n.

I'hol(pty IttrhurU flli-nt Threo Hftrflit-lrnrM In "1 1 Hi-nutiful My." recall the nohle effoits of this particular alluring player In other Orlf- Polir, fithlan episodes as, for Instance, "Isn't Life Wonderful?" and "Sally of the Sawdust." And, possibly, there will be others In Strand audi AM ISKM MANHATTAN. One of the Vlaycrg in "f.aff That Off," the Comedy at Wallack's Theater, Which Achieves Its lOOth Performance This Evening. MAJESTIC E. H. SOTHERN in ACCUSED By Brieux 2 Krlth-Alhro Conrrrhi Hiinduy MuIIii.t Klltlrf MAR I lllKriit of All Miinlml Mill.

ences this week who will profess no acquaintance with the lady, but who JOHN DARRYMORE will bo no less eager to spread the tidings of their "discovery" of a screen actress who can say more with the bat of long black eyelash Till: (ireenuiih Villus Tlx-mrr made its most intereHtlng production of the seuson last Saturday cvenlnK when there was presented at that house tho newest the ilnyn uf Kiiueno O'Neill, "The (ireat (lod Brown." It In not the mom cuhereni, the deepest and mire.st of dl-umas. Its author is less certain cif where he, Is BoiriB und how lie Is to fe-et there than he was tn'The Hairy Ape." less easily satisfied than In "Anna Christie" and "Desire I nder the Kims," hut he has delivered himself this time nevertheless i.f a surprising drama, one of those O'Neill dramas destined to he cne all over Kuropo and 'to please theaiernoers there more completely than It can please here. lie has done in "The (ireat (lod Brown" somewhat the same sort of tlllnpr as was aimed at by Uenryi Hum Ilnrrlgan as Brown and Anne Shoemaker as an all-knowing pros titute are the most successful among LMRT Hit HARK IIIX In "ntlMAMIAXUI.EU" "THIC SKW CnilM.IXlDltVT" nlnli-hr huei't, llfil t.jom TKiHU II HAT melmtinQ fu.ivyi.li" hats sauna 4 wicks in advance AmdtoaoaV' than can many of her sisters of the legitimate theater In 3 0 minutes of carefully dlctloned soliloquy. Miss Dempster may be seen currently at the Hrooklyn Strand in such excellent company as W. C.

Fields, erstwhile comedian of the "Follies," James KlrKwood and Harrison Ford. Such is the talent which them. Air. ilurrlgans performance Is one of the finest of the season, and for Miss Shoemaker's role It would not be easy to find better player. There is good work, too, by I.eona Hogarth us the wife, by Koh-ert Keith as the uneasy Anthony "NAI.LV.

1KKNK AND MARY" With hullr O'Nrll and ConHtnnre Ilennett -Vlycra in the little play called S'UMDKWAY- JMoTR bat and by tho elder of two actors who Griffith has assembled for the plcturlzation of "That noylo though It must, he reported again In are seen as draughtsmen. Robert Kdmond Jones has devised the scenery and staged the play, SIATIXKKN WKIINKSDAT ft NATCKDAT BWKKnA'S LY GRAND CENTRAL PALACE SHoW these columns that the picture Is not quite equal to tne standard es which Is one of the most finished of Miss llagartK Plays a Leading Pole in Eugene's O'Seill's Latest Drama, "The Great God Brown," Which Opened Saturday Evening At the Greenwich Village Theater. I1IRKCTI.Y I'KIOK TO BROADWAY A MflV tablished by D. w. in tne past.

"That Royle Girt" is from F.dwln RAINBOW ROSE Ml SII'AT, I- AN.22-30 iOijOA.M.fti50M. CDMKIIY Balmer's melodrama of low life AM. THIN KKK ninong the bootleggers, the hijackers and other parasitical elements of the Chicago tenderloin. It BO0AV 3 JT with miF.Ki.Kit n-Ansnonrw (llt II F.ST It I )lrtroinlttan orn. ynwt HO, tneludlno UKUIUiK Mac.

2ESL GECnvT cohan AS TOR the fireenwlch Village Theater productions. Mr. O'Neill can have little to complain of. The directors of this theater are growing. "ShPltiT." piny liy Hurry f'liHpman Font, preserved by Hnny Macullum Kt the Chisrry Latin Pli.yhouae.

THK CAST. Hn) There ItynilH ProKglA (ienPVii Ifarrlron h.il.l'll Max W.iizrnnn I'irker Louis Ki'y T. William Ailnma 3UDAV MATINEt 3 is a thrill narrative of Daisy Hoyle (Miss Dempster), and how she grew up from the seething pavements of iBIG PARADE Brooklyn ACADEMY of MUSIO Metropolitan Opera Company BARBER of SEVILLE OAlll-Curcl. Wakfnetd. Tokatynn, DeLura.

Miinlonefl. MlHttiita. Ri-rxhlKltHn, Bnbo-rhek HAKHMAN PIANO CSKTl. Haln HIPPODROME Onia Mump The tilrl Djjl If liHivy Mai'ollum Taylor liravea JanM llPtclnaid harlovr the play by Harry Brown's kind of character is the kind found on earth most worshipful. And as the two sides of him that war spring uppermost the actor playing the role puts on or takes olT a mask.

Ills wife has a mask, too, with which she covers her own individual defeats. And so hus the prostitute with whom the husband comes In contact. As most often happens, Brown, the shoddy god. succeeds chiefly by picking the brains of his friend and enemy. Anthony, who is tho failure.

And when Anthony drinks himself to dealh in the presence of Brown he wills him. as a curse, his ow nature. Then, taking off his mask, he Is contrite and begs forgiveness. Hut Hrown's Itching mind prompts him to make Anthony's mask his and. concealing the fact that Anthony is dead, he proceeds to he the i.tlier man.

Hut the part of him that Is Anthony cannot forget the part that is still hunilllatingly Drown, and finally the Anthony In him murders the Brown, the two of them thus meeting failure In death. It is a moving and extraordinary drsmn. the fullest offectlveneys and dignity of which is adulterated by 0 Nelll's Inability to make use of his without giving his play an air 01 trickery and superficiality. He Is experimenting. He could have said ns much without the masks, though hi- might have Increased the dilli-cultles of his actors considerably.

Those actors as it Is meet the demands made upon them with sin-c rity and no little distinction. Wil- presented unluckily at the I'rlneess Theater not Ions ago. lie Is more fortunate than Myers In having actors of ability and understanding to interpret his play, though lias written for them a drama extremely difficult of Interpretation. Myers endeavored somewhat too trickily to tell In drama of an exchange not or.ly of identities but of entities. O'Neill does the same thins more profoundly.

If less concretely, giving his hazardous theme greater aiif-milcanees. In "The (iiiai Uoi Brown" see two human tfings, from childhood to middle age, sekinff happiness and content with themselves and the world. ach fails because he has not the other's qualities, the one longing to be the other, tin-other unsteadily holding the qualities he lacks In Intensest contempt. They are friends, e.ich fund of the other, but one is like Strlndberg. yietzsehe and other (terce rebels against common h'c.

creative and an artist; the other ie tiie onforniist made through his Instinctive conformity. They hate and love each otlter. a. id the less stable of i he two luuiTi" the girl both of them love. This fellow Is turn by the promptings of two illlfcrent natures at war.

for he cannot shake off In himself an understanding of the practical advantages for happiness of natures like that of Ms ti ieiol, whom he calls the I ireat tiud P.rown, since rilK If uippic CII.VM. ln ARJMj Mr 4 Mr, iiiio.NXKH. RAE SAMUEIS ii v- home-made infernal machine and chases him 'tilo the river to drown ir fracture his skull or what not. Then he. the hunchback, looks up Ui heaven and says, "I thank Thee." Tho setting of the play Is effective enough.

The Intent, thoiuh amateurish and crude In the extreme, is honest. Mr. Ford did not mean thnt nis play should be laughed at. He 'lid not even Intend that it be revolting, which it often wis. He simply meant to write a line, true play, hut nobody ever taught him how.

Barry Macollum, who mnde the production, likes the leading role, that of the h-inchbaek. Kog-tnrild Harlow and the prompter play the villain, who Is looser than tomorrow's flappers. He is not a nice fellow. Chapman Ford, tho first public tier APIAl KUII WK0.MI1ES I NATIONAL1 H'way. Kv.

JKSHIK ItKCK ami "THK INNOCKVr MAIDH" 20 Mlrtliful Innorrnt Mnldi- Ford finds expression difficult he gets a spade and calls It a spade until he grows red In the face and more than a trifle tiresome. "Shelter" fairly teems with good Intentions. It tells a story of virtue triumphant, the tale of a starved soul who is awarded, after much fruitless living, food for his modest ego. Ho Is a hunchback who iuyf taken idtelter somewhero In the nether part of a dock and gathered about him poor hopeless men and women whom tho world docs not want and who have no place to hang badly damaged hats. It Is their sweet home.

It is their sweet home until Bull, the bad man und crook, enters. He enters a few moments after a little speechless girl has been given shelter and has shown toward the poor hunchback the lirst affection he hus ever experienced at the hands of the opposite sex. And Hull, the blooming cutthroat, takes her away from him. The rest is asterisks. Finally tho hunchback saves her from the rascal, scares him with a LEW FIELDS in Money Business THE MILLION LAI (.11 I IUIKIIV the to become tne central rbaracter In the murder trial of Fred Ketlar (Harrison Ford), who was charged with manslaughter.

In the final scenes, wherein the Royle girl has run down the real murderer and there remain only hours In which to save the Innocent Ketlar from the gillows, Mr. Griffith hus staged the (for 1.1m) inevitable Bacchanale of the elements in the from of a cyclone. And when the Big Wind subsides and calm has come again to the Strand screen. Daisy Iloyle experiences sufficient relapse of heart to admit she loves the District Attorney (James Klrkwood). You will find this film constantly exciting and, if you lean to gullibility, entertaining as screen melo-drainus go.

At least, you won't deny that Carol Dempster Is the most capable of actresses and that W. C. Fields Is a comedian than whom none can more convincingly portray a slate of chronic inebriation. In addition to the film, the Brook SAM HARRIS Kvi. 1:110 NO PLAYGOER CAN AKKORD TO MISS MOI.r.N hWKKTN." Willi Dorothy AnilrrwN, Hurry llnrHiran Iti SWKKT 1 fonnance of which is promised lor this evening at tho Cherry Lane playhouse, is not a masterpiece It Is not because Ford hesitated to say Just what he meant.

TIm play was given a prlvato performance Saturday evening and would do at well to remain in private. It Is not evident that this new playwright Intended to be dirty. Hl object was the simplest and direelesl honesty, hut honesty hardly conceal hi. If of this play's sins. Beginning playwrights should be forced, by law or otherwise, to treat of harmless topics until they have learned their trade or until they have acquired the knack.

In other words, of distinguishing honesty from junk. When Mr. The Monkey Talks H'way 38 fit. Dir. A.

L. Eilanvsr. Mnti. CASINO I'hon I roU' BI A Trlnnele 4147 lit HI KNIH KliiTlnl I.nrllM' Mullnro 1,000 Hcitu tlie. WINE.WOMAN SONG Ni-it 'k "MISS TAHAnTO" "Moilie" Dunham, Ford's fiddler, closed at the Hippodrome Inst night.

He and "(Iran" begin a 16 weeks tour of the Kclth-Alhee Circuit nt Philadelphia today. The Albee Theater will entertain them soon, and a prlzi contest for all Long Island fiddlers will feature the engagement. ftfi m'uvo A.TirniLA- iA DEAREST ENEMY With llelra Ford and Cku. I'aroll Ralph I Colambls HMO I Hurlrxiu EMPIRE Ladlni' Klifrlal 1000 Hrata (Jo. THAT OFF ilTiTovn GIRL CLUB NTt OF THK DAT" LAFF, NOW ri.AYIMI By C.

W. KAHLES HAIRBREADTH HARRY Another Clue Fails MARK MARK A t.WUn KVERV TWENTY HKf'ON'OS li VTRAN I gtklynIi "ffKLYN D. W. (iRIiKKITH'S THAT ROYLE GIRL (ALA Ml SIC HAVE YOU HAP A HARP I 60LLY A HAPPILY pWBffl HOLY SMOKESlTHAT'S THE MYSTERIOUS I Remember she was terribly CHERRY LANE TONIGHT to Commerce 2 hlhK. bcl.

Sheridan Sq. Kvkh. 8:30 shelter MY AT trie OfrlCt, MAN VUiTk CHI STRAN6ER WHO WAS AT BELINDAS HtVii Bli'UETIM MYSTERY Or BELINPAjS NERVOUS WHEN I ASKED HER ABOUT HIM. HE MUST HAVE HAD SOME STKAN6E r- i HOUSE THE NIGHT BEFORE SHE VANISHED AMP ABOUT WHOM SHE WAS SO SECRET HYPNOTIC INFLUENCE OVER LOEWS METnOPOLITAM Ul.TOl--MIT--.LIWNf T-OIa-T(IIlT RAYMOND GRIFFITH I P. Royal I'fkln Tronpr, Frhl ft On Othrrl.

"MIKK" IX COMlMi! I DKAPPFAPAkirF 1 IVE! HERBS A Cohan Thratrr. Iliray ft 3d Kt. lulrr Unity, hunday Mutlnera at CLUE! J. rArVUrf rur Hint! wtis. SrHAN6tr NOTE IN BELINDA'S TELLER'S SHUBERT N-H MATS.

IVKII. ft -TI'KDAlf fKlSS OWN HANPWRITIN3 EXONEK- IME.POP) THK MASTUR WOTrTinil II YNTIFIKII Fl.OWF.nfC Week. "MAY a.misi:jients imooKiiYN. s. atn6 rudolph of all blame only apps to perplexity.

it is now believed she mas been kidnapped an 0 BElUti HELD FOR RANSOM. WHOLE COUNTRY STl ZZED Nothing has LEAKED OUT Surpassing all of its Predecessors! HA! UNDOUBTEDLY HtLUOUS JOIN SEARCH JfKOBABLYSOME (on for some cClue! all's well MONSTER BLUEBEAEP HE IS KEEPING HER A PRISONER IN THIS LONELY MANSION! OR SOMETHING! I LL TPfvrk- UIM Yrt now I'll soon leaem LAIR SOMETHING LOOKS LIKE ANOTHER CAN'T BE ANYIHIrti tPHONEY ABOUT THIS BIMBO. BUT YOU CAN NEVER i Tell! its a queer world, nil be Queerer to-mkm, The Defense Refuses to Weaken By H. J. TUTHILL HOME, SWEET HOME i iVHAT A LIFE'.

what! me hand them ALL I'M TtLL ME1. I'M NOT WORRIED.) SUCH A eusiNESs' it ASHAMFO GUILTY OF 19 1 CAN PROVE THAT POR TWO, I SUCH A. DISGRACE'. WELL NEVER BE ABLE TO NOLO OUP I HEADS UP IN THIS TOWN AGAIN IF WE LIVE TO BE AS $90 8ECAUE-E ThEv UAfC TRYING TO PAtS TO LOOK VOURE. ALWAYS iN TROUBLE ANYONE WEEKS) PEOPLE HAVE SEEN MISTAKING ME FOR SOMEBODY ELSE.

MY NO SIR! 6EF0RE THIS THING li OVFR they'll hamd rf OLD AS METHUSELAH. ALL "4 IN THE FACE DAY LONG PEOPLE WHO HAVE mg nni ir.u ctkitv rrifi AND NEVER TO TWO PEOPLE WITH BAD EYESIGHT 5 who rr THINK CONSCIENCE 13 CLEAR 1 ILL BEEN WAITING P0 YEARS AND VOLrA UNLESS THEY MAKE AS GET A LOT OF SALVE TO to Give ME A Dig have blame. MUCH NOISE TURNING ME PUT ON MY CUTS. WHAT 1 IALIS A3 CALLED UP TO LET ME LOOSE AS TMEY DID WENT THROUGH HAS WRECKED IF YOUD iwc in KNOW THEY HEARD 1M THE BABY THROWING ME INTO THAT MY NERVES, IF YOU KNOW ABOUT YOU BEING WHO HANDED THEM JAIL I WHAT I MEAN! RIGHT NOW i GET UP ARRESTED. AN ORPHAN 1 I WOULDN'T TAKE SOME KIND" I CHECK 100,000 TO i'm not worried A bosh! thf IF THIS THING EVER SENSIBLE THING I REACHES COURT I'LL.) TO 00 iS GIVE I HAVE SO MANY THOSE FOLKS PROMINENT PEOPLE I THE $90 -m FOR CHARACTER THEY LOST WITNESSES THAT I AND THE TRIAL WILL 7 LOOK LIKE A 71 7 SOCIETY jcp (LOWOUT; 1 1 T7 1 (t OF AN A SETTLE THI3 AFFAIR TO VcELEBRATE THING.

YOU BEING I 23 rd egiment cArmory Bedford Atlantic oAves. JANUARY 23rd to 30th ALL THIS WEEK, 2 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Daily Auspicri of Brooklyn Motor Vehicle Dealer i Association pfX of the sensational new models from the New York Show 42 makes also Taxicabt and Motor Trucks. Latest accessories new body and coach work 200 cart and chaises.

SPECIAL FEATURE "Goddess of Transportation" Beauty Contejt MUSIC BY JOE ZIMMERMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA tt' Time and Tide Wait By HAYWARD SOMEBODY'S STENOG Voiife ty4 out 'V CAiIWiii RFiT iT KAiLAp1? Cam TE.LL Th4 Ff? 4Ch f)E LEGATION To PoiTPOAe TH parade Tmey cam wait Tilwi Wt i r. I 1 r-l fE CAlF Pallv 6fT A aiw bReii' Im AoT do To mm VAiLL 06 Ht Rc IM A AIMUTE Wc'GoT To be lAJ COR CARRIAGES "VTJv p0T Ojf ovfifr the Plate cor lUWEMT'CM OF THE. ST JUT IM THE. WORLD HAS BUEaj NOTICED By The freaich (SolE.I?JAr!AlT AAJti I vwModathlwkit I' lKk M.Ol'E lmVnY TOMOKUOW lliinnj. 314 FlatbUBh All-Ntiir t'nnt, rinthr Miike the Plratr The Same iHifflflri, 249 Uut'dchl Ktiyninml (trifflth.

Hf'N it I' rime Mu1k Knnedf Kilrn. 6th Av. Sth St tmri, ltl'rna The Mmuft Kfpney'n. sno UvltiRHton St. Wiilliirc Miu-Dnniiltl, The rrlmruM Pi.thj 1o VauHcvllU Satlonul, WRBh.

A Prntpect.Tm ll, The Bent Itml Mnn The Name New Inn tie. Flat. Inti lltur, Km Airiiln The Saint Truftprct, ttih Ht. A Miilon T)H Hour hIm VnudevHle him, ion Landia 8a ma IHE I A RA 0 a A ki A iAj IHE I A RA 0 A 5TAPTS A -TEry --Sy f. 71 ThE SM i tv erses WiLL BE HONOCtD by a big public Dewo.mstratio! Cumberland.

327 Cumb d. Itudnlplt Valentino, Cobra KKDtOltlt HKCTION nedfonl. Hedford A TfenHMneflt al ViiudoTlUe Kesettt, Fulton A Moore, Where the Wont HAY KMK1K SECTION Br Rldfe, li AV. A 7 Id Ht. Alice HenHlneti hImi Vumlrll'e FLA Till IS II HKCTION Albemarle, Pint.

A Albmle. Mnnre, MmlernH Century, Nnntranrt A Cknlrtt.l.. llarrymore, (ilrl int Wouldn't Work I urrugut, I'lrit. A Hogeri. nHoi'fi Moore, MnilernN liinvNMuy.

Ktnirs II. -C. 1. Av. Mury Atr, The HeHrlet Siilnt I.lmleii, 815 FUthtiah Av Mury ANtor, The Hrnrh-t Kjtlnl MlilwfHHl.Av.JAn nthBt l.von.

The Ire Thnt ThrllU Ha noiihii Centura It Hohlldkraut WIGS OPLAGE lb A SwaniuB Hume Marlon 1'avlei Hay Hum fume BiT She turjM'T Kaiosa She wa uRkiuG For a Couplf. ot- pw Mrk, K. 1 fi St. A N' Wklrk HlrliHnl Hurl helmoptn, shore l.euve IMrkolde. Flntbimh l.vtell, Mpnrtlnc Mfe Kin I to.

1016 Flatbuih Mim Mtirniy. The MHRketl lltHIIWKK HI HON Colonlnt. HwiivA rhauure. I'elrrB. The Mnrm llrrnker.

Same llalaey, Uwiy A lUliey Jurqueline liRim, WnKe for Wlveai alio Vuutleiilla I.RKKNfOINT SECTION Milton Mllla, The InfunrUrd Hour a I no Vaudeville 1.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963