Evening Star Newspaper, December 12, 1923, Page 36

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WOMAN'S PAGE. Scalloped Hem Line in Velvet Gowns BY AN is credited with one of the most trocks she knew with the scalloped realize the truth have only to Mary having youthful of wus th hem line of this Pickford sald that looking frock And remark to ou NE RITTENHOUSE. | | observe how incongruous is the effect | hem line as worn by : proportions are no of & scalloped the woman who: longer youthful. To go the scalloped better there fs the skirt with many saalloped or flounces. The sketch shows this idea developed in % “brown chiffon velvet evening <own. The hodice is perfectly plain, the only ornament aside from the scallops and the tlers being an arti- fiolal flower at the left side. Tn this frock there is no sugges- on of bouftancy in spite of the ttars which are made with only enough fullness to keep them from lving too flat upon each other. There are other frocks of the exag- ceratedly bouffant sort that show the same idea. In one formal eve- ing gown, wide enough to have been worn by Eugenie when she was Em- yress of France, which shows scalloped hem in a rose lace skirt, there are three rows of fine plaitings nf green tulle, one just below the hips, one at the knees and one mid- way of the hem and the knees that Zollow the ped line, Quite a few of the new velvet gowne are made with scalloped hem Tine—if uot with scalloped tlers— and the ldea is one worth noting by e woman who sometimes makes her own clothes. For really there is no umsurmountable obstacle here to the woman who has patience. The t'ers, like the hem, are not “hemmed” but are always faced with matching secorgette, making the scallops flat and aven A hem tiers (Coprright, ¥ Cheese Sandwich With Jelly. This is one of the best of the many tnds of cheese sandwiches. Toast “ome half-inch slices of bread on one fAe. Take out. turn and cover hal? e number of slices with grated arlcan (heese. Place under the wollar until the cheese is melted ut ton other slices and cu e sandwicl rwise Place co of grape on top of ¢ sandwich ar serve immediate th BEDTIME STORIES Nanny’s Courage Fails Her. The wise will think of safety firat And not for more_adventure thirst. oy Meadow Mouse. Ae soon as Mr. Gopher Snake had | disappeared, Danny and Nanny Mead- ow Mouse drew a long breath. “Ugh!" exclaimed Danny. “Waen't that @ arrible fellow " ’ Nanny shivered. “Let's go straight wack to that man-bird.” said she. 'l never leave it agair. Oh, dear! Oh. dear! T wish [ wers back home on_the Green Meadows.” But Danny felt within him the “LETS GO _STRAIGHT BACK TO! THAT BIRDMAN," SAID SH { <pirit of adventurs Already they| .d seem three people wholly strange | to them, Gopher the Tortoise. Sala- imander the Pocket Gopher and Mr. line one | | roam around. R | THIS BROWN CHIFFON V FROCK HAS A SIX-TIERED SKIRT ALL SCALLOPE By Thornton W. Burgess. | Other step.” | straignt bac | great man- we'll be safe. |~ “We will not do anything of the kind,” retorted Danny. ‘‘You can- go if vou want to, but T am not go- ing until I have seen more of this Sunny South.” Nanny knew ny spoke at he satid Please come, Danny. If 1 go back alone the time about you.” “Then don't “go,” replied Danny promptly. “Come along with me.” Nanny hesitated. Then she thought | of Mr. Gopher Snake and her courage fatled her. Little cold shivers ran all over her from the tip of her blunt little nose to the tip of funny short tail. Without another word she turned and started back toward the shed in which was the great man-bird, or airplans, which had brought them down there. She thought that Danny would follow. But Danny didn‘t. No, sir, Danny didn't. Instead, he turned and start- |d off in_the opposite direction she replied. “We'll to our nest in rd, where we g0 that know b, th the he way meant that I worry all tempted to follow. thought of Mr. Gopher Snake, again she shivered. She knew that she just couldn’t go on after Danny. She "eimply couldn’t do it. So she ran stralght back as fast as her short little legs could take her, as scared a Meadow Mouse as ever lived in all the Great World. Not until she reached the shed in which was the great man-bird did she so much as look behind her. The instant she was inside that she felt better. It seemed friendly and safe. But she felt safer still when she had climbed into the great man- | bird ana slipped into the little cup- board to the dear. famillar nest. She no longer wanted to be free and She was entirely sat- isfled to be safe. And somehow she Gopher Snake. Danny had a feellng that many more Interesting folk | ived down there In the Sunny South nd curiosity was getting the better tion t's go on a little farther,” sald Nanny shook her head ot an-| felt really safe there. The relief was 80 great that for a time she didn't even think of Danny. (Copyright, 1923, by T. story: “Danny W. Burgess) The nex Finds ueer Log. Q The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLAD The Truth About an Author. | Glenn Hunter will be seen in “"West the Water Tower.,” shortly th Glenn is play- esting, and the fact that| the author of the hook | the film wus made is| trebly ting Croy lives my home was s astonished as the i onlooker when “West of the Vater Tower,” which was published 1onymously at first, burst into pre- aminent prominence as & best seller, | \d then some. FHe hasn't quite got- .n over the shock. I could tell you iot of things about him. such as e fact tha he s 1ler than venty rage me favors the waaring of a brown velvet rduroy ift, has the pleasantest smile in We world, und various other attri- yites; but T happen to be “In” on a {etter he wrote an inquirer one me, and he puts « few facts about mself better than I could put them. Thay follows b I have re ter asking me to tel hout myself. <0 Jived that 1 can do this. "Howev I don't know as it's go- 2% to help matters. I'd rather h v readers think that I am me xreat and wondaerful being with noble and godly ways instead of just n ordinary individual subject to 0ld In the head. But if you want 1o rsk it, here goes: am forty vears old “T am married and have two <hil- iren—one of each. now maies oubly i lomer Croy i which makes m 5 chat Homer own. He inte i ved vour let- you something I am glad that T have | ¥YS HALM “I hate to do chores around house. sitting room door since May. Last week T got up ambition to fix it, but could not find the screwdriver. “What probabiy I hate to do worst of all is carry up the ashes. 1 have two cans. and when they are full [ throw the ashes against the wall Then my wife comes down—the next morning T carry the cans out “1 hate to wask the car, and at the garage In our town it costs $2 T promise my wife that I will wash it. then put it off untll she is ashamed to ride in it. It always works When we go visiting I lean back in the wrong weigh close to 200. When company comes to see us 1 always crack the same jokes. I am a poor carver. I hate to carve worse than anything I know. My the always chair. ideal of a_meat for company dinner | | is ltver. “But we have it only when we are alone and eat in the kitchen. “Yours for pung chow and im- mortality.” Gloria Fan: You mayv be pleased to hear that Miss Swanson plans make her home in the east in future | has rented her home in Holly | wood for a year and expects to re- main in New York indefinitely. | Yes, George S. H, Thomas Meigh- an’s father died on November 5, at | his home in Pittsburgh. He was | seventy-four vears old and left a | family’ of even children. 1 under- | stand that Thomas wHl now make his home in the east. He has pur- chased a house on Long Island and | will move into it some time next | spring. (Al Tights reserved ) Our Birds in Verse By Henry Oldys. AMERICAN PIPIT. Across a moist Dece: Circling birds are dr; Slight they Like leaves upon the mber sky ifting b, seem and brown and pale, wintry gale. And when the floating flight is done Downward they dro And wander in the By changing move al Ah, modest ds, co The northern scenes The pallid turrets to The flashing banners The level journey of As the last sands of The mossy carpet al in unison allow field, lone revealed. uld ve but tell ye know so well- w'ring high; of the sky; the sun, summer run: 1 ablow : The musk ox and the Eskimo! Through sight of you our lives expand— A glimpse of that forbidden land Within the inner vision stirs. Thrice-welcome, littl, TEE TITLE OF THE BIRD POEM IN YESTERDAX'S “THE BALTTM e voyagers. STAR WAS, ORE ORIOLE Just she begged. | Once more Nanny hesitated. She was ! Then again she | and | The knob has been off our | 1 i Puds Simkins came over after sup- ! pir last nite and stayed till he had to 80 home on account of me having to £0 to bed, and I went down to the frunt door and stuyed there tawking to him 1ili pop called down and asked me weather 1 ixpected to go to bed down in the vestibule or up In my wn room. and 1 sed to Puds, Well, T !haff to go to bed now Hay, I tell you wat. lets see wich one can get up the erliest tomorrow {morning, Puds sed. If Im up ferst 11l come and throw some pebbles up at your window and you haff to give me a cent, &and if you come and wake me up I haff to give you a cent, he sed { G, all_rite, 1 bet o'clock, T 'sed, and be up at 5 And he went home to bed and after a wile 1 woke up thinking G, 1 wonder if Puds is up yet. Being dark as enything outside, | {and I quick got up and started to get {dressed and it was so dark | nocked {2 chair over and it was so dark I | m Puds sed, be up ut 6§ I bet 111 and 1T went up nocked it ov vin tryins to piek it | up, making more noise the 2nd time than wat it did the ferst, and pop vnnning up stairs in his pidjam- mers saving, Wat the doose, wit the blazes do vou think voure doing? | Im having a contest? I sed, and pop | sed, wat with, the ferniture? and I sed, No, sir, Puds Simkins, we're see- | Ing wich one can get up the erliest. | Well you win, its 4 o'clock in the morning and getting erlier every minnit, pop sed. Now vou hussle rite back into bed and if 1 heer another | peep out of vou, mutch less unother bane. 111 tatoo my name on your anatomy with my slipper. he sed Yes, sir, [ sed. And [ went back to bed back to sicep and ma woke me up insted of Puds and I quick ran to jskool and Jest wen I was passing Pudses house Puds came out still fin- ishing his breakfast and we was both Hate for skool COLOR CUT-OUT Planning Toy Shop Play. | | ‘1t would be more fun to lev the children at the hospital for cripples | { think these toys we're making came | !from Santa Claus Instead of from | (us,” whispered the girl next to Betty Cut-out at school “From Saata Claus' squealed Betty. “Let's | Christmas pariy at the {play and show Santy and Mrs. Santy with all the toys around.| Boys and girls from our achool car dress up lfke tin coldiers and dolls and evervthing | Foer child st the hospital will get one of these little Christmas trees as well as & pres. | ent from Santa’ To make one vourselt cut five squarss of green paper any size just | 20 all are the same. ~Fold one sheet and cut Christmas 1 iike the one in the | diagram. nd this one on the other | four shests and cut out. Now vou have five | trees alike. Fold each in the oentor and p the folde of all five together. Paste them and you'll find you have a tree that stands. (Copyright, 1623.) “Just Hats” By Vyvyan. ! toy shop?” make our hospltal a Leopard Is Smart. | | i i | { In fars, leopard is rapldly gaining favor with the fashionable milliners and ooutourieres. Hers is a smart, cuff of sealskin and topped by a fur cuff of seal skin and topped by a fur button. The Guide Post-- BY HENRY VAN DYKE. Courage of the Timid. For they all would have made us afraid. * * ¢ But now, O God.| strengthen thou my hands.—Neh.,, 6.9, There is a sharp distinction be- tween courage and insensibility. Some natures are <o constituted that they do not feel pain very keenly. To persons of this tomperament, fear 18 comparatively a stranger. We must not suppose that this in- sensibility mak them brave. It simply exempts them from the neces- ll%ct courage. @ bravest soul is that which feels the tremor and resists it. shrinks | {Love Es | his OF WASHINGTON BY R. A. EMMONS. L e S b 2745 CHASTE-TREE—VITEX AGN/ During July, August and September pedestrians going down 17th street be- low Pennsylvania avenue were doubt- less attracted by a delicately foliaged shrub crowned with slender spikes of small, pale blus flowers, growing op- | posite and a short distance below the Corcoran Art Gallery. There are two more specimens of the same shrub on the southiwest shore of the tidal basin, of which fs fllustrated here. Though not showy, it is one the most attractive shrubs we have, deli- cate, modest and delightfully eatisfy ing. Tt is the chaste-tree, also call monk's pepper tres and hemp tree It is one of a tropical and substropi- cal genus (Vitex), of six of which thrive s far north as Was ngton; in the family Verbenacae with the black mangrove of the coasts Florlda, the gulf states and tr America. There are but two sy in cultivation, the present one and a |DorothyDix] sential to Marriage Because Only Love Can | specles with deeply cut leaves nnd’ white flowers. Several &pecies of this | genus {n southern Asia are important | | timber trees. The chaste-tree is a shrub or small | | tree with a strong aromatic odor. par- ticularly valuable for its late appear- | ing_flowers, though its foliage is also | attractive. These flowers bloom from July to September in slender terminal pikes, five to seven inches long. They ‘Are pale blue to lilac colors and about a third of an Inch long. After the leaves fall, these dried-up spikes, with their little seed husks, remain on the | tree well inta the winter. The leaves are long stalked and palmately com pound, with five to seven leafleta. | These leaflets are lanceolate, sharp ! pointed, narrowed at the base into a short stalk, soft green above, grayish tomentose beneath, the middle or three to four inches long. It is hardy as north as New | York in sheltered situations. The | white-flowered species, Vitex Negundo var incesa, is more hardy, thrving north into Massachusetts. Why Is Love Essential In Marriage? Says Love, Ondy, Makes Marriage 2 ndurable Bear the Disillusions, Sacrifices and Daily Com- panionship of Same Person, Year After Year. | is love so essential in marriage Apparently love ! rriage to the greater number human beings man never sees the woman to whom he i married until he Jifts her veil after thel! aremony, and where wives A MAN asks. “W isn't essential to In the orient, where the are | frankly bought as objects de luxe, or kitchen conveniences, love cuts no figure in matrimony | Nor is love the dominant factor in | arriage in continental FEurope, where marriage is a family affair, | arranged for the uniting of two| fortunes, or for strengthening social | position, and where the man’s income | and the bride's dowry are considerad | of far greater importance than the! emotions they inspire in each other. | With them love is the garnish on the | domestic dish. Nice, and pretty, and, | without doubt, giving an added relish, but it has nothing to do with | the substantial quelity of the food | itself. Truth compels us to admit that all £ these peoples, who take their love | n_the side, as it were, get along vers well without conjugal love. Furthermore, perhaps Lecause less is «xpected of marriage, there are fewer vorces among th who regard matrimony as a business proposition than among those who believe that they will find it an earthly DOROTHY DIX. z paradis arriage to iantie, D in the Anglo-Saxons, because, as a race, we custom’ has made us expect ime instead of outside of it us. We are not greatly Besides. our doll bables Lrand of kisses with some essenti because because avaricious, and to find our happiness and companionst s the marriage of convenience is not diverted by with dressed-up doll bab seratch an Also we wish domestic kick in them, instead of being s flat duty ARRIAGE, M in e, us we are love is in we But sentimenta sensua then. with us is the most important thing in life. Compared belng born is incident of no importance, and death a mere episode. It is the one big gamble in which we risk our ail of happiness, of peace, of well being. And we win out, or lose out, on our hearts. For us there is nothing but loye that enables one to endure matrimony nd in it joy Instead of wretchedne There is nothing but love that makes one hug his chains, and regard | 1 as the dearest spot on earth. There is nothing but love that takes nd makes one feel it a privilege to spend one's to fi the sting out of sacrifice, !life in toiling for anoth. It is only love that makes it possible for us to enjoy the daily com- panionship of the same fndividual, vear after year i The society of the most brilliant stranger bores us to tears if we ara| forced to spend the week end with him. and have unbroken doses of his | conversation. After we have heard his adventures, his pet storfes, and applauded his epigrams, we pray heaven for deliverance when we see him | heading our way. But we never tira of those we love. We may know them for only high- grade morons, but we can listen to their babble about the state of the grocery trade, or what the children said and did, for hours without | Wearying. It is only love which keeps us perpetually interested in those about us, and that makes the story of their days as thrilling as a book of | high adventure. s OVE s essential in marriages because it is only love that can endure the disillusions of matrimony. | Before marriage every woman is an angel to her lover; every man is hero to the woman he is courting, and marriage itself is to be a dream of bliss. Real life shows the feet of clay. 'The angel turns into & woman in ourl papers and wrappers, with cold crearm on her face, and with tempez and Rorves. The hero becomes just a man Who is fussy about his food, and closs about money, and who has to be jollled and flattered into doirg the things he ought to do. And.marriage fsn't a dream. It is stern reality that is strewn with more tecks than But love still wraps its rosy chiffon over the sordidness of domestic life, so that the man and woman who really care for each other never see each other as they are. The middle-aged man who still thinks his wif aged woman who still begins every sentence with * have_found marriage @ Success. Love is essentlal to marrfage hecauss love alone enables us to make the sacrificos demanded by marriags. It is 80 easy to do things for {hose we love. It Is 8o hard to do thinga for thome for whom we do not care. ivery marrluge requires eternal sacrifice. There must be & continuni putting of another before one's 8elf; GIVing UD of one's personal InelinAtions and desires, and tastes for another's And this is a daily oruoifixion of soul and body unless one loves the other one so much that one prefers hi or her happiness above one's own. It 1s because we only find happiness in betn because It i only love that makes us blind i husbands and wives, and because it is only woman to forgive us our faults and weal . that love is essential in marriage. (B DOROTHY DIX. _— e from the flame and faces it. Never was a better soldier than the old French marshal Montlue, who said that he had often gone into bat- tle shaking with fear, and had recov- | ered courage only when he had said beautiful; the middle- ohn says,” these alone owg‘h. thon‘r:oum we love; pecu! es of lovo that enables any man or But there are others to whom the unkind word I8 like a_blow, and the sneer like a sword thrust, and the breath of contempt like ths heat of flames, and when they endure these | tons ‘and ginghams lone begin 4o Menu for a Day. RREAKFAST Sliced Bananas. Baked Hominy with Cream. Dropped Egg on Corned Beef Whole Wheat Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Jellied deat Loaf. Baking Powder Rolls. Caramel Custard. Fruit Cookles. Tea DINNER. Beef Stew with Blscuit Crust. Mashed Potatoes. Plain Lettuce, Mayonnaise Dressing. Irish Moss Pudding. Coffee. ~ BAKED HOMINY. Gradually beat two cupfuls of milk into one cupful of cold boiled hominy. When smooth, add one tablespoonful of meited butter, one-quarter teaspoonful of salt, and four well beaten eggs. Beat until very light, turn into @ buttered baking dish and bake in a moderately hot oven until firm in the center. BAKING POWDER ROLLS One quart of flour, four tea- spoonfuls of baking powder, one teaspoonful of salt, one- helf cupful of melted butter, one egg and milk to make & dough that can be bandled. Mold thoroughly, place in pan and let rise b hours in a cool place, and then make into rolls with the hands. Bake in & very hot oven. IRISH MOSS PUDDING One-third cupful Irish moss (bought at any large grooery store), fill cup with water, goak fifteen minutes, wash, pick over and strain. Add four cupfuls oold milk. Put in _double bofler and boll thirty minutes, then strain and add a pinch of salt and one and one-half teaspoonfuls of vanilla or do not flavor at all Put in molds to cool {m ashion | orecast H i | 8 Arcabel ! worthngton For the School Miss. walst is this Peter ittle | cut Slightly Pan collared school dress, patterns in sizes 6, 8. 10, 12 For the S-vear size 13 yards 40-inch material with i vard 22-inc contrasting with yards of ruffling | required. Of sarge or wool jerse this stle would be warm and give | excellent wear. Linen finished cot- are also used a an arming for and great deal | Price of pattern—1% cents. in pos age stamps only. Orders should addresmed to The Washington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 15th street, | New York city. Pleaxe write name and address clearly. | MOTHERS| AND THEIR CHILDREN To Bring Smiles. One mother says Notleing some broadly smliling false faces in a shop. I bought sev- eral. The next time my children got into a fuss. storming and whin- ing at one another. 1 brought out the masks and adjusted them on| the surprised voungsters. The effect was immediate. Seeing the laughing countenances hefore them made each | laugh aloud. I ex- plained to them that their scowls and pouts had been the same as masks, hiding their sunny disposi- tiong. CORNS Lift Off—No Pain | { Doeen’t hurt one bit! Drop a little “Freezone” om an aching corm, in- | stantly that corn stops hurting, then ehortly you HLft it right off with fingers. | things and face them, and will not be | driven by them from the path of duty, they are truly courageous. Do you understand what I mean? Timidity is no more inconsistent with courage than doubt is inconsi ent with falth. (Copyright, 2088 a prayer. The same thing is true trials. . There are some people to whom re- oach and ridiouls and condemna- lon mean little. mu do not care; they are tous. in moral Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for @ few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, withous soremess or irvite- 4o, FEATURES. Pineapple Apple. Chop one quart of tart ripe apples Ix them with a pinch of =alt, one level tablespoonful of flour and half & cupful of sugar. Place the mixture in a buttered baking dish. Place some pleces of butter on top of the apple mixture and bake the dish in a moderate oven until the apples are soft. Allow half & cupful of grated pineapple to simmer until it is ten- der, then ndd to it a few drops of lemon juice and half a cupful of sugar. “Let the mixture come to & boil, then pour it over the prepared apples. Beat the whites of two eggs, add one cupful of sugar and spreud the merlngue thus made on top of | the pineapple dressing. Brown in 4 moderate oven. —_— The Associated General Contractors | of the United States have declded 1o hold thefr annual convention in Chi- cago next month | Westinghouse Iron With Every Purchase in Qur Store of a WASHING MACHINE CLOTHES DRYER IRONING MACHINE VACUUM CLEANER FIRELESS COOKER Better Homes Equipment Co. 739 11th St. NW. Phone M. 2278 Devas "PHILLIPS™ MILK OF MAGNESIA SAY “PHILLIPS" to your druggist, or you may not get th: original Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 year- Refuse imitations of genuine “Phillips” “The last drop (s as good as the first.” The delicious fragrance of Baker’s Breakfast Cocoa Its unquestioned purity, uniformity end palatability meke constant users of all who try it; it is the cocoa of high quality. W Made only by Walter Baker & Co.Lea. Established 1780 Mills at Dorchester, Mass. and Montresl, Canads BOOKLET OF CHOICE RECIPES SENT FREF. i ‘l ‘1 i PROTECT Your Doctor and Yourself 25-cent bottles, also larger size, contain directions and use CHILDREN CRY FOR MOTHER :- Fletcher’s Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teeth- ing Drops and Soothing Syru especially prepared in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of WIM Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend i for Infants In thirty minutes—my White Youth Clay By Edna Wallace Hopper ~the Tas and renews t of callowness clogs causes blemishes, { was a plain girl and [ made my- |selt @ heauty. 1 grew old, like | blackh others, but 1 kept 1y youthful | stantly he bloom | 1t brings the bi Now, after ORISR ravie wtar, T still look a girl of 19. Al [ “that roey afl because of beauty aids which |ymazes and delights French experts perfected in minutes seem Now, as & duty to my sex, I offer | voqre thome helps to others. And T am ™"\ o taking time in a busy life to tell |, Clax fivms the facts about them larged pores Clay Did the Most The ordinary crude and muddy You read much now about facial |glave do that. Then what may. yoi clays. Millions of women use them. | ¢ypare of & new-type clay, at | But they are crude and muday, 116 | ten timas s effectivas - You |the primittve clays T used many | expect just what it did for me |venrs ago. A | "Mine is this new-type clay They do amasing ‘things. = Any|call it my White Youth Cla: | woman who omits clay does herself | {3 now "supplisd by &l e injustios. Nothing else can 80land toflet counters at 50c and multiply Beauty or S0 Dreserve ono's | Gin tuhe i Also Cream, wh But there are better clays today. | qngyla My Facin French experts after 20 years of | Yoy oty 2R i study, have perfected & MeW-tyDe |Alan i 0 sanuey ay. Tt is white, refined and dainty IoRSbE o It brings manifold effect This is [the clay | now use—my White Youth Ciay. And to that 1 owe my baby skin at the sge of 62 | Its Magical Effects | Most of you know what clay does. | You see boauties everywhere whose complesions are due to clay. You see mothers who look like daugh- ters, grandmothers who look like girls—all bucause of clay. Clay puries the skin of all tha - d to t 10 years as a_stage rglow which Many women skin Kies combats a reduces en- I my Youth follow the clay. my famous v Halr Youth luxuriant hair with each nearly over. to br to_others the i Now you the very holps which made I am. Start today with m Olay. and ses what tomorrow brings you. Edna Wallace Hopper. Busl-| ness mddress, Waukesha, Wis. | NOTE—Mi*n Hopper 1s now play- | {ing the Pantages Vaudevills circuit. | —Advertisement. day ix Now joys 1 at Youth 1

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