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CUCU TUREDAY, JUNE 11, 1990 | -About Plays and Players +3 By BIDE DUDLEY BNE HER + SRESE NT. Tt SUGGEST 2 THSTUMONIAL performance, the biggest and best Broadway Attention, Limerickers! evér know, will be given at the Conan & Harris ‘Theatre on Sunday re oa: Peer ae | ning, July 11, for Nellie Revell, jereen Shrewebury ee J omaelltad Wellsvitie Optic obtained an intimate! woman, t and er ce view of Dudley, the limerick Presi- “good fellow,” who has been flat on Her back and in a gteel brace for|@*Btal candidate, yesterlay, He ar- > Play @ game of croquet with | early a year Miss Revell tn at St.|the candidate, sha Cnt anne inoent’s Hospital, auffering with|plece on the Stebbins boarding house Dow trouble, and the gungeons say | stoun ph te ees Mr. Nutt'e ac- “must remain there possibly an- ” "I found Dudley an unassum’ must have the best! man, with the modesty of @ Lincoln and the courage of a Cleveland, He} chose the yellow mallet and bali and| I took the green. As the game startedy I asked: * ‘Have you « bogey on this course? “Never emoke ‘em,’ he replied, ‘I , | Dester @ pipe.’ | wea sain he Srovett « bowey tea | in he “ was a Sogie, He thus showed himscit to be | SHE'S FOND OF READING = Give HER A Good YES SiR- WE HAVE A DANDY NEW Novel CALLED “FRECKLES” EA <_ | KATINKA HAS BEEN WITH US JUST SIX MONTHS TODAY AN’ WE OUGHTA WHY, No | SiR — hate SAY KATINKA- HAVE You READ "FRECKLES"? MAHOGANY COLOR - AN’ Some SPOTS MUSTA GOT ON HY FACE ! GOSH, SHE.MAY HAVE READ THAT- LVE BEEN PAINTING MY BUREAU WAIT, Tle RUN HOME AND ¢ FIND out! ps ert) WELL OFFICER = WELL, [LL BET YE A poLtarR Y'cost ME AS] DOLLAR You wouipn’y ; ) DOLLAR" CHASE ME OVER Ye'Li BE IN COURT “T ease “THAT ROUGH ROAD 1 1 y oFFIceR! ‘ Wel HEH: HEH "f Easy Joe! EAsY Boy! HERE COMES A RED MOTORCYCLE - BETTER — - Look ED! You LAUGH An’ SAY —" WELL OFFER , You Cost ME A DOLLAR” -— i re. j : look of reproach for his judgment defeating me he ve a big drink of ave any in your room.’ ‘and when I left him he did which emphasized the the and the . He is a great man; fact, he will grate on almost any- body,—Nutt,” i i i ye L & ; Bs 24 a: f ¥ i ¥ i z 5 4 set ‘ ; ig Me Sagee ih i : i if te Gossip. Martin Herman has returned. Ho - DONT cry, Bosse - Inu Gwe Yu somé THis ‘Cause You CAKE AND yOu ‘44 PusHeD ME OFF FoRGET att ABouT_! My TRE PorcH AND Yeur BumP— ; I cot my Heap “BUMPED — L AW- Ww — } You -sHourd | AuTTA- di Yy>CNE ME ff Baw-w- ¢ NAW—TI Gor © You PusteD me OFF THE Pore 4nD T Bumped MY Head * Dip NT T Pust- You OFF THE Porcn- < AND GET YER Heap <BumPED yy: EVERY THING < Owing to the length of the show, It fe announced, that rise on “The Follies” at 8.10 o'clocn to-night. ‘The tickets issued for the opening of “Cinderella on ” at the ‘Winter Cecen are good Thursday. Carl be yeh iy story.| Th ino §6Brothers, Spanish dancers, introduced a new specialty in “The Night Boat” lest night. A THOUGHT FOR TO-DAY. Leslie Dowell, a Los Angeles film publicity man, send: stuff and advises us charge for this service.’ FOOLISH MENT. I know a girl named Minnte Begt Who.thinks the iceman ts a pest. |. | The icemn always wears,a grin, And once he called her pretty Min. ? lot of press “there is no fellow-workers at rs, Stewart went West with him. _ WooDs STARTS ANOTHER. “sa the Syoote Roll By,” a new play by Wil! J poney has been Pi fa. vebgerent “by - H. Woods Irene Fenwick in the featured roje. Others in the cast are Robert Ames and Elwood Bostwick. EMERSON SAILING. Emerson, President of the Ac- —R-M -BOINWER HOE. — We Hope They’ve Lost Their Return Ticket, Too! “Oh, ma, that guy's @ flirt,” Min erted, ‘Tut, tut!” her mother then replied. “Just calm yourself, my dear; don't frown. Perhaps he'll cut our ice bill down.” "WHEN ‘Do You (INTEND “To “TAKE SouR” VACATION BUT YouRE STILL AT Home — WOW Come ‘, 6 -BuT ro TH Wire eel AN’ MoTHER- obo! THIS 16 TH Lire! PEACE AN’ QUIET) *N' EVERY THIN * juity Association, is sailing to- bags? Ned = by stor Europe, 4 his wife. He expects to in bringing Sbeat s closer Etors in'London and Ps Copyright, 1920, by The Press Pubttanin you agree with all the answers to this week's question which 7 have already ' been printed? Jgte have your views on the subject. Don't delay. Send in your answers to /FHE OUIJA EDITOR, y \ EVENING WORLD, f NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. Fach person is limited to five an- awers. “8 fT PROPER FOR, GIRLS TO » WEAR ONE-PIECE SUITS AT “THE BATHING ACHES? SNot a Hard-Bolled Egg, N- J—i'm @ girl, seventeen, won the champion Asbury, and ¢' I go ins ming I wear a oni iece bathing, sult, Believe me, be- “Yd-wear anything else Or let a bf say I'm not modest, I'd stay out of the water altogether, Take my adviee, girls: If you want to be # ewimmer, rs gansieee suit, “pm Bronx je—By means, ‘That's just the Yeason most girls cannot swim, for it is-m big handicap to learn to swim with what an old-timer would call “meédern” girl's bathing sul 0 bathing suits that som tervthey hit the water and their store complexion washes off, the bath- it makes no difference, Insophisticated Englewood — On, Yoyt I'll tell the world it is. The only men who think it isn't are the owners of burlesque theatres, because they'd lose business. @ Seventeen, Bronx—It is very improper for girls to wear one-piece bathine suits, but I approve of short bathing dresses and socks. @Miss High School—in my opinion, iis perfectly proper for them to do teruorial they go to the beach for ‘ning and not to strut around. ert M.—i am not one of those shows his speed by exclaiming, “Me for the Frenchies!" Still, I be- lieve a one-piece bathing sult is proper. It surely appeals more to Apyaone than the clumsy long skirt esigned by the uplift society hypo- erites. The one-piece sult 1s made the United States FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE. “Did you read about those negroes ringing! 6 ay 1 Co, (The New York Bening World.) Improper only by the shameless be- havior of some of the gi them, But, for that matter, all they wear nowadays 1s not “proper.” Henry, Bay Ridge—d'll say it is. How can you expect a girl to #wim in comfort if she has to wear a large akirt and get tangled up in it? of my friends almost drowned last summer while swimming with a long dathing suit, “Down with the censors against one-piece bathing suits Here is one of last week's an- sewers: Common Sense at Seventeen—A girt and a fellow should go together long mough to know each other’s dispost- | tion, * If everything is O. K., age| would make no difference whatever. | That “empty barrels make the most ! noise” surely fits that Ex-A. BE, FB! Soldier in his thinking that a girt| lacks cominon sense before she is twenty-five, It's too bad that all men | are not gifted the way HE claims them to be! ata lala Do You | Know? | Copmright, 1920. by The Preas Pubilshing Co, (The New York Evening World.) | 1, By what name is red sulphide of | mercury known? | 2, Of what team was “Home Run” Baker a member before leaving pro- fessional baseball? 3. Who was the inventor of the| Pianofurte? 4. Who wrote the fairy tale “The | Ugly Duckling?” 6. Which is the largest city op the| Pacific Coast? 6. Who is the designer of the Shame rock TV.? 7. Who was Daniel Webster's great. est rival? 8, What American.Indian became a Brigadier General in the English Atmy? = 9. What were the last words of Christ on the Cross? 10. In what country is the City of Bombay? 11, What South American country Produces the greatest grain Crops? 124How many mints are there in +» ANSWERS TO QUERIES. 1, Cinnabar; 2, New York Americ (Yankees); 3. Cristofori; 4 And en; 5, Low Angeles; 6, > y; 8 0 10, India; GLORY} LT “CUT” HIM! — THERE HE GOES OUT WITH — o/lb RUSTY AND BUB HE'S ANGRY BECAUSE eee Was ONLY ARNG. Lt HAD LEFT were ! Here! YOU CHILDREN | STOP QUARRELING ‘THIS WEL — T arGuer FOR YOU — BLT SHE \NOULON'T COME OUT WERE — I TOLO Hee YOU WERE CLEVER AN’ “WHat You Were JUST “WOUND UP" TO-DAY! "ITS A WONDER HE WOULON'T CWWEsse77 igars an’ Free Lunch