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Poe COMIC PAGE TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1920 x ~KATINKA ee Bey : About Plays and Players By BIDE DUDLEY (MORNING MADAM I WISH you'D SEND I'M HERE For IMFORMATION THIS FAMILY MY CUT THAT Comedy — | 1M FROM THE i SOME To MY missus! NOT JOKING! C'MON, SLIP DON'T USE EB WHATS YER Boss's CENSUS ANY, sin! NAME, Quick ? |K Bureau ! — HE official tits of the theatr’cal . firm of Cohan & Harris will come | ‘. . to an end to-morrow night. While | By Way of Diversion George M. Cohan and Sam H. Harris | Sed have been going it alone in the pro- | ducing game since last fail, the firm | has been in existence, nevertheless, | and has necessarily controlled nu- merous mutual interests of the two Mafboy, in dis ole world ob our'n | Things ain't all chicken pie, \| Er lot ob kickaha you'll sho! find; — | | Ter knock yoh game dey'll try. | men. Reports to*the effect, that ‘the tWo would join hands again are de nied, as are others which told of new alliances eagh might form. One said Mr. Harris and Irving Berlia might)! form a partnership. They will do that very thing, but it will be merely to handle the affairs of the Band Box, 4 theatre they plan to erect together. Mr. Cohan will probably move h fices from the Cohan & Harris 1) tre “Building soon. Because of prior eases, he can not get all the room | he wants in that building. While | But don’ yo’ mind ‘em, boy, at all, Amite when de knocks come thick Des plug an’ keep apluggin’, boy An let de kickahs kick. Wifout de obstactes he meets, A man might lose his mind, Some day you'll find yo’ troubles, boy, | Ter yo! wus really kind. Des plug an’ keep a-pluggin’ "tong, Den when yo' come to die Yo'll thank yo' lucky atahs yo’ life Once More an Innocent Girl Gets Insulted! ; { DONT Tete ne To GUESS IT— F f shy TM IN No HUMOR FoR * etl ney = 5 “~y = i. ' yn ( JOE f) ia > Let Her Come Out, Joe! We're Not Subject to Fits! George M. Cohan and Sam H. Harris Wus not all chicken pic. a have cleoted to go their separate ways | eal r <q, i THAT Li Postage stamp t BUT GEE, Wizz WOMAN Ba 2 mpd ran che business, personally | | si.roat operation, is back in the cast Sera cay Ba Y ALL “THAT. THING A ym A MAN S> You caN'T Di taetawas,reneae Ii ed conves | of “HO " |} | You CALL THAT LITTLE. RAG D You Cau “Tar. —_ ov ‘To Broadway, however, it is uree| of “Honey Girl,” at the ¢ ‘ohan &) ne! ot) Ans of Keon regret to sce. two such fine | Harris. a WEAR. A SuIT LIKE AM (LL say it's A FIT ~~ DON'T You COME OUT ITLL GWE Mé ONE HERE! D'YOU THINK 1 WANT fellows “breaking the home tes.” ERLANGER KEEPS CONTROL. The Hollis Street Theatre, Boston, has been leased for ten years by the Hollis Street Theatre Company, Inc. A. lL, Erlanger is President; Charles J. Rich Vice President and Treasurer, and Joseph P. Bickerton Seoretary. ‘The house will be renovated during the summer, This move retains for Mr. Erlanger the same strong position with regard to the Boston theatres that he has held for twenty-five years. The Hollis Street, Colonial and Tremont Theatres will be booked through the Erlanger offices. BOWMAN “COMES ACROSS.” While Marc Klaw and Tom W. Riley were on their way to Europe aboard the Lapland recently, they ‘were put on a committee to arrange a concert for the Sailors’ Fund. A happy idea struck them, and they ‘wirelessed other ships crossing the pe soliciting funds. John McE. , President of the Pershing Square group of hotels, was on the Mauretania. He wirelessed Messrs. Klaw and Riley an order for $500. raising $2,500 on thelr own boat. BALL PLAYERS ATTEND. Owing to the sudden closing of “An Innocent Idea” at the Fulton Satur- ‘day night, the baseball theatre purty soheduled at that house for last night ‘was switched to the Cohan & Harris, where Babe Ruth and the Yankees saw “Honey Girl.” BRAHAM IN “MECCA.” Charlotte Greenwood’s musical suc- cess, “So Long Letty,” is being filmed at the Christie studios. Boyd Agin has been engaged for a’ role in Thomas Dixon's new Abraham Lincoln play, “A Man of the People.” Sylvia Clark; with “Hitchy Koo” last season, has been assigned a role in the new Greenwich Village “Fol- lies.” Twelve vaudeville acts, supplied by E. F. Albee, will give a show at Fallsourg, N. Y., July 4, to ald a) charitable institution. Ben Blake has been appointed chief of the direction staff of the new) Harry Levey Corporation. George Gresham has been engaged for “Transplanting Jean.” Rehears- | als began yesterday. Rita Morarity, seven years young, | is a newcomer in the cast of “The Night Boat.” She helps Ernest Tor- rence in a mysical number. Earl Leslie, tenor, has been engaged for the Go@tze! production’ of ‘The Rose Girl.” Thomas Dixon ts staging “A Men of the People,” which concerns phases in the life of Lincoln... He Iwrote it himself. Augustus Pitou ll, present Fiske O'Hara in “Sprinflimé in Mayo,” by Anna Nicholas Dyffy in Stamford on Aug. 9. Anna Paviowa, Russian dancer, who has been away four years, will return to’ America in October for a@ tour, ‘Two hundred apd eight officers and men of the 69th Regiment will see “Irene” at the Vanderbilt next Mun- \ day afternoon, Harry Levey’s now co-operative film producing concern has been narhed ,H ‘Levey, Inc, It is al- ready at work “shooting.” Pauline Chase, “The Pink Pajama the} Giri,” now the wife of Capt. Alec George, Broadhurst will present “Come Seven” in New York in July. 36¢ Opp has been engaged for “The Midnight Rounders” at the Century Promenade. ‘The girls in the modern sextet in Drummond of London,. was pelted with flowess by the girls of “The pe Oy Boat" at the Liberty Saturday night. A. THOUGHT FOR TO-DAY. Gelfishness which affects only the selfish one is a pity; when it puts burdens on others it is a crime, FOOLISHMENT. To Mary a bill was a joke, | She seemed to think men should go broke, WELL, IT HAS “AS MUCH ARE As- Yours! eee sae warner — cme * A ee Keres EZRA_Ddo YA. } \ Sue - Ds tek: | cute Te ie 7 aTaee Be He 4 ITC RER' ERT me HAVE THE Bare ~ | WanT + a PLAY BALL You cay PITCHER - cHer—| 2 Z ae 2 “Now LISTEN — IE You «> - “TH'READERS OF “THis PAPER “To SEE YOU LIKE “That 21? He’s Not a Pitcher—He’s a Fall Guyf )_BeFore you PITCH \ Tr You GorTa Cer ‘THe LIM DEGINNING TS Batu our ove CS \ see WHY They / GAVE ME SEWER ¢ | 1 TAs [| PircHErR's Toaw > SN; Macnesial = Hore ou HEAVEN “iorodora” tin, flowers | She'd spend hubby's cash, . WNRE AN Never REPEAT \ than the “old-fashion one With verve and such dash, r Wy ‘ iy A LIL’ A WoRD OF wot » FORBID: . eres the, chorus gir iy oder "Twould get hm so angry he'd choke, e "We ey Tar Do. SOUT nee were . f en’ adway” who doesn't miss a 4 DuMBELL performance befo! ye t “Lassa at the Nord’ Bayes The- WITHIN, HEARN! FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE. “What do y8u think of the repor: atre, will pass the hundredth perfonm- ‘ance mark to-morrow night. Ottie Ardine, having recovered from from San Francisco tat Bryan may be nominated?” “Far-fetched. se Evening World Ouija Editor Asks Coprrittst, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New Yogk Evening World.) T, ho, Evening World read- , ers! ‘ Cd yeu ‘believe in eecret Are. you ied? If so, did you contract 4 wedding? Have you any friends who married pecretly?. In your opinion, did their ‘marriages turn out happily? At any rate, write your” answers to this ‘Week's ouija question and mail them to The Galle Editor, The Evening World, New York City. DO SECRET MARRIAGES TURN OUT HAPPILY? R. R. Ra Greenwich Village—vVery, very seldom; because it is merely the idea and fascination of the thing, and fascination soon dies o Threck Pack, No. 211 Division Street Yes and no. It all depends on the concerned. F., 88th Street, Brooklyn—No one uld get married secretly, be- cause it immediately surround) cl @ marriage with unfavorable mys- teriousness. Ex-Gob, Greenwich Village—Mar- riage is nothing to be ashamed of— “it's a blessing, a paradise, with the right girl. Positively no secret mar- tusn out ‘happily. jarriet, Nyack—Secnt marriages turn out happily? How can they? is a ®acred institution and 4 be treated with sanctity. Why off on life's journey together by hiding something? It's nothing to be ashamed of. o Marguerite, Perth Amboy--Why dn’t secret marriages turn out as happy ad J ‘Tis only the hidebound, ind that - question, “Is it proper for girls euite at the bath- beaches: a Oulja Editor, Kathryn—I swim in pools with a one-piece suit and outside I wear a regular it, and I never find it dif- ficult to swim with such a suit. Job, Heights—Young men's morals and one-piece bathing sults? Why not let the girle learn how really fine the water is? As for the morals, if a young ‘man has seen a one-piece suit before it will not hurt him, and if he hasn’t it is part of his edu- cation, Mii Common Sense, Long Beach_— Why all this riff-raft about one-piece suits being all right for swimming, but the girls must not parade the beach? Don't the men walk up and down the beach after they have hada dip? They alternate a dip and a sun bath—just as any sane person would 4, Why expect the girls with one-piece suits to remain in the water all the time, just because some hard-boiled egg thinks they shouldn't parade the beach. Am I not right? ——— Do You Know? Copsrieht, 1990, yy The o tine New York “Brening Wort) 1. In what country was glass first used for windows? 2, For what player was Arthur Fletcher recently traded by the Giants? 3, Who wrote “The House-Boat on the Styx?” 4, What American President was interested in ornithology? 6, In what Shakespearean play does the character Cassius ap, %. What key of music has five flats? 7, What are the wires called in a wireles station which receive tho electrical vibrations? & How many pictures are there to each foot on a motion picture film? 9% What was the nationality of the famous surgeon, Abernethy? 10, What Roman defeated Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium? 11, Wheré was Thomas Paine im- prigoned during the French Revolu- tion? 12. Who Is the designer of the yacht Resolute? ’ ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS. England; 2, Bans 8, Joni 1, errans Pur Coy 6 wertd LEAVE IT HA’ Ha’ — so You “THOUGHT T COULD ONLY PLAY AG —TIME , LOU WAITLE You HEAR THIS PIECE CF BEETHOVEN'S ft Pi », 1M, GOIN . VA AN’ PAY Wi THE BABY NEXT DOOR] |MRS ANE T PAY VERY WELL, 1 CAME OVA 1 BE A GOOD wiv YOUR BADY OnE FEWOW WHO ISN'T AFRAID TD FACE WWE MUSIC § Rather Doubtful Compliment! HED Have AL I CAN SAY i "CAWis® 13 16. * We Omens wa BEETHOVEN COULD HAVE ! WEARD YOU PLAY VEUGHT o A Be a Fox Trotter When He Grow stupip! DONT HE'S GETTIN YA KNOW YA ET AW RIGHT, SHOULDN'T WEAR . Now, MRS, LONG DWESSES ANDERSON \ T'WAL IS i p IN