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_ COMIC PAGE TULSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1929 “Second-Hand” Bargains f Ax! Dw YGET y Rots 1 Gor LETTERS ; THey WANTED mv) REPLIES 1 rrom FIFTY WOMEN Tocgwenme , THEN WHAT ARE WT] apvertisep in it Y'DONG WITH THE Il For A HUSBAND ! } MATRIMONIAL OO mound 2, NEw — — _— "MEAN To MARRIAGE 15 SUST LIKE A | Mi you TELEPHONE, Boss* Y'DON ul | INever expect ff ALwAys GeT THE RIGHT , | | To ser PARTY ts StF u 3 ( “The Unwritten Chapter” Written for Louis Mann By CHARLES DARNTON NB of the most dificult things in the theatrical world {s to mnke a | play about a vaguely historical character of little, if any, dramatio | interest, “The Unwritten Chapter,” evidently written for Louls "i Mann by Samuel Shipman and Victor Victor, and produced last night at : ‘the Astor Theatre, io that kind of piay, | "6 ‘The programme quoted various authorities on the question “Who {s/ . Haym Salomon?’ and then left the audience to discover him as a Jew who gave doth financial and loyal ald to the American Revolution, In one Drought about « conferences of Jews in New York City that re- & pledge of funds pecemary to a svccessful termination of the lomon gave all his goki and persuaded others of his faith to con- to the cause, the play took the form of argument rather than drama—tho loy- . the Jew to America. Salomon stood firmly for patriotiem and was 3 sentenced to be shot. But aa it happened, there was both a prologue and an : éutlogue in which the fighting Jow of 1920 turned race prejudice into ai. | ~ Beat It, Joe—You May Hear Some More mire:tion. cence - Mr. Mann gave digntty and distinction to the role of Balomop. Lucille| ” - GOSH - THesE DEALERS ARE # rs TER 4 SiX HUNDRED ? You'Re cocky! > ‘Watson was a more or less merry widow who defeated the En, with a} ep! MDEPEMDENT' y'can't GET LGyess (Dd GE . fu TAKE (T * Fi HER A FATHEAD CAME IN HERE Ee iataes Pack Kingdon and Servers Druce peyea Enaushmen an Ensiishmes| Tie eee cae AN OU BORER EM To KNOCK OFF A CeNTt] | RAB THAT CAR — Ors. UP with Gas aN’ on! AkouT “Two MINUTES AGO © ro . { A whould be played. LIKE “THAT! “Too MUCH MoNEY" Atoop BuY AT THAT! AND SAID SIX HUNDRED ; If you Hike Louls Mann without humor you may lke “The Unwritten tu > ' | WAS “TOO MUCH MONET - ~ seme A BARGAIN! Ae FoR “THAT CARN ad Pn : es ta} = j About Pl d P ne : ‘ out Plays and Players my } By BIDE DUDLEY a B N. WOODS is to present soon . » “The River's End,” a drama. By Way of Diversion. - tization of James Oliver Cur- 3 Wood's novel of that namo, by Julian! —gummer's gone; the barefoot Johnson and Ray Long. The play desoribed as a melodrama in prologue,| *#on now ts over for the year, i] a three acts and an epilogue. It was| Wénfer’a nearing; that's the rea |, f written direct from the novel, not] #0" shoes and boots on boys ap- ” BS H { r from the motion picture. Lowell Sher- pear. Long ago, when closed = f pis man will be the foatured player in the| September, we got out our hewey ow Mom Knows as Much as She | Woods presentation. | eutts, With them too—well I A NEW HANNEFORD, remember—those old boyhood Poodies Haenneford, the Hippo- leather boots, I can see them drome’s equestrian clown, and Mrs. very plainty, creased and wrin Hanneford are the proud parents of | ied; ehrunken too, Black when new «irl, Mother and child doing) new; then drownish, mainly; gpams Poodles stil} bragging! sido-strops red or faded blue. 1 Sy wat WHAT NAMES \>'p He CALL Tite | TEACHER > Ve S41D —HE SAID - HE SAID sHe was WHAT TI SAID sHe 2 was ¢ WHar pip Bato (CALL THE TEACHER) THe TEACHER AWFUL NAMES ~ THAT'S CONFIDENCE, remember all the trouble that, Fred Stone met a vaudeville per-| to get them on, I had. I can see former on Broadway yesterday. me, bent»near double, scowling, “Congratulations on your new #how!” said the two-a-day man. “Will You save me two sents for the Fourth groaning, mighty mad, When at last they quit their balking and of July?” I got them on my feet, my, the “Which Fourth? asked Fred. pain that came with walking! _ Seemed my misery was complete, TO MARK ACTOR'S GRAVE. Still, when in my mind I'm turn William HH. Thompson, acting with William Hodge tn “The Guest of) "*fonor,” has begun a movement to! place 4 monument on the unmarked | gravo of Charles Fechter, a French | _ actor, who died In Philadelphia nearly a forty years ago.. Mr. Thompson to-day tn “Carey's Quest. ing back in years, perhaps a score, I can see them and I'm yearning just to fight those boots once more, cele! FR ree * . | Burns and Foran have joined the Wieyet in the Feohter company | cast of the new Shubert musical show, | MISS STERN MARRIES, | "tau" Kuy Kendall ts staging the numbers Wo have ep Poco bis for “I's Up to You." which William Btern of the A. H. Woods offices was| Moore Patch will produce. Pi ATTY (married eight weeks ago. Our in-| Bert Wilcox and Josephine La To Leave TH “4 formant does not mention the name |Crolx have a new vaudeville playlet LAST QIGHT LUKE ef the lucky man, but men count for Peses ramen cp oe ; * ‘eta Adler, of “Tho Treasure,” be- ~ a 2 ~ 6 little these days, anyway, gan her stage career in ‘the support of Bertha Kal: acting In Yiddish. CASADEBUS IN A SKETCH. | afartinka's ‘Theatre, at No. 493 Sixth Robert Casadesus, who was promt-| Avenue, gives free magic shows dally ently connected with the Theatre fon 10.A. M. to 10 P, M, Houdini ° “yoet. | Kellar, Gold: Th ton, Rosini, Parisien and later played in “Wort eee | ‘ant and others Zeone,” will launch a new playlet 19 | ary penind nt to create @ re- Wngiish at Proctor’s Theatre, Mount magic | Vernon, on Thursday, Nellie Leach igo Kennedy And Henrietta Delannoy will assist interior dec- Savage has ra boudolr settin n “Cornerud,” tn nedy will Tho aketoh is from the typewriter of | O)’ B. Dudley of Bronxvilin, TO PLAY “TWELFTH NIGHT.” - "The Lonox Hill Players are rebears A BUSY MAN. ing “Twelfth Nig and will present| A mate trom Kdith Helena, who ia} i ‘4 is singing in vaudeville down South, | it on Deo, 4 and 5, Later they will) protos that she wa young negro in front of her hotel in Tampa, F c asked him how he spent his tim “Oh, Ah jest nets an’ thinks,” he | replied. “an' when Ah ain't thinkin’ offer Von Hoffmanstah!'s “The Fool and Death,” mupplomented by Hindu pantomime by Burton W. James. | Ab jest sous.” De RERAS Wee yee 7 Wr THE BEST SHOP FOR, CUTTING —- 4 ripidis te = WHY WALLY STICKS | $- Tt == bi uP Soars is “THAT "MO. YES WAUMl—BUuT ASCHE COMING HERE. A THOUGHT FOR TO-DAY, OS uae abierecen ATES a Cor : BARBER ON THe CORNER MY GATHER WAS A cablegram retoived by Morrin| pey in some people so lazy, dat| — a vem “WE "GOAT" S dcy'd ruthah starve dan qgrn a honest Gest punounces that Oscar Aso sith of "*haceu the Tater C livin’ begginy—Eph Jones SOMEBOON'S NUTHIN' $— ) ; { 3 Mae ury spectacle, MING AN WE SWALLOWNE! ork from Len FOOLISHMENT. ES SOF ERY Soe ONO, 7 He MUA GAUL re ‘ork. Hin stay hore will be brief,| A man by the name of Joe Hatch MY TEN OO ¥ js wince he is playing the title role in| py K i - Aine We te Dinving the title role in| put Kitty, his mare, in a mate = eannot leave it long. | Said he: “Now, a dealt | Named Kitty, at least Gossip. Bhould come in ahead by a scratch.” Minnie Dupree is back to “The | Charm School.” Ray Hubbell has written muate for the new tomedy, “Sonny.” Fritz Lieber will offer Shakespeare at the Lexington on Doo, 27 i Henry Hull will begin rehearagls | body, FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE, “My brother Goor swallered he minister.” | ai ney out of any- : a4 Coprriye, 1020, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) ¥ there are any persons in the world without friends they must be chap- | ergnes, according to the chirpe of the auija boarders to date, The fans ELL, WHAT DOES THE Cook CALL don't seem to cat for them. They think they can get the best ents | = AG WHAT 1S YOUR WELL, wes OOK cs Slone. Hut there's a lot of time yet in which to decide the question, and if| IVE FORGOTTEN THE WELL, SONNY, WHAT! | SAME AS Teppvs same? Your DADDY WHEN WE COMES Dow! : —— VA OQUGHTTA Miny of the fane or the fans’ parents tink that chaperones are advisable | ee Oo IHESe NEY? iS Your name P MY DADDY'S TO BREAKFAST IN THE moRNING ? HEAR WHAT SHE. and permissible in these days, they should @ eit to work and send in| EMBERS = IM FLOCK ay — ¢ CALLS HIM whey the answer. Aiso, we want sot wr future questions, wo | | [MEMBERS OF Mv FLOC HE DON'T come ! end them aléng with your usua. BUT ILL FIND ITOU » fe ' Give old man oulja a snifte In other words, yes but FROM THEIR LITTLE BOY when he brightens up, ask him. L DUNNO, ARE ‘CHAPERONES OUT OF STYLE? aoT— the chaperones, The o cure of themselves, ia Send the dope to The Ouija Eaiter,| Palomine Joe—< | The Evening World, New York City, | stylish as two-seat tas arid cares B.—How are young folks go-| ene lamps, We bem, but very get Aoquainted with a dread- | seldom, De af Maught trailing them? Chaperones| gagi¢—yes, Girls of to-day think Z are ancient history, they know just how to handle the i Bridgeport—Yea, ‘They're in the|man themselves, bur they need the mame @uss as hoop gkirts. ladviee of their parents. | Rrother Joe—They aren't but they| Chub—As far as modern girls are ought be. concerned, yes, but | would suggest Brother Bill—They are advisable, |one for Terrible Al and a few others | Put they're neither useful nor neces-\of the eame assortment,