The evening world. Newspaper, April 9, 1921, Page 6

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| | | EE I rR NS Oe a ee eee i H } “Nemesis” Seen a TURNING ON ' THE SPOTLIGHT Prices of Tickets to Be Reduced Next Season | to $2.50 and $3, Says Lee Shubert— By CHARLES DARNTON s a Play of Horror IRST a bit of news for you—an Next sewson the Shubert tickets to $2.50 for dramatic plays and $3.00 for musical comedies. ‘This announcement comes from the Having heard that a Shubert Yor no more than $1.50 a seat, I made it my business to ask “Mister Lee,” as he ia called about the shop, if he eost of theatre tickets. For a mor record, but, after admitting the Philadelphia rate, he went further. said Lee Shubert, “we are going to lower the prices of tickets “Y @ext seasun, We shali charge $2.50 paratively stall casts, and $3 for eostly because of their large companies. “Haye you found that the prices mew charged are keeping people from ping to the theatre?” I asked. “N-no,” he slowly considered. “That fmt the reason for the change we tmtend to make. Everything is com- fag down in price, and the situation maust be met by the theatrical man- if not anticipated by him Business generally is getting down to a new basis, and the theatre is obliged to follow the movement of Jower prices. This is merely a matter of common sense, War prices no donger prevail in any channel of trade, ‘and so the theatre must adjust iwelf fe pretent conditions. We still are obliged to ‘meet increases demanded by péople we employ, especially mosiclans and stage hands, but we afford to disregard the de- mands of the public. “Hag 13 been a bad season?” I in- quired, “No, it hasn't,” was the prompt re- iy. “Whe season has been very good on the whole. Every worthy produc- tion has been given excellent patron age, especially in New York, There ia a public here that would pay $60 @ seat! for something it was eager to see, bet whis public is so small that fn the end it would mean nothing to the theatre. It would support noth- img but its own desire for the mo ment, and therefore it is not w~ t counted upon in the long run. Taust rely upon the general public,” It necessary to urge Mr. Shu- bert 1e with a question as to how far his plan might go for the good of ‘Yheatre patrons. rowing his cal- culating eyes, he said: “Throughout the country we have out 450 theatres in our control. The etandagd of prices we fix must be met by any one booking our houses— that’s all there is to it. If another r isn’t willing % play at the rates we establish ‘ie will have to Jaok elsewhere for a house.” Naturally, the question of compe- ition came up, and Mr. Shubert an- wwered it wit “Managers generally, in my opinion, ‘will be compelled to reduce prices.’ “You believe prices are too high?” “Yes, I do,” he admitted. “But at the same time, ‘al! of us have been under tremendous expense. Because of this there are more early closings ‘of road companies than in any other mn, High railr ve made it impossible to keep them You might tmagine that people are and other rates | d you may agree that it’s good news: s will reduce the prices of theatre Lee side of the firm, “show” was playing in Philadelphia had started a move to lower the high | ment he seemed reluctant to go on| for dramatic plays, with their com- musical productions, that are more going to She mov from the 80-¢ theatres. “No,” said Mr. Shubert, “this is not true, ‘I believe the movies are bring- ing people to our theatres, Hor one thing, motion pictures are shown in churches, and churchgoers who once shunned the theatre have had their religious prejudices against it re- moved, so that now they come in larger numbers to see a play, Con- | ditions are better, rather than worse. But I believe they will be better still with a lower cost of tickets, and so I shal pursue that policy Incidentally, something of a stir along this line has been caused by the announcement that $5 will be charged every one who wants to see Ethel and John Barrymore from an orches- tra seat in “Clair de Lune” at the Empire shortly. This, after inquiry, proves to be true. The explanation given me is that the production is to cost $60,000 or $70,000, and that the engagemert is for only eight weeks. In this matter Lam eimply your hum- ble reporter, and staying away Ned “legitimate” No one can doubt the sincerity and thoroughness of Augustus Thomas as a playright. Moreover, he has mental strength that makes most of our play- weaklings. a play with a fixed a, Makes the impression in the end of a play of horror, Mad with jealousy, a man might take his wife by the shroat and then stab her. But this husband commits murder so deliberately that it is like butehery. Then with a rubber finge tip bearing the marks of his wife's lover he imprints, supposedly, dam- ning evidence on various things in the room, This murder might have happened in she Grand Guignol, only there it would probably have’ been given the thrill of a fight for life by the woman, There is also the possible influence of Brieux, with “The Red Robe,” on Thomas, for both find fault with the house at Sing Sing the audience is the n hears nin “At the Telephone,” who hat robbers are breaking into wife, No thought is given by the ence at the Hudson Theatre, perhap to the murderous husband explaining his crime to the District Attorney. It is left to think about e Innocent electric chair, Still, it must be granted that a play with an idea is worth a dozen without one. COUNTRY FOLLOWS EW YORK LEAD IN BUILDING HOMES gs In $400,000,000 Quarterly Plans, 39% for Housing . Compares With 59% Here. Building activities are increasing steadily throughout the country Reports for the year's first quarter show a round $400,000,000 of new work tander way. At this rate the projects started during the entire year would call for $1,600,000,000, ‘That final fig- tures may well be far above this is indicated by the volume of projects announced but not placed under con- tract, It js running close to $400,- 000,000 a month, or 4,800,000,000 a year. The main reason for not start- ing more operations is the lack of mortgage capit With any great increase in available credit, this enormous coastruction would get under way, because it is based upon actual current demands Contracts awarded during the past month throughout the country called for $164,194,000, according to the F, W Dodge Company reports, issued to- day, They exceed the ures by 63 per cent and those of year ago by 78. ne big increases are} April 1 for fiftynine houses, to @ue to small projects, largely resi- | COSt, $547,000. Gential. During the ‘quarter, con-|. While ‘speculative builders are striv- tracts awarded called for $376,631,000| Ng naturally to obtain the most favor jon 1 operations, with 37 per cent,,| ®ble terms before launching his op or $60,693,000, residential. ations, and are thus ostensibly sup- 1 4n New York State and Northern| porting much of the proguganda of New Jersey, the Dodge reports verify the figures of metropolitan building outlays published a week ago in The Evening World- Covering the remaining territory out side the metropolitan zone, the tota ‘becomes ‘work reported amounts to $4 ‘but this includes the Hudson Rive’ bridge. For March, the total was $29,846,000, * an increase of 40 per cent. © eb ruary. This one, month shows $17, 679,000 for residential structures, or 6: r cent, of the total, This again yer fies Evening World statist of $30, 000,000 for the past thr housings for 20,000 persons, showing Abet home piviovio wOW aio sunning | ( leat dale of the | ness much of February fig- a total of $67,100,000. Contemplated 24,000, months on tional volume, In the New England States, con- tracts awarded for March, calling for $13,262,000 are 84 per cent. above the total of the preceding month. The identia) projects take 35 per cent. For the quarter, the amount was 574,000. Contemplated work is more than four times that put under way The Middle Atlantic States started 03,000 of work in the quarter and ,069,000 in March, Home con- struction takes 39 per cent. Con- |templated work foots up to $185,0 000. The Pittsburgh district for March with $37,871,000 is 87 per cent, above February totals, For the quarter, it scores $85,869,000 with residential projects calling for 83 per cent, The Central West records $116, 937,000 for the quarter and $48,513,000 for March, inere e of 74 per cent, There was 27 per cent. residential. In the northwest the $15,225,000 for the quarter and $7,632,000 for March show gains of 152 per cent. over Feb- ruary. cent These figures show that the metro- politan district leads all of the coun- try in its high percentage of residen- tal construction. And the main. in- centive around Greater New York the new rent laws with exemption provisions and sures for stimulating home build measures advocated persist- ently by The Evening World, and as strongly fought by profiteering land lords with their following of hungry brokers, Realty reports of the past week through the metropolis revealed fur- ther expansion of the building re- vival, especially in the fields of mod- te cost homes. Dwelling builders are flooding the suburbs with their operations and flat builders are filing ns and buying sites in steadily in- creasing volume. ‘To illustrate this, Brooklyn builders of dwellings filed plans in two days. Home work is taking 26 per seems to be tax their other landlords who still fight to hold rents at highest levels, it is plain that all are r to get projects under way in spite of their talk to the contrar -| This is shown by their bidding f 1] sites and their hustling negotiations for building loans and architects plans, The first meeting in a long time r]of the Builders’ Association, at the call of President Harry Goodstein,, revealed the new sentiment, — Its -| members are yeterans who have -| housed hundreds of thousands of New 9] Yorkers, among then\ being John J. placed in much-the same position as | 0 his house and are about to kill his| ¢ audi- | ¢ victim who is being murdered in the | Ss HE woodland was quiet. its ‘4 way slowly th there. Little that some birds were about It going silently. morning; their was a stillness. At least for all much how He remembered those with another house and to get quite ardens and houses, himself in -the middle of a loud hubbub, building a nest,” Billy “Pretty, too" he thought. The thing was red it, in the wagons, without hor: see other anim to his stared. ever seen a circus. Ty was not a circus at yet. It was just woodland, Billy fixing for the show. nated; he watched °o nr began be in white ting a drum side, catch, d to a stake. “th said a man in ov air and opened open jaws. t the Some tim Another a same way Bringing on the -| Hearn, Charles Hensle\ Ely H, Moran. -| H. Berman, Henry F man, J. Vogel, John Katzman, Max J&st, M. Ray- mond, M. Goodman, H\ Edelstein, nuries Kiaum, A. Muller, @ A. Lanz. celved in fall while rehearsing, ki ° A inn & She brings with her the hum of hees,|“easters” who fly through the air nea ‘And songs of birds, nesting in trees,|the roof of the building, have long Robertson ‘And spreads her mystic veil of green,| ranked high in the efreus profession. Production Til nothing ugly or brown is seen.| ‘The Ward act this year concentrated ona triple ac ersault ending in And the pussywillows nod with glee,]a “eaten” A maf sailing through the d roliesome breeze from ove: |Mir turns over t tines and is caught 0G 8 feovonolne ze from over /iy another man at the end of the Sets to dancing the flowers rass.|° "phe third turn is regarded as the Along the path where spring does} mate test of mental stability and mu: pass lar strength. It is here acrobats oft« lose their vision and their nerve * She sets free from bondage the ice}of casters have fallen after the third clad brook, turn, So it was with Lane," He misked ong through fleld ana] #nd turned the fourth ‘time as he was Aad it irile Mong through fold and falling to the net, landing on bis head 0) and shoul hiysicians £ ace While from the hills the echoes aing, |e chil calcul ee Found & fr “Oh welcome to thee, Welcome Spring.” By E TITMAN, age fourteen. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Lawrence, L. I. —_ Why Are Bin Happy? ‘A Complete Funeral Service Birdies’ will you tell me. in an atmosphere of refinement Whenever you I see, The dest costs no more," \W WAY AHH Ae £0 FRANK E. CAMPBELL Hf ap pee fe shirping in a tre “THE FUNERAL CHURCH” Ine. {I} ‘ And will you tell me, binies, (sen-Genanen | round with a pointed top. field, was a ring of es but with bars on the ides through which one could| 1s, big, fierce, talking animals such as never came MMETT CORRIGAN MRe KALLAN —— sy unusually A faint breeze pushea hrough thick mist to stir a tree top here and subdued twitters awake, most of them were still sleeping or morning queer it made Billy feel restless, made him wish to get away from it» chi Billy ran along the path to the very edge of the forest, and then on across a meadow and into a garden in the middle of which grew a house. Billy knew it grown there, anyway he didn't care it had got there, it was very big and frightening and Billy was timid about going too close to it. long dreary from the It was yery early and the houses all about were still drowsing, but inj New York, N. J space, | one spot, a large, flat, open 4 whole lot of people were busy with| hands and feet and voices. “t told himself. and wi Bright It was the first time he had| that a troop of circus! performers putting up the tent an Billy was f. and wondered in the corner of the Jot a lari n with a black face and a red coa and loose pants and pointed hat blew with all his might on a shiny, an Now he was standing before a huge gray beast that swayed from side dere Ju eralls, beast’ raised its long nose high in the its mouth. fine fat peanut flew from the man's hand and found its way into Jumbo's nd and ¢ he'll drop one of thos April showers A ihadhe sweet adr mules you Kay, kind Outside loud- Then a ow RES) 0 | Each GMOS SISTER “Aida” Mon ay by Mmes. vard Gustafson dunott ance ning, whe Gordon, OLIVE TELL AND PEDRO DE CORDOVA. nian, Pap will be su Friday by Gustafson Other ¢ “Louis one of the Met will this s Messrs. Harrold, Didur, Rothier, Ana sen and Messrs. 3 a. THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, Emmett Corrigan and Olive Tell | In the Melodrama ‘“‘ Nemesis’’ SN RMB ‘Aida’ Opens ‘Week in Opera; t week but politan opera season will open the 1¢ vening Muzio, de sung and Har- when it wi Claussen nd Messrs. Crimi, Danise, Didur, “Boris Go- ave its first perform gon next Saturday n it will be sung by Mmes. Delaunois, Howard and and Audisio, i conducting. “Lohengrin” ng at a special matinee on Mmes. ston and Claus- mbach, Whitehill, and Leonhardt. yperas next week will be on Wednesday evening, with Mmes. Farrar, Berat and Delaunois Harrold, Whitehill and “Pagliacci” and “Ll Segreto di Suzanna” Thursday evening, the 4 s former sung by Miss Sundelius ana THE“ THUMB PRINTED PORTRAIT Messrs. Martinelli and Amato, and IN CLAY, THAT STARTS ALL THE FIREWORKS = and Mes: De Luca Lescaut’ The Evening World's Kiddie Klub Korner Coperigth, 100, by The Pee Puidiching On (She Mew York Brening Wet) Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Woodland Wonder Tales By Cousin Eleanor No. 36—Billy Brighteyes Goes to the Circus. the told but ores of Crimi, morrow’s to-morrow day play major, tra Bride” Tel Fi ancis M I haa way of the law or justice—whatever|94Ys epent as a prisoner in a cage By et you choose to call it. Intelligence is}down on Cravby'’s farm and the’ tweiy, always the directing power. But in| thought made him run away. But he the final scene outside the death] nly ran straight into another garden that one into still another until he began| used to them—both| He went on and n and shortly Billy Brighteyes found | time. town, and, more than that, in the midst ol All of how they test on Time.” HO Bus ¥ sven | Doris | \Cliftora Gr hite, reg | Howard, Cc. Loftin ar | Subject: the ten Not| from “The Kid \- | ceed 150 The wi | contestan | elders. Write other Address N. Y, Evening World Kid- yellow horn, At every blast Billy i ile ees : 2 trembled. ‘This was the first music| @4e Klub, No. 63 Park Row, New York feathered forest songsters and the groga. No wonder he shook, halt) premarin rene frightened, half thrilled, but ail en-]$4OW TO JOIN THE CLUB AND chanted OBTAIN YOUR PIN. to mo, The other | 3 erees said Billy, “and when he does 1 will run and get it” So the little gray ——$—$—_—— squirrel settled himself in front of the big ray elephant to wait ex-| CIRCUS ACROBAT KILLED. pectantly for that lucky chance - He waited a long while Sells-Floto Performer Misses Dif- Next Story: Takes a Ri ficult “Triple Turn” Feat. Spring. CHICAGO, April 9. nest Lane, one ing comes laughing o'er the hills,Jof the nine persons taking part In the | Scattering violets, daffodils, Ward “casting” act in the Sells-Floto| Waking up the crocus flowers, Mints Blt pene Aae tiues Inliriee see | For I myself doth know, It makes little children play. Birdies, or are you thanking God, The Maker of the For all He has done for you and me— New York City. MARCH CONTEST AWARD Wouldn't GLADY! netta Randall, Clark, Ridgeficld Park, N. J.; Evelyn Cresskill, N. J.; Ten awards of $1 each will six send in the best essays or poems on Neither essays nor poems must ex- CERTIFICATE il children up to sixteen years of become waubere Mach member dilver gray Klub Pin ad membership rth and sod, why you are so happy? JZABETH WHELAN, age WINNER. bas Nine Year Class. stars the kiddies have some spare them it be nice to tell spend it? I suggest a con- What I Do With My Spare G R E A T ‘ MON, age nine, West NORABLE MENTION, DeVoy, Woodcliff, N. J. ‘onwall, Floral Park, L. 1. Rutherford, \N. J Brooklyn; Dorothy Mil r Brooklyn; Edward Smith, Sidney Wald, Bronx; n Adams, New York City, APRI is CONTEST. The Kiddie Klub's Birthd: with Kiddie to Klub members, aged fifteen inclusive, who Adie Klub's Birthday.” words. ork must be original and the nt Must not accept help from NAME, AGE, ADDRESS and NUMBDR distinctly. Beginning with aoy num- ber, Of the cou- pons, 758, To, 761 762" and nd nail aoe to 1m Kdeamor, Kreuing World Kiddie Klan, No. 63 Park Row, city with Jou must A ‘G8 AND’ ADDRESS. Ate mar u COUPON 758. “Il Segreto di Suzann: “Madam Buterfly’ with Mme. Farrar and Me — Mmes., Muzio and Telva Scotti and afternoon, Beethoven's concerto the * numbers will rikovsky’ seldom romance TOWN IDOL” by Miss Bort 4 Paltrinieri; on Friday evening, srs, Gigtt, ‘Manon with and Messrs, At to- operatic pro- rs. Scotti and Saturd Ananian; y matinee, Malates an concert gramme will be rendered, | Erno Dohnanyi, Hungarian pianist, will be soloist at the National Sym- phony concerts, under Artur Bo- danzky, to be given in Carnegie Hall evening and Mr. next Tues- Dohnanyi_ will in E flat The orches- be the “Bartered of Smetana and Fourth mphony emillen, violinist, will ap- mperor.”* overture AMUSEMENTS. Theatres Under Direction of Huge Riesenfeld In “Deception” the love story of Anne Boleyn and King Henry VIII of England SHALL offer at the Rivoli Theatre, a motion picture possibilities of the screen in Beauty-Splendor-Art in stage craft and acting— Apicture that brings to the vision with a power ualled on stage or screen, the stirring shook a throne and divided an empire. that will reveal the IG SUNDAY Rialto Comedy Week Mack Sennett. gathered together ail the of his productions and put into a rare combination of Spectacle Comedy Melodrama ‘A SMALL IN 6 PARTS Ben Turpin, Phyllis Haver, Marie Prevost, Charles Murray FAMOUS RIALTO ORCHESTRA Hugo Riesenfeld and Lion Vanderheim, Conducting RIVOLI “PROXIES” B'WAY A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ton mezzo sopran Hall and the Schur concert there in thi ard Hale, baritone, app" ‘Tuesday ‘afternoon, EI ist, evening, while Fanny White, soprano, |~ has chosen Town Hall for her recital Mme, Olga GSamaroff p Reethoven Hall Thursday afternoon and Rudolph Bochco, debut Mana Zucea, mezzo soprano, ternoon and Augusta Cottlovw, pianis at night. Guiomas Novaes gives her season's farewell piano recital in Acolian on Gaturday afternoon. chestra, founded by the late Alfred at49thSt. to1130P.M. Tomorrow Sentimental be difficult to conceive anything to surpass it.”— New York Mail. 19231, 08 rnoon the soloist will be Julia She will play the Schumann ther numbers will be Sgmont" overture and mphony No. 1, in C minor, concert to-morrow night is at The popular prices. Mme, Julia Culp Will give her first New York recital, after an absence of five to-morrow afternoon in Acolian Hall The fifth and final of the second season series of Frederic Warren Ballad Concerts at the Longacre The- atte to-morrow afternoon Will have a group of six contributing artists Sophie Braslau, contralto, will give a recital to-morrow afternoon in Car- negie Hall Thomas Bean will give his farewell concert of the season at the Lexing- ‘Dheatre to-morrow night, and Mme, Galli-Curet will sing for the last time at the Hippodrome, For Monday, Henriett@ Safonoff, will sing in Aeolian nn Club gives a evening. Rich- ars imAeolian a Hilger, cell- ters, in the aide by her two. ays her final I in Aeolian sonata rect Russian violinist, makes his at night in Carnegie Hall. pianist-composer, gives of her own composition ay evening in Aeolian. For Friday there are Esther Dale, in Aeolian in the NOTES OF MUSIC. The Young Men's Symphony Or- AMUSEMENTS. ST. NICHOLAS RINK }|* Dancing Every Afternoon Evening, Including Sundays, 2.30 Lady Floor Manager will introduc you to suitable partner for danec- ing. lar institution. Roller Skat Lincoln Seligman, completes its nine- |New York recital at the Town fai? OF MUSIC teenth season with a subscription |/on Mon evening, April 18 Fite concert at Aeolian Hall on Sunday | programme will incude compositiona afternoon, Aprit 17, at 8.1 by Bach-Busoni, Chopin, Granadom, Alfred Boswell, a pian pupil of | Albeniz, Liszt and a group of the jpear at the concert next Wednesday Emile Blanchet, will give his first! works of Blanchet. ening. He will play the Goldm £ : — = meerto for violin, The orchestral | | numbers comprise Beethoven's “Corl. | AMUSEMENTS. _ a ANUSEMENTS. overture, Ra “Mother = = suite and ere’s symphonic rhe Sirens.” Onnext Saturday ]] SUPPOSE YOU WERE THIS WOMAN— Suppose you had loved “not wisely but too well”; swppose the man was held fast for a crime of which he was innocent; suppose his only po: sibility of freedom lay in your releasing him from the oath to secrecy that was keeping him prisoner. And suppose the release from that oath meant your own everlasting shame, What then? See R. A. Walsh's Remarkable Screen Presentation at THE MARK STRAND THEATRE BROADWAY AT 477TH STRE! “A NATIONAL INSTITUTION.” DIRECTION JOS. PLUNKETT. BRGINNING Io BOSTON ‘via Cape Cod Canal... METROPOLITAN LINE ALY, steamers will resume service for the season on Tuesday, April 12 Fare $6.78 inc. War Tax . “All the way by water”—No change. Connections at Boston with steamers for Portland, Rockland, Bangor and Yarmouth, N.S. Steamers will leave Pier 18, N. Ry New York (foot of Murray St), daily, including Sundays, at 5 P.M. Telephone Barclay 5000. WEW YORK- ALBANY = TROY Daily sailing from Pk Ne ity foot Canal Sty 6 P.M. West 1324 Sty 6.30 P.M. i rail connections at Albany to all points north, east aud PHONE CANAL 000. Express Freight Service. Autos Carried. |] HUDSON NAVIGATION COMPANY MIDDLETON |S. BORLAND | and JAMES A. EMERSON, | Receivers, ANCING CARNIVAL 66th Street, near Broadway and P. M. to 12.30, 3 Lessons (i, Not necessary to take lessons. |DYCKMAN ST. FERRY To INTERSTATE PARK Hiking and al FARE Oc Outdoor “Sports Busses to and from Ferry House Best Route for Autos to New Jersey, Learn to dance at this popu- ¢ on Ground Floor. Dancing on Second Floor. Cont. Noon ROLLER SKATING ST. NICHOLAS RINK \66th ST., NEAR BROADWAY; Competent Instructors to Teach You How to Skate. 50c per Lesson Two Sessions Daily, including Sundays, Dancing Carnival on 2d Floor LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. jack Dane dog, with white sar om Tex! dieappeared from Apel’ 2; liberal reward " , Pelnain Macon, Large Manor 2to5P.M. Skating on Ground Floor Evenings, 7.30 to 11. RELIABLE GOODS £0) Beginning RIVOLI CONCERT ORCHESTRA Tommy With GARETH HUGHES MABEL TALIAFERRO and MAY McAVOY A Paramount Picture Broadway at 66th St. full of delightful aovel LUKE AY UMES Only 5 more weeks of the greatest season in the history of this, the most popular theatre in New York! COMMENCING MONDAY AFTERNOON beginnin nick Vian to, ena! evil AUDUBON BALLROOM Make Shaving a Pleasure Grepensable adjunct, Phylactic, x is soothing and refresh the most tender skin. * rrmoion te Shore Soup ee Onntoneat where. tment WEF Cuticura Soap sha DANCING CARNIVAL NOW OPERATING THE INFORMATION WANTED, Frederick Stahiberg and i Sree aati eAtias WANTED, information concerning Josaphy Jooeph Littau, Conducting dave and. holidays, afternoon. aud. ev | Manuel ‘Troyo, who left. home duly 1, NO CHARGE FOR DANCING, LE: EOS B. AGoreae Ty a prme 796 Kast 183d INDIVIDUAL, INSTRUCTIONS, ig, ii PRIVATE LBSSONS, — — — Times Continuous Noon Not necessary to take lemons Lady Floor f| Square to 11.30 P. M. Manager will introduce you to suitable part: | per ODUBON THEATRE BUILDING. | THIRD WEEK 166th St. and Broadway | ADOLPH ZUKOR, presents ; ip Sir James M. Barrie’s =n: AND REAL FLESH cy NNO DRUGS Cuticura Soap IS IDEAL For the Hands \t,Talcum, the. everywhars, For sam a Laberaverion Deph is Baltes With Cuticura Talcum with Cuticura Soap the uticura Talcum i an in- Antiseptic and pro- Notice to Display adv lor clin the Advertisers 1d release dere World or Th VOM. the di in be inserted only and in order of receipt at) Th oitalulng engravings “to te Sample Hach Free by Mail Ai Maida bo recelved by 1 P.M. for the World Supple- rust be y containing | en st be recelved by Thursday noon, Sheet copy. type copy which hh by 4 P.M. Priday, and vt 1 has not been recelved In the by 1PM. Friday. and positive not reecived by 8B. M. Friday \ as conditions require, rigidly tn Aer lates recelpt and. positive release copy or orde leased later than led ab fan; T, contract or other

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