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GERMAN ENVOY IS RECEIVED BY POPE Grants First After-War Audi race to Representative of Central Powers. ROME. Nor. 10.?For the first time since tbe declaration of the - world war. Pop* Benedict Saturday official ly received in private audience a representative of the Central Poweri, Baron Johann ton Gebsattel, secre tary of the Bavarian Legation, who has arrived in Home to prepare for the return of the Bavarian miniacer. CMplimatic relations were not In terrupted between the Holy Sec and Bavaria during- the war. The Nuncio remained in Munich, while the Ba varian minister accredited to the Holy See resided in Switsserlacd. The in- j direct relations with Bavaria, which | the Vatican maintained through use of the diplomatic mail pouch always were respected by the Italian govern men tb The Pope and Cardinal Ga?parri. I the Papal Secretary of State, during the day received V onsignor Alosi Ma sella, who has just retorned from Lis bon. where he was stationed during the revolution, remaining there until the resumption of diplomatic relations between Portugal and the Holy See. Both the Pope and Cardinal Gas parri conversed at length with Mon slgnor Masella about the important qaestions he will have to solve in hia new post at nuncio to Chile, to which oountry he will proceed after a rest here DR. McKAY TO ADDRESS U. OF P. CLUB TOMORROW Former students of the University ef Pennsylvania are invited to be pceaeot at a meeting of the Univer sity Ot- Pennsylvania Club, tomor row night, %t the University Club. Dr James G. McKay, of the club, will deliver an address thanking all service men for tbe part they played in the recent war. Moving picture*, taken at the university, will be shown at the meeting. EBERT AND NOSKE ! LIVING TOO HIGH ????? I Critics Point to Large Bills Incurred by Pair at Dir.nstadt. BERLIN*. Nor. 10.?President Ebert and Gustav Noske. minister of de fense. have been criticised for the ex pens* bills ther Incurred during their recent stay at Darmstadt. The crit ics say that luncheons and dinners cost upward of 11,000, exclusive of wine, of which r*ore than 200 bottles were consumed, and complain that 1110 for spent or floral decorations. Sueh Hems, say the critics, scarcely ' can be reconciled with the govern ment's admonitions to the public to account for every penny. They ac ruse the present government of keep ing up "all the expense of the im perial regiific and none of its dig nity." RANKIN CO. OPENS OFFICES IN CITIES ON WEST COAST CHICAGO. Nov. 10.?The William H. Rankin Company, of thia city, an nounced that it has opened offices In Los Angeles and San Francisco, Cal. This announcement followed c. state ment issued recently that th* com jany had become associated with Charles F. Higham, Ltd.. of London, England, to represent them lo Great Britain. The Rankin Advertising Company now has offices In New York. Chicago, "Washington. Los Angelas, and San Francisco. The new offices have been opened in the Title Insurance Building In Los Angeles, and 74 New Montgomery street. In San Francisco. PARIS HAS GERMAN MUSIC. PARIS. Nov. 10.?German must;, barred during the war. again has appeared on the programs of orches tra concerts, and is being heard at some of the yieaters. A referendum taken recently at a concert resulted in an almost unanimous vote favor ing its return. wft ??y > RELIEF WITHOUT QUININE Sf*.n?\ | J Don't stay staffed up! Quit blow ing and rnuffling! A dose of Pipes Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken M?ualfy breaks up a severe cold and ends grippe misery. The very first dose open.* your r!?ff*ed-up nostrils and the air pas sages of the head; stops nose run itny; relieves the headache, dulines, feverishnes*. sneexlng. soreness an stillness. "Tape's Cold Compound" is th . quickest, surest relief knoarn an -osts only a few cents at drug storei It acts without assistance, tastes nlo no quinine. The Red Cross Thanksgiving Victory Roll Call Ends Tomorrow (1) MAKE CHECKS for the $100,000 Fond payable to the Red Cross and hand them to a Red Cross worker or Bail then to CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS (2) JOIN THE RED CROSS for 1920 by giving your name and SI to a Red Cross worker wearing a uniform or a badge. Present memberships expire December 31st. THE RED CROSS MUST HAVE YOUR SUPPORT To enable it to continue its work Caring for soldiers, uilors, and marinea. Relief in epidemics and disasters. Saving war orphan*, etc. ACT QUICKLY Red Cross booth* in banks, theaters, hotels, department stores, offee buildings, and Campaign Headquarters, 1719 H street. SPECIAL RED CROSS BENEFIT PERFORMANCE AT MOORE'S GARDEN THEATER, 5 P. M. SHARP TODAY. Seats, 12.00, $1.00, and 50 Cents. MACK SENNETTS BATHING BEAUTIES WILL POSITIVELY APPEAR IN PERSON Through the courtesy of Thomas Moore and Sidney B. Lost. DR. WRIGHT ASKS YOU? What Does Modern Painless Dentistry Mean to You? It means years of constant study and practical experience as well as thou sands of dollars invested in the latest electrical and mechanical devices to I alleviate pain. So that YOU may sit with all ease and comfort in a chair ONCE shunned and hated as a pestilence. All this amd more is modem painless dentistry as practised by DR. WRIGHT and hie staff of careful skilled dentists. We have brought the price within the reach of all and arranged for payments to suit you. DR WRIGHT 1* >f?r? mf Hrmrarrk Wsrfc Our dpec:al Caoutchouc Plate Known the world over for Its llgrht weight and adhesive ness. This week only. fcrt. $15.00 AM. WORK GIARAMTKKD Pyorrtie* treated by the mn?t modern and accepted treat ment. Ultra Violet Light Bridgework Per Tooth Iadjr sad Maid In Atleadaare. $3 $4 and $5 DR. WRIGHT 4,7*441? THE OFFICE H IICKK TUT PA l"RO\AGE OF TOMORROW HAS AS GREAT A VALIK AS THE PATROWAGE Or TODAY HOURS: 8 TO 6; SUNDAY, 10 TO 4. At the Theaters This Week polps. The Vanderbllt Producing Com pany presented "Irene,'' a musical comedy by James Montgomery, music by Harry Tlerney and lyrics by Joe McCarthy, before a packed house last night: THE CAST Donald Marshall Walter Regan Robert Harrison Hobart Cavanaugh J. P. Bowden Arthur Burckly Lawrence Hadley John B. Lite! Clarkson Walter Croft Ireae O'Dare K tilth Day Helen Chseton Kva Puck Jans Ollmour Gladys Miller Mra Marshall Florence Mills Eleanor Worth. Bernlce McCabe Mrs. O'Dare Dorothy Walters Mrs. Chestou Lillian Lee Madam* Lucy Bobble Wateun So many musical comedies are neither musical nor comic that It Is like a breath of fresh air in a soft coal mine to greet "Irene," which is both musical and comic. Also, though not exactly Important, a real plot can be discovered and tracked to its lair, thua establishing a record for musi cal comedies in recent seasons. Irene O'Dare, a New York shop g<ri with aspirations, meets Donald Mar shall, a wealthy young man wno happens to need Just that minute several good looking girls to aid a friend In starting off on a success ful American career a .London raoJ lst?, Mme. Lucy. There you have the trio necessary for the succeas of the show. Edith Day playing Irene, Wal ter Regan playing Marahall and Bob bie Watson the male modiste. Miss Day won a host of new frienda by her characterisation of Irene O'Dare. the Klnth avenue shop girl who becomes almost overnight "The O'Dare," with a genealogical tree, costing (500, extending back to the second century. As the shov girl elie was natural and humanly possibl*. As "The O'Dare," transformed by beau tiful clothes, she is immense. Walter Regan was not "stagey," which Is saying considerable. He might have been a wealthy young man doing Just what he did and fall ing in love Just as he does. And who could blame him? As Mine. Lucy, Bobbie Watson was perfect as the male modiste. He never even approached the thin line that would have ruined the impres sion upon the audience. And he was refreshingly comic. Music? Oodles of 1L Miss Day's 'Alice Blue Gown" provided the sen timental hit of the first act. Her "Sky Rocket," with the assistance of the entire company, was the hit of the second act. If not of the show itself. For swinging rhythm "Sky Rocket"* Is second to no song hearj nere in many days. Two pleasing little ladies contri buted much to the enjoyment of the evening?Gladys Miliar and Eva Puck. They were shopgirls who becamo ladies. They were graceful dancers and dainty singers who scored a de cided hit. "Irene" should endure for manv weeks, becoming better as it got j along. LYCECtM. Burlesque, musical comedy, and vaudeville constitute the entertain ment of Thomas Beatty's "Oh Frenchy" company at the Lyceum Theater this week. The vehicle is entitled "A Day In a Moving picture 3tudlo." The chief fun-making is In ihe hands of A1 Martin, who is as sisted by Julea Jacobs. The support ing company consists of Johnny Buckley, Hazel Ford. Walter Austin, Lottie Lee, and Martha White. ITRAHD. Half a score of winsome, shapely lasses, from among tbe flock of bath ing girls that Mack Bennett has made famous on the screen, or who, per haps. have made Mack Sennett fa mous, are appearing in person this week at tha Strand in conjunction with the five-reel comedy, "Yankee Doodle in Berlin." Washingtonians evidently have an eye for pulchritude, and the picture xnd the girls appeared before capacity performances. Judging from corn meats of passers-by who had seen the show, it was the bevy of girls and not the picture that really was the attraction. At any rate, the comedy was not so terribly uproarious, perhaps the ef fects were lessened by dragging a two-reel comedy into a five-reel prop osition. The story deals with the adventures of an American aviator who files to Berlin In the guise of a beautiful dam sel, and picks up an acquaintance with William and his family, not for getting Von Hlndenburg. or "Hlndy," for short. The aviator gets the se ?rets, wigwags them to a waiting partner, and makes his escape. Both well Brown, rather wel l known for his female Impersonations, takes 'he part of the aviator, while Ford Sterling as the Kaiser, Mai St. riair is the Crown Prince. Bert Roach as Von Hlndenburg. and, of course. Marie Prevost as one of the girls, make up a very acceptable screen cast. "SYRUP OF FIGS" CHMMIVE Look at tongue! Remove poisons from stomach, liver and bowels. Accept "California" Syrup of Fl^s only?look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child Is having the best and noat harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its delicious fruity asta Full directions for child'* lose on each bottle. Give it without sr. Mother! You must say "Call ornla." METROPOLITAN". "I "Please Get Married" In its articulate version had possessed the magnificence of setting and tho uni formly artistic finish that charac terise the 'famous farce in photoplay form, as revealed to capacity audi ences at Crandall'8 Metropolitan The ater yesterday, it probably would still be reigning as the laughing hit of Broadway. Viola Dana and An trim Short, incidentally, contribute impersonations of the harrassed young newlyweds that compare rath er more than favorably with the original portrayals of the "amusing figures In the play first etched by Kdith Taliaferro and Ernest Truex. It would be well for young people contemplating surreptitious matri mony to lend their earnest scrutiny to this pictured tale of adolescent love attempting ta combat the com bined embarrassments heaped upon it by Irate parents, an outraged clergy and over-zealous plain clothes men assigned to a fashionable hotel. There should be no doubt about the legality of the marriage. A burglar married Muriel Ashley and Ferdy Walton. They were fooled complete ly by tHe perfection of his disguise and the fact that he was known as the ?"Parson." It was ohly the fact that this prowler In the night hap pened to be a regularly ordained minister suffering an attack of am nesia that _enabled those most di rectly concerned to unravel a series of complications, pursuit to a hasty elopment, that threatened the reputa tion and peace of mind of two emi nently respectable families. The 'elopers In the ecstacy of their perfect love were the least concerned of all that they might not be marcied'with all of the surety that conventional society deems requisite. Supplementing the major feature of the bill are a number of unusually interesting subsidiary features. PALACE. Any doubt that may have existed in the minds of the skeptical as to the wisdom of the I nee maneuver that made Douglas MacLean and Doris May a team of cinema co-stars, was completely swept away by the forceful and finished manner In which this pair of players put over at Loew's Palace Theater yesterday their first starring vehicle, "23% Hours Leave," an Ince adaption of Mary Roberts Rinehart's Saturday Evening Post story of an canton ment love afltftr. Mr. McLean, who is a former Wash ton youngster, ^evidenced an ability to interpret high comedy that was positively remarkable in its skill. Doris May, his co-starring team mate, is one of the most charmingly in genuous types the screen has seen to advantage in many months. "23'4 Hours Leave" Is one of the best of the Rinehart stories. It con cerns a rookie and his bet with a sergeant that the rookie will be in vited' to breakfast with the general, "he manner In which this thought is worked out Includes a love affair, a spy plot and a tense and never-ceas l.ig suspense that excites only the highest praise. The picture was supplemented by a number of excellent minor features and the Palace Symphony Orchestra contributed "Carmen" (B*;zet) as an verture number. CRAXDALL'S. A vivid film a study of diplomatic intrigues and sensational devotions embracing every stratum of society in Paris is on t^view at Crandaii'a Theater the first four days of this week under the title of "The Snare* of Paris,'* with Madlaine Traverre pictured in the role of stellar im portance. >l:ss Traverse is cast in the rose or Marguerite Couliard. wife of the French minister of foreign affairs. Her life has been free from every thing but the appearance of socml intrigue with persons outside her ov/n social circle. Her husband is prepar ing a secret treaty of immense im portance for illicit uses to Belloc, a traitorous operative in the Frenci secret service stationed in another country. A murder is committed In an effort to secure the coveted docu ment, and in her attempt to render aid to the victim, Mme. Couliard dis covers a son by a former marriage In an Apache naunt in the lowest quarter of I'aris, where he has sunk to the uttermost depths as an absinthe fiend. From this point the narrative pursues its flambuoyant course with all of the wild rush of unalloyed melodrama?in a do luxe setting that stamps the picture as one upon whica great artistic thought and a lacg'i amount of money have been expendd. RIALTO. "Anne of Green Gables" was pre sented at Moore's Rialto Theater yes terday as the week's attraction, it also being the premier showing of the picture anywhere In the country. Mary Miles Winter appears in the title role. This delightful young ac tiess steps Into a part that fits her perfectly, and as a result Is revealed a? her best in a story of the joys and sorrows, the smiles and tears of sweet sixteen. The story deals with the adventures of young Anne Shirley as she grows up into wo nanhood. She comes to the "Cuthberts," an elderly brother and sister, who live at Green Gables, in a small, out-of-the-way New Eng land town, after they have requested the State orphan asylum to send them "a willing child." Through misunder standing. the authorities send "Anne" instead of the boj- requested. Her welcome Is cold, but they accept her on trial. Her charm and her delight at living with a family finally win the leve of the Cuthberts, although the many scrapes Into whleh Anne gets herself are a great trial to her staid foster parents. Of course, there is a certain young man In the town, and *ry Indication that the wedding bells will soon be ringing Listed as an added attraction is Hector Goldsplnk. lyric tenor. Selec tions for the week include popular numbers, such as "Dear Old Pal or Mine' and "I Hear You Calling Me." Piratic numbors are pivrn as encore The Uialto Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Daniel Bree ^ ? runs Mr. Goldspink a close race Tor mus cal honors. The overture for the week is "Classical Favorites" GARDICS. The visualization of Richard Hard ing Davis' red-blooded novel of romance, love and adventure, "Sol diers of Fortune" enters upon its third week at Moore's Garden Theater to day. Allan Dwan director and producer of thf photodramatlc version has handled the story in a manner that leaves little to be desired. The Garden Symphony Orchestra in conjunction with or^an recitals pro vide a musical setting which adds much to the enjoyment of the show. RATIONAL. "The Canary." a musical comedy in three acts, translated from '.he French with music by Ivan C&rylt, Irving Berlin, and others. THE CAST: Eugsnic Mary Phillips Mrs Beasley Alice Bentley Neil Breeze Eugene Revere Mr. Trimmer i 'innio Belle* I>r. Dippy Wilmer Bentley Undue James Doyle Fleece Harland Dixon Timothy Joseph Cawthorn julie Jufia Sanderson Mary Ellen Maude Eburno A minister George Egan "The Canary" Is an enjoyable mu sical comedy, and then practically eevrythlng i" said. There is a minus plot clothed with a number of songs and danccB. Some of the songs are sweet and catchy, and some are ade quately described by Kube Goldberg. "They don't mean anything." The dancing, however, was a treat. Doyle and Dixon could have danced all evening, and then the audience would have asked, like Oliver Twist, "for more." Juiia Sanderson, winsome and popular, also contributed some of the light fantastic, and the only regret about Marie Callahan's work was that she was not given an oppor tunity to dance until the last act. and then not very much. She is "small but petite," as a wise New York press ! agent with a limited knowledge of S French once remarked In the office. ! Her dancing is dainty, graceful, and extremely pleasing to the eye. The first scene is laid in an antique shop, and most of the pokes are quite In keeping with the setting of the act. "A Thousand Years ago," one of theose River Nile things, with Egyp tian dancers, and a quartet of wrap ped mummies is quite the best thing in the first act. In fact, that song and the other by Miss Sanderson. "I Have Just One Heart," are about the only, ones that are catchy enough to be re membered by the time you have reached the car line after leaving the show. The canary, by the way. is not a bird, but a grown-up diamond. The sporting editor's parlance is well suited for describing the second act, and could read like a description of one inning of a game, "one run, one hit." The hit was Miss S^nder I son's song "I Have Just One Heart," i and the run was scored by Maude Eburne, who came in the second act as a sort, of pinch-hitter, and immedi ately' produced the goods. Taking the part of a "Hibernian Theda Bara" she savTed an otherwise drab act. Es pecially clever were her attempts to vamp Cawthorn. She is one of the real comediennes of today's stage, and for broad comedy Is right up with the leaders. The last act, as usual with most musical comedies, is devoted to un tangling the rather scanty skein of plot. Audiences these days may laugh at risqi|e jokes, but It is very doubtful if they really enjoy them, and the blue pencil could be effectively used in one or two places. Furthermore, a pretty song such as "Love Me In the Spring" does not need profanity to "put it over." As for Cawthorn. he is Cawthorn all | the way through the play. Eugene Revere is acceptable as Ned Breeze, and the chorus was pretty. KNICKERBOCKER. Presented as the secondary fea ture of the bill at Crandall's Knick erbocker Theater yesterday, "Bill Be , haves" proved one of the most satis* factory vehicles ever afforded "Smil ing" Billy Parsons as an outlet for his inexhaustible fund of rotund ex uberance. The chief photoplay feature was . the film version of "Please Get Mar ried," a complete review of which will be found in connection with the Metropolitan Theater. COLUMBIA. "L'Apache," the newest Ince pro duction to bring Dorothy Dalton to the screen of Loew's Columbia Theater, where it began a four-day j run yesterday as a first-time shown picture. Js an unusual story of great ; dramatic force. The Paris under I world Is the locale of most of Its ac 'tlon. Two strongly contrasting roles are assumed by Miss Dalton. At the start. Miss Dalton is seen as a girl of the slums, in virtual slavery ! to an Apache gang leader. She flees iher brutal master; meets an Amer ican girl of striking physical resem jblance who had been Wding a shame ful life with a profligate she loves. The story as developed, shows the manner In which ^he slum girl escap ed from her sordid and impossible surroundings and how the American girl escaped Troni her life. The slum girl finds love and the other finds death and the manner in which these developments are depicted makes "L'Apache" one of the strongest and most colorful photodramas the screen has witnessed in months. AMUSEMENTS. A PERFECT PI.ACE I'OH DANCING Must i'mmrsk n Modern Floor of Mar lile and Ulnn? Over Elretrle l.lirtits, nnd the Very ltr?l In Music, Such As Ik Only In Br Found In GREATER PENN GARDENS An All thr Real Danrfn Know. Pen a. Ave. at 21?t. N. W. ONE ADMISSION TO ALL. NO EXTRAS AMUSEMENTS T\OllLiy Tonight at ?:*? mAjSo MMt~ 111 * !Wu \ andrrbilt Prodnrlng f?., Praniti "IRENE" A M luteal Comr&r by J?m<? Manliomm With Edith Day (the eri#t?al TlekU Tm Girl) No. 1 of a series to tell you of an unusual musical comedy next week. w QfJHA The I Tod a ceo "Did you like "Chu Chin Cfcou," "Oh Boy," "Leave It to Jane"? Well, these are some of the successes spon sored by F. Ray Cornstock and Mor ris Gest. That would- seem to indi cate, would it not, that there it something to the frequent remark: The Comstock and Gest stamp on d play is the same as Stirling on sil ver. This new piece is something unusual from a firm that has dealt with the unusual. P. 8. Hull T??WW. SHIBEIT- beus:o ia*SJ:'5?s Dlreetiea Mm*. gh abort ( art&ln prwMr at >:1> Immediately Preceding Her KMrnyraflt at the IMaaeo Theater. S. V. DATID BELA8CO Preeenta LENORE ULRIC la "THK SON-DACOimai. A S'?w Play by Ow>|? Hon.. jio?gk and Da t id Balance. Xe*t A MABTHA HEDMAN | Heata Rnn. I IK "FORBIDDEN" I Thar. Tonight ?:????1 Mac Than. MIUS. HENRY B. HAUM fr?e?al. "When a Man's a Man" A PLAY By WILLARO ROBERTSON A ad KILBOVRN GORDON Next Monday Ere.?(teats New Washington Optra Company EDOr ARI) A T BlOX, Dinctar "FAUST" In Engliah RRITFBION THEATER 9TH AND D STS. N. W. tODAY AND ALL WEEK Sennett*' Bathing Beauties la Addition To "THE HELLION" "One who Uvea or deaerrea ta live In hell. BRASS BAUD?TW1CI DAILY S-K-AT-ING la America's Placet Arena. s t. &:M. Every Day ? ?uu THE COLISEUM SBS Orer Crater Market. HEALTH-GIVING EXERCISE. I.adiea a ad Children?4 ome te U all [i|-a? POPCI.AIl PRICES. ~ W rek M(kt>. ARCADE 14th and Park Road. PERFECT PLACE TO DANCE Strict Ccaner Peyaler PiU?? gayety?:,*j7 Jack Singer's Uehman Show' with HARRY IjAIVDKK Xemt Week?"Saa? Hewer w Orer" Taka Wa?bin5ton-Virginia ,ln^i?ttk Line. Penna ave. and 12th aireet. to Bout# Knd Highway Bride. TODAY'S BEST ATTRACTIONS* IN washington'S KOKEMOST thkatkhi CRAIDAU'S F ST. AT TENTH Al Metropolitan TO OA % AND ENTIRE week Please Get Married Serpen < ln??ira' S?vea-Rcel PlrtnrUatlon of Ihe I- uuiuiim Moroateo Kari'fi Starmur.' VIOLA DANA J \ >11 ?? \l I1HKY In "Sqnnba mil Squbklrn" I uthf Itrtlru?Tuplni of nay?~i urrt-ui KvtaU Colnrt Solo. Mr. Nappl. * mm CtAKDAll'S Eifhtunth ?M Ctlumbti >#?< Knickerbocker IjAst times, beginning ?i.io r. m. VIOLA CANA in "PLEASE GET MARRIED" "Hntlllns" Dllly I'uritena In -Dill AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS MOORE'S 9th at G RIALTO THEATER 9th at O 11 1 M.?ALL WHI-11 P.M. Roalart Pretentt L M. Maatgaaftry's CUwsv Xovtls of X?*#rioBw Gtrlkood Tke Famous "Amu" Book* Combined in Chu Photoplay ANNE OF GREEN GULES Featuring Mary Miles Miliar W Added Attraction IECT0K fiOLISMIK-LYKIC TEN! MOORE'S 9th at D HSTRAND 1 P. M.-ALL WEEK-11 P.M. PRICKS: 1 P. M.-6J0 P. M., t5c, 50c; t:SO P.M^ 11 P. M.,SOc 7Sc THEATER 9th at O Soae Show! Boi't Mitt It! Mack Sennott'? YANKEEDOODLE"BERLIN AND Saaaett Balkiag Girls in PERSON WITH Ttaeyek 4 W?Hy ?Igi? Classical hiea AH POSES Positively Every Day From HA.M.tollP. M. U p| f\ AI/CD So Every Man, Woman sad nfctw v W fc>n Child in WMhmftwn Cam Sac THIRD BIG WEEK "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE" RICHARD HARDING DAVIS' MARVELOUS LOVE STORY THE PICTURE OF A THOUSAND THRILLS I. O E W# PALACE ? TODAY ANT) ALL WEEK DOUGLAS MACLEAN IK "23V, HOURS LEAVE" By Mary Hkkrrta Rlatkul Overturr ... ??Carmen"* fbiott) i. o r. w< COLUMBIA TODAY?TOMORROW?WED. DORCYHY DALTON ' :IN *1'APACHE" N ATIONAL jci.iv Omls Mm s??i. 2:t? JOMV1I Sanderson Cawl orn In -T1IK CA*AHY,~ with DOY1.K a I>l\0> and MA1DK K.Bl K>K. Prim E*fnt "tut. Mrht in<- to *--5? rwn?as?j3rer i MltCFELD >.wt owt BILLIE BURKE a m iw tytet ha^J ^SAfewtft b.K KEITH S*. WILT '."SNN'-MfU .liS A < ?-Mar Hill of < onilr 4 na?^aeac* Strtla I J*, B. MAYHEW HOWARD m.a4 Uli iji TAYLOR CLARK t Ivwm. with hkirl* Hart*; Hunting A Irwfk; l.luraa A La NOM Varjocrilr; Hu() A hofrwij "Mart* t.laaa#*;" Thr UriUoo.. Hcrtua SUr Irt a*. LYCEUM ST* BURLESQUE OH, FRENCHY