| January 8, 1927 WINNETKA TALK Stage and Screen News and Reviews "CRADLE SNATCHERS" Harris Theater After playing more than a year at the Music Box theater in New York, Sam H. Harris' amusing "Cradle Snatchers" has arrived at the Harris and settled down for a Chicago run. "Cradle Snatchers" is a very piquant salad for those who like to think that they are still in their salad days and it has some unusually stimulating salad dressing. The theme of this farce is that wives still continue to grow lonesome every time their husbands go %unting--es- pecially when they have have their suspicions as to what their husbands are hunting. In this case, a trio of wives, disgruntled because the hus- bands they love seem to have lost all | sense of romance and are seeking af- ter strange goddesses, decide to do some philandering themselves and adopt three boy friends from college. They hire these youths at a flat rate to inflame the jealousy of their husbands and bring them back. The husbands come back faster than expected, and the matrimonial situa- tion becomes badly scrambled. The authors have had the originality and good taste not to wind up their play with neat re-alignment of husbands and wives, but instead let the wives scamper off with their young affinities, with just a hint that later the cats will come back, but not until thev have walked the back fences a bit. It is a play that ripples with amusing dialect and some of it will be taken home and used by theater-goers in their winter conversation. Part of the allure of this comedy is due to the excellent cast, who act it up to the hilt yet never suggest that they are doing anything but hustle through an ordinary evening in the married life of prosperous New York- ers. Mary Boland is particularly artful as the rather designing matron of forty, coy and inviting, who always felt that she was Spanish emotioi ally, even though she didn't speak a word of the language. Edna May Olive is supremely comic as the wife who hesitatingly has an affair of the heart with a young, man who might be her son, and who in the bumptious, im- petuosity supplied by Raymond Guion is a delightful foil to her prim, old maidish respectability. --Thespian Elbridge Keith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Keith of 310 Warwick road, Ken- ilworth, left Sunday, January 2, to resume his studies at Princeton. George Scully Dies at Winnetka Home; New Trier Pioneer George Scully of 1050 Elm street, | Winnetka, one of the few remaining | pioneer residents of New Trier town- | ship, passed away quietly at his home, {at the age of 79 years, on December |28. Burial was at St. Joseph's ceme- | tery, Wilmette, Friday, December 30. | Mr. Scully was the son of one of the |early pioneers, Thomas Scully, and white children | was one of the first [born in this part of the north shore, [west of the present Indian Hill dis- trict. Thomas Scully took up a government [claim when he came to the north shore. | Another interesting fact concerning Thomas Scully, is that he saw the ne- | cessity of a school in his locality, and gave a site on which a school might {be built. Later his son gave an addi- tional quarter of an acre on which | District School No. 37 now stands. | George Scully served as president of | the school board until his retirement in 1908 In 1872 he was married to Jean Tearney of Northfield. They lived on | the old homestead until going to Win- {netka. Mr. Scully is survived by six sens, six daughters, twenty grand- children and four great-grandchildren. New Georgian Hotel Open Social Season The Georgian hotel in Evanston is now embarking upon its social season and announces the following affairs for January. Friday night of this week, a dinner dance, and another on January 14, are on the program for the first two weeks." January 17 will be the occasion of a bridge tea at 2 o'clock and the formal opening of the club will be observed with a reception for which formal invitations will be sent a little later on. Friday of this week the freshman class of Northwestern uni- versity are giving a luncheon and tea dance in the ballroom. Mrs. Charles Wanner of Evanston, formerly of Wilmette, is the social hostess at the Georgian. Mrs. John Livingston of the Library | Plaza hotel has added her name to the | roll of those in the younger married cet who are identifying themselves with daily "jobs." Mrs. Livingston is asso- ciated with Mrs. Alanson Follanshee in her shop, "Chez Moi," 88 Temple court, Winnetka. iO Duncan Bradstreet Farnsworth, son of the Frank D. Farnsworths of 470 Hawthomn lane, has been spending the holidays with his parents, but expects to return to college shortly. Win IN EVANSTON SIRO RT Pee CATHERINE RECKITTS A reduced sale in Lamps, Pillows, Shades, Furniture and Linen during the month of January at RTT > i) HOVSE © GARDEN-SHOP. UT Catherine Reckitt's House and Garden Shop, Inc. 1720 Orrington Ave. (u] 00000000 0R0000000000000SS $0 Ear 0a0ielNtNNieii init rei nion ition essssec Ivanston Shop Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evenings Henry CLytton & Sons State and Jackson--Chicago Orrington and Church--Evanston All merchandise advertised in the Chi- cago papers is also on sale in our Evans- ton Shop. January Clearances Now in Progress Throughout Our Evanston Shop Presenting Decisive Savings on Men's, Young Men's and Boys' Suits Overcoats Shoes Furnishings Orrington Hotel OIL TO BURN | HUGHES & COMPANY Superior 6481-2-3-4 Greenleaf 3456 A Grade for Every Burner General Offices, 844 Rush St. North Shore plant, Howard at McCormick Blvd. Telephones: Niles Center 217 Rogers Park 0982 roy