Winnetka-Northfield Public Library District

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 4 Dec 1926, p. 24

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22 WINNETKA TALK December 4, 1926 An Innovation in Buk nh 4 oat K Greasing You can have your" car greased with no. incon- venience under our Call-for-and- Deliver The Red Roof in No-Man's Land Just South of "The Cottage" Gasoline 1928 Sheridan Road ~ Service HE way we do it: Just let us know where your car is parked, whether your place of business, your home, the home of a friend, the "L" station, your club. We'll get it, grease it, and bring it back within two hours of your calling. And if you have the time, we would like have you watch us do the job, as we are proud of work and equipment, most up to date and efficient. Stephen Shimonek, Jr. TEfco\ OF = --r Distributor Phone Wil. 3379 Finds Chicago ldeal as Drama Producing Place Is the oft repeated promise to make Chicago an important theatrical pro- ducing center to come true after all? From recent developments it begins to look that way with the forming of a new producing organization in the city. This is headed hy B. L. Murphy, a well known New York promotor and producer, who came to Chicago ex- pressly for this purpose. Murphy be- lieves that good plays do not need the New York stamp of approval in order to be successful and is backing up his assertion by completely producing and opening here'a new play entitled "The Open Door." This is from the pen of Walter Lawrence and will open Sun- day night at the Playhouse. Murphy has assembled an all star cast for the initial production 'of his new venture. This will be headed by Mabel McCane, well known star of musical comedy and vaudeville who will make her debut on the dramatic stage in "The Open Door," a stirring romance of the underworld abounding in laughs, thrills, and tears. Miss Mec- Cane got her first professional start here some years ago and so has again chosen Chicago for her dramatic debut. After "The Open Dgor" gets under way successfully Murphy will begin preparations for producing a second play in order to have it ready when "The Open Door" leaves Chicago and goes to New York. If "The Open Door" is as successful as advance in- dications signify Murphy will continue producing plays in Chicago somewhat along the same plans being followed by Mrs. Samuel Insull in her venture at the Studebaker theatre, next door to the Playhouse. This will put two Chicago for the first time. "The Open Door" is a comedy drama, one of the most vivid romances of the underworld in recent years. Promin- ent in the cast with Miss McCane will be Walter Lawrence, the author, who spent several weeks in the Charleston jail in Boston as a voluntary "guest" in order to get the correct atmosphere for many of the scenes in "The Open Door." "THE TIME OF MAN." By Elizabeth Madox Roberts. The Viking Press. "The Time of Man" is all that its critics have claimed for it, truly a work of art. It is one of those books which slipped unobtrusively into the season's fiction list and then as if it had been a match slipped into a haymow began to burn bigger and bigger. It is quite a conflagration by this time, and it is justly so. It is a story, very simply told, of a girl living in the mountains of Ken- tucky. It is odd that three of the most sensitively written novels of the past year-should have been of the southern the uninitiated. It reminds one of a Russian nevel where every character has for every other character a dif- ferent set of names. At last conquering all these impedi- menta we come to the book's content. It is a story whose chief claim to in- terest is certain disconnected flashes of insight and information on literary London and literary people of the past thirty years. These flashes are vivid and illuminating and if you are inter- ested in the subjects they will repay you for conquering the book's discon- certing elements. On Sunday, November 28, Branch Rickey, vice-president of the St. Louis Cardinals Baseball team, spoke to the fathers and son and the mothers and daughters of Kenilworth at the Cul- bertson gymnasium. So Ra a 2d zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzziziziia (e]6) 3D, # What Things Need Cleaning I; for the Holidays $3 asi 4 - You know that we know how. SCHULTZ & NORD Don't let the Christmas rush cause you to forget to have your evening and party clothes clean- ed and pressed for the holiday festivities. H9Cleaners for Particular People | 1152 Central Avenue; Wilmette Phone Wilmette 320 AILSA ISS SSS IS ISSSS idatiillddibdbddilliliilibbldlildii lll ZZ ZI 7 ZZ ZZ 2 7 ZZ 2 Fd 2d Ed Edd ZZ ddiddizziiudedddddddds ei a | Ct ---- 1 rE 3

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