iP"WS? fSi'W' ' -Kt$n$foUyH'tw ' " lWW;yw-w-'-'-'-ri(3Jlpj!)(f - - t - . "j." tiJ '1 ts"PTHfvlCrj rJ 4m. rLk y&u Tfn- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY ' APRIL 20, 1921 I .M .M MfsZt&SL HMtWMve 'rin Galusha Bangs -Hero yw we to ozrri& tf Aim, 6uf ww caaf helpuovind him too He was a queer bird 'lander crackedron grave yards and tomb-stones" but harmless. All the Cape Cod folks said so. And certainly queer doings began'that wet night when he loomed out of the fog from nowhere and fainted dead away at the feet of "Miss Marthy Phipps," spinster. Queer, too, were the consequences that followed his chase through the grave-yard after his run away hat. And that time that he went to the spirit seance He was so helpless and timid yet, someway, everybody found that he held their destinies in his hands! You have to laugh at "Galusha" the funny, absent-minded little professor who was raised to be a banker and turned out an Egyptologist but you can't help loving him too. The world needs to laugh just now, and Joseph C. Lincoln has put into "Galusha" a humor so irresistible that you couldn't help laughing if you tried. Says the editor of Pictorial Review: "We have read 'Shavings,' and 'The Portygee,' and 'Cap'n Eri' and 'Obadiah' and we want to say that Galusha' is the best of the lot." Read this open ing installment and understand why. r"Galusha the Magnificent" By Joseph C. Lincoln Begins in Pictorial Review for May fThings the Censor worit let you see in the Movies D O YOU know that state a kiss may- shown on the screen than five seconds? in one not be for more The censors of the same state will not let you see a picture in which a happy young wife is shown sewing on baby-clothes. And they hastily conceal from your horrified gaze a title reading "if we only had a little one of our own" supposed to be spoken by a wife to her husband. Some of these things the'eensor will let you see in one state but not in an other. In one, for instance, they will not let you see girls in one-piece bathing suits, although in another they have pro nounced such garments entirely proper. In a certain state they forbade Jack London's "John Barleycorn" on the grounds that it encouraged intemper ance, although everywhere else it was shown as an argument in favor of pro hibition. One state barred the "The Birth of a Nation". Another ruled against a patriotic film called "The Little Ameri can". A third refused a showing of "The Miracle Man", although in all the others it was commended as one of the most uplifting pictures ever produced. In certain localities pictures showing dis putes between capital and labor are under the ban. The funny "Keystone Cops" were prohibited in one city on the grounds that they created disre spect for the police. No one knows more about the ac tual workings of the censorship than Jesse L. Lasky, Vice-president of i the Famous Players - Lasky Corporation. Read what he has to say about it in "Is There Any Sense In Censorship" By Jesse L. Lasky Ym tit pi HSSylJi riiis represents one of the moat popular gingham dresses 9330-Lndws' Dress She 34 to SO 35 cnt Advance Summer Fashions PICTORIAL REVIEW for May contains a won derful collection of advance Summer Fashions. Ging hams are shown in profu sion. Don't miss the new Box Jackets, the new Medi eval Frocks, the new Apron Tunics and the new Hand kerchief Drapery. There is a perfect-fitting Pictorial Review Pattern for every one of these delightful styles. Pictorial Review Patterns 20c to 35c None higher that a savage cat was clawing at your throat then Tkad When dreams are danger signals. Suppose you' dreamed again and again that a savage cat was clawing at your throat, and then, quite by accident, your doctor discovered that you had a throat tumor would you call it a co incidence? Or if you had a vivid dream that you had been cut in two, and two days later you had been stricken with paralysis of one side- -would you say it was merely chance? Science has now made the startling discovery that it is perfectly sound instinct that makes us believe that dreams are warnings. In this second of his series of startlingly re vealing articles on dreams, H. Addington Bruce tells us how we can recognize and profit by these clanger signals. PICTORIAL REVIEW FOR MAY On sale now A ' --- ""H t.fr,, .. l,V., ij.... a9 M iwa ? -' SSJl n !: , jji.vjj.t. 3JM..I. l-Ha.. v l&t&Sk. iK S &fe J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers