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Show Haw the Grl Who Believed All Jilted Suitors Were Entitled to Refunds Was Won and Wed in 24 Hours, cr l 7 ) 1 ' a i L '$ UTCH Treat" Sheila has married again, j I I J Chicago papers in their headlines I . ?-" told the world of the twenty-four-hour j romance the thrilling and honest-to-goodness azz wedding ' Sheila Terry and Henri Gendron, i ' JvHll lader the weirdest moaning jazz band in I -jnxJ Chicago, down at the Montmartre Cafe. The other evening at 10:15 Sheila and her ( 1 1 dancing partner, Johnny Berkes, strolled into the ' 1 (JTfi) ca'e ust ' "ave a good time. Five minute , I i I later somebody introduced her to the "Sheik." j That's Henri's name with the women because rV?7 U n'3 handsome, dark face, his raven black hair and n)f"35.l "sl,eiky" build. At 10:30 they were vpN in love. The next afternoon, after W hours of ardent wooing, they had fy jT so firmly made up their minds that fi (l they got a license. And before i t a.8' " l their most intimate friends knew 1"$ w'hat it was all about Mr. and Mrs. f' .4 "1 r jj Henri Gendron were being I. "-Cfci congratulated by the jus- 1 TVv tice of the peace, i AdY But this isn't the first J OjflP) time that "Dutch Treat" ' CvOi Sheila has been caught j SSvsJ, doing the spectacular. It was three years ago when ' ner er3twhile sweetheart, 1 1 HkjjJ Benny Rubin, a popular a vaudevillist, sued her for . ' v Benny Rubin, Sheik ..rrto. .. jfr. r- "? . Sheila Terry, Dr. :v m.J .. EXPENSES INVOLVED IN WOOING. Diamond Ring . $700.00 Wrist Watch 1 100.00 Locket to:...u:... ..... 40.00 , Bead Necklace ; . .i.. . 36.00 Purse 1. .1... .!.; 42.50 Kodak ....... 48.00 Motor Coat . . 120.00 Photographs ,.- 36.00 Doctor .1 ....:.. ' 300 Fireworks on 4th of July . .b;.i . 6.00 i Lessons in Golf....... 16.00 I, Meals 341.00 Automobile Hire . . .; 190.00 Flowers ,. ., .., 160.00 Candy ,. ., -.... 40.00 Books 9.80 fSjV Telegrams u: 11.70 I XXs Stockings .. .......t.i. . 13.00 - ; Gloves ujj,,ibMibii 12.00 1 Total. .. .m.-. $1,917.00 ; ! ' ' imk "And when the jilted 1 )rr Benny Rubin presented 1 ( Sheila with his bill she i Vs I smiled and said, 'Of, ' ... course, I'll pay him. It's ( J the only straight thing i tVf to do'-" tl Y . T UTCH Treat" Sheila has married again. ., v - 7 vVVD ',1 7. t A n 7 1 r 1 j ' " ' , "1 ' "D mTZ&J"SSZ Haw the Grl Who Believed All Jilted A' '"' . -)r : j VsFyl. romance tne thrilling and honest-to-goodness $5 ' , , " , - ' ' I TV VYV?i jazz wedding of Sheila Terry and Henri Gendron, f CJ 1X7" Y "lJ J 1 ZD 7 T J f Jt ' ' " -v ' ' ' ' "1 HJtVf ; j leader of the weirdest moaning jazz band in UUOrS W CTC 111111(1 10 i 605 FT OS ." ' ' ' ' I rJJ Chicago, down at the Montmartre Cafe. 4 i' S rs,5 ' " Taj Of The other evening at 10:15 Sheila and her f . T T S 7 A 11 " " ' N - ; ' s s" " ' 1 V i iTrrhraTooatr , Won. and Wed in 24 Hours, cr i ' ;'. ffl , i- later somebody introduced her to the "Sheik." . I. . ( ill . r , , j ' 't ' ; W j W i That's Henri's name with the women because ot Vx .! i ' Jli XltHiW . " . , . ' ' ; KvW. fN777 his handsome, dark face, his raven black hair and . ' ''t'- ' ' 'TF" .i , . t.. B M . , l' t. , A iJ VV UfUV "sheiky" build. At 10:30 they were v L Sff '-"h 4 ,! ) ' ' , Slci in love. The next afternoon, after V - yjZ Ji 'ijaw J, i '-"4. ' '."") C7 J hours of ardent wooing, they had rff8'V IT : " ' X ' k V .L, A ,1'" , f ' ' ' V , , ' ' so firmly made up their minds that K x ' -Tlv ' f . , . , - -.V ' ' v ' J l-TW they got a license. And before . Ik .-'i ' ''WW' Kr'Sk k . . , J -TJ 'jT U their most intimate friends knew fe J 9l ' k''T -"Asfl SlHlfB-. ' j 'A J Ji what it was all about Mr. and Mrs. V f 'IS BennV RuHn, Sheik f" , ' 4' 1 " ' " ' f ? l'' - j. J Hu Henri Gendron were being I . y OCIUiy . XVUU1I1, OI1CJLK. 4 C-lfelpi . ' " ' diiU AJ congratulated by the ju- t mSffe ' 4 j V ' A W r SD tice of tlie peace. - . BUi,.w? BSjTtnSJ?a ' ' , 5 . " '1 -SviTvi i ..nT" i , , Sheila Terry, Dr. V ' ' 4 ( -; I sjflJ time that "Dutch Treat" f X?. v . 1 , j; A . ' Ehjf ,TOUSJwfftfrSfaS ?' r , V i PK ) iTZTZ & & i EXPENSES INVOLVED IN WOOING. Aid , V. ' f I -. her erstwhile sweetheart, t V Mamond Wng 1700.00 44i?f!S ,V fj 7 , Benny Rubin, a popular . UA Wn,Watch.. , . j . JL MXMP- 'A' ' ' , - JT vaudevillist, sued her for N f" 4 Slid N"' i"' " " OO ' I A .j h M' I"1V Doctor ,. :., 3.00 - M' lMfM f- ' 1 5a K , .J. XfS f -J-rVV W Fireworks on 4th of July.. B;., . 6.00 M lVr :S! ' j 'I J , ' ' " . V',v v ! ' vv m X Lessons in Golf 16.00 . M I , J N r " r ,r-f-U Meals 341.00 TO U fft'K- ' J ' ' pJA . " ! iV 4 Automobile Hire 190.00 U Vl4 H- -'f ' ' . . -1 Vil I ; f , Flowers,.., .., 160.00. iu VI SiSJ - . ' "'- ' " I v ' .W.- Candy ... . 40.00 11 glil Y'.v ' , - , J,, VA LP1 ? A .,'i Books 9.80 - vV? . , , w ---.'',1 ',f- 'V'-, Telegrams 11.70 ff Mt V; , "w' ' F , f? thi Stockings ...w. 13.00 - ; 1 - 1 ' . f , '' ) ' , i .AA V 'l U HSVI Gloves ...... 12.00 IWM W V ' " ' i'--VM v U- .V v -- -4 iff Total.... wMMWi L - ' ' ' ' Kl I iag v-f.si -l -1! 1m rte t4'ri;- fM ! I ' ' ' , A ' . 4 XJ , I f f Dancer, Whose i . , . j I 4 I ! Vll "And when the jilted 3Vx 4 V S "I everyone has wanted to perform. But 'V lfil I I Twinkling Feet X' h V J' ' J tl VOM: i ' 4rW Benny Rub?n presented f U. - that's aU that happened. Sheila Terry . ' If Couldn't Resist thS . . I (V Sheila with his bill she I , . f knew what she wanted and went out and .- WwM 4 V . Jaz Strata f Henri Gendron'g Viollii (A:U f smiled and said, 'Of,, I J sought it. .. MI Long Enough to Stay Single. And So -, - 7 'thTl'idy straight thing ? , It was William B., Friedlander, husband J ), '." Ki fem bills. They got to know each other, and before ley. Benny now -sought -revenge. The next i to do'-" -k r 'y of Nan Halpertn, famous on. the vaudeville j , I a month was up the two of them seemed heading ', night hs sat himself down and recalled with rVI j. 1 y f atage for her cleverly arranged song cycles, - Pfe-gl straight for the altar. It was during this hectic astounding accuracy, erarything he .had. given the APjL I yV " f and himself a prolific producer of vaude- ( x. H month that Benny decided ha must do more than , ungrateful Sheila. Then he started remembering Jf JZJ-.j ' i v ville tabloids, who gave Sheila her first merely avow his overwhelming love for the prices, and put .them down. Lo, $1,917 was the i lKS f "?.-JF chance. She came into his office with no ' Sj"J'tl talented and so adorable Sheila. He would give sum. He'd show her; he'd sue her for the money Rw.' i . K i y A yfmrl experience in the world, merely an ancient &ftef. her tokens of his love. She could have anything . he spent on her, and, document in hand, he viii I ' ' f . ' s- - J urge to go on the stage. . She seemed ' jCC she wanted.' The little tokens became larger and . marched into' court. ' He had to admit he couldnt js&h ' ' 'fi'fF t' x "vk pretty enough, but what could she do? "I g&S4r more expensive and finally blazed forth into dope out women, especially Sheila, because she JjJ ' I jIyF , i y i tt, dance," and she did, right into a contract diamonds, fine clothes and jewels. The spirit answered his charge with, "Of course, I'll pay Jjffrii :' isjjjy Sp5' f '"V 4lt to appear in a vaudeville playlet. Her rise. .V- fu of giving got so firm a hold on Benny that him. He's entitled to it." And, after going over j JWJi"" ''ta A was phenomenal. , The little review of th " 1 , , ' finally, on the Fourth of July he forgot, proba- ' every item just to check up, she paid in full to f i rjvJyX ' vaudeville bills each week, y " , , bly, that this was also known as Independ- the sum of $1,917. WS ' usually so calm and matter of . , I t J5v ence be bought her firecrackers $5 "It was the only straight thing to do," she J 3 the money he had spent on her during a month fact, noted with praise the name of ' f ' . k worth of them. Perhaps, deep down, Benny flashed. And Benny was silenced forever. 7 ;7 of feverish courtship only to be jilted in the end Sheila Terry,' a newcomer, who was . J ' I v ' - V,,J wondered why he disliked buying a sky- But Roy, whom she had married in June, 7 j(V4 that she answered with this startling statement: the best on the bSJl, f ' " ,- t Cfs A rocket though he did and why he let it 1922, knew of only one straight thing and that i,N ! 1 Uu) "He didn't have to take the case to court. Any A . " , v , t remain the last one to go off. was a straight punch to the jaw. Any time he j U suitor who is jilted is entitled to a refund, and, of irttit i ' I- "It. W He had seen thm go off before j felt a powerful right aching to be served he tried 14 H AS course, I'll pay him every cent he spent on me. t&V .,X ' ' ' , , , they looked threatening. But Sheila. At any rate, so Sheila's complaint VVV 1 W2L. Any girl who lets an honest fellow spend his tim. a. V T V ,i! " f , "W" Sheila's had to go off , too there aUeged. Five months later she haled him into Pl) 1 (3 and money on her and then gives him the. gate to , J; , it went,' sputtering slowly, then court and was granted a divorce. i ((C just as low down as a thief, and all these O1'' 0 V ' 1 " 1 " A f ' ,K gradually rising, gaining strength . For three years she remained single and 4- ! gold diggers ought to be m jail. And she y ftV "nt8 fV ' ' ' ' ' T , " , on tlie way up then reaching the worked hard in vaudeville. She got up a new . JfU did pay to the dollar $1,917, to be exact. , -V- -0 1? , C - ! ' T f-'-. clouds, bursting wildly, radiantly, act with Johnny Berkes as her dancing partner, N 'v VVZ " 'Sn 6r XW"l.tf loD-A rtJl 1 " ' ' - . and they were booked for Chicago several weeks sM4 She'la Terry; ady f W$3j A K CXS ) ' X' .V',. 1N W T ago. A peppy night's entertain- fV on the vaudeville stage be- Vjt0 , L?J5 A ' " Henri Gendron, Tt A ment was their first thought W , g came famous all over again u Vl4 X WV X ' " ' " V i "Sheik" Leader of A '- A on their firet pight In the v jf k, V "Dutch Treat" Sheila. POrtSJO llfl.V !, A , 4 if 1 the Cafe fV 7 " rik c u j IJW Little Sheila was born in a XCr-i W JCV ft . ! f , Montmartre V Hf III A? W . M pi small Middle Western town V (&ftS L ; M ' "U" O sff "' w f W .M Srof soft, large brown Xl Dl2IiT1 ' ' ! " 3K2T T - TowVl T & them looked at the world and V V A lV f ' t - J W t, hJI j ,atf know they were introduced to. ifi 1 KV considered a rather moros. rT iP li jUCt Vr , , . V'-' ''1 W flZ? t f , JT IW child and f often paused in her JC : ", X ' - I oTTehtet i. V. I precious few moments of play -fm ilfo. I. (SM V--' ' v 1 m "T ,. x, "cl-'""0 cnargwi. I '' kj to think, It seemed. She wouid fVt , T ' , , t f A " ' .J ' WTSS 2 Wf I and c"ncPhhertiny0flpb- V gf lOW? fZ - . ' 'I 11 HtdTd r-'- W M ably she was saying, "if an, -?ff ' 7 ' ! ' , ' SbS r ,v S 7 body ever treats me nice and , s? I t ' ' ' ' i v r'H .0' u v 5 Aftnr .i, i , VkSil y Niu t i v r. t ' ? t 4 n , ii ryyr ? v If'V Alter each selection he sauntered over to '1l4U UvVU' take's me aiy from here I m - t - t JW-' - Sheila's taHo tr. v " OVBr w s t05 Ir-O Vv ........ . S- ( ' ., i ' 8-vv't- 1 , oiieiias taoie to see how thoy went acrooa. 'An IP V . going to be good to the whole - - ' i ' . t v i v" - . - . ., , the night in-ew Inw if , . world," which, translated into , t " , i. ' , ' .JT out Bv nJdnTv ' U took Wm loner to find 4 1 ' y, i ,t Abov?: Headlines from , , ' - 1 . . 1 ff i out. ay midnight there was no coaxino- Viim ,o.V )! Wl, grown-up language, meant "If Chic. Newspaper,, I ' ... J - , , v " ' - the orchestra and at thrle tamoW ft III .' I ever get a square deal I'm Printed at the Time f , ' , , - A . A , ' t f"' ' announced their Ulree n morning they k I V going to treat the whole world When Sheila and Benny I' , , ' P6Zn, " ,f v -K?Jen ' JL on the level from then on." RWn Broke Their ! , , i j' , , tV -'- tthen-e, M SheiI Wed th Jy I . n And the little girl never forgot EnfSn,ta Berkef I ' ' v , '.X ,r J i lnt0 ,B "lf" tT lo"ff eneSa. At any rate ; olj-V . . oh"n.le erkf' f , t 1 i - . U , ashes. He brushed the 8118 cut this one short When Henri r.nmn b'W- ! ' 1-C he:' promise. She as Dane n t f . K , , t , i , , j ,.u, iV nolloH T,n-f -"'ion xienn Uendroa I I'U Her good break came one Partner Just Before t , , 1 , t , ' , f 1 1 , , J ?ed ''"'f , "5 fihX K t "" of JO j , 7A dav in the person of an Eng- Her Marriage to Henri l k J-jL. JtXl- aside what had that to Bheila meth.m more than half way. ffhey Jumped 1 i 1 lish woman. The child's spark- ("ndron- ' 1 In vaudev.lle, too, and almost , do with fteir love? into matrimony that afternoon. HV I ' Vr ling and, at the some time, - , : J simultaneous with Sheila's success, Weren't they going to be married t ' her romance with Rubin had taugU Sheila sl i vl;V self-reliant air touched Mrs. Westervelt Terry L i'J. " 1 Benny Rubin, a breezy young per- But 'Benny and Sheila quarrelled. They quar- to put even marriage on a fifty-flfty basis. Tbo , irTn d the child, who did not even have a family ' ' t ' f ' ' 5 former, was being loudly hailed for relied often, because sometimes Benny dared to therefore honeymooned over to Indianapolis SFr name to call her own, became Sheila Terry and I H " v i hla wit. "You can always get a laugh get bossy. And one day Sheila departed, gifts Jj Tnrofoi Irs- GenJron wns booked to W, ! O A got the chance in life she had prayed for. I 1 , 4 out o' him," was the way one of his and all, leaving Benny alone and more than a day H?nri returned Xw0 Thp naxt Mon- ! - N As she grew up, with her pert face becoming ' . , " " ' -.- . '1 staunches admirers boosted him. little piqued. They met again soon after, but martre and Sheila stayed on 4 WMH- rrttier, she showed an undeniable talent for f ' ' . Then Sheila and Benny played on the Benny's pursed lips kindled no last spark in "We will both continue our own careers de- iWM I V t j . . . . . . . I 6 ;. H i -v " - " :. ' OrDheum Cirrnit. This includes all Sheila s heart. And Benny went out as Le Roy spite our niarnago." said nhll .J .jli V l' Y ' NVUJL dancing And soon the de.,re to go on the stage j E . . t-", . j tt.Pb? ttawuderi'le house, in Sedley came in. He was Sheila's partner in er pay our way as we 'go alone '' d III) t dominated all other hopes for the future. Tins , fcu JL jMi, ..4t .- . 3 Chicago and west to the Coast. Oo act. It seemed very sudden to Benny when he They hadn't culled her "Dutch Treat" Shall -X ' C jTisn't unusual, because at some time or other j . . casionolly they played on the same heard that Sheila had become Mrs. Le Roy Sed- for nothing. oneua ffy1 s everyone has wanted to perform. But J I that's all that happened. Sheila Terry I ! knew what she wanted and went out and ,. sought it. It was William B., Friedlander, husband ) 'gi of Nan Halperin, famous on. the vaudeville ij isr stage for her cleverly arranged song cycles, and himself a prolific producer of vaude- ( ville tabloids, who gave Sheila her first chance. She came into his office with no '-rb. '-rb. experience in the world, merely an ancient J urge to go on the stage. . She seemed s4 pretty enough, but what could she do? "I dance," and she did, right into a contract to appear in a vaudeville playlet. Her rise V was phenomenal. , The little review of ths , vaudeville bills each week, . usually so calm and matter of . jf fact, noted with praise the name of ' Sheila Terry, a newcomer, who was j the best on the bijl, f Pretty "Dutch Treat" . V ' 3. Sheila Terry, the ,' '.',' " " ti f. Diminutive Chicago It' . jJfe '"S Dancer, Whose 'r?ll.iJV . t J Twinkling Feet xaW"-' - s Couldn't Itesist th8 Jazz Strains of Henri Gendron's Violin ,j Long Enough to Stay Single. And So 1 1 . bills. They got to know each other, and before -f a month was up the two of them seemed heading straight for the altar. It was during this hectic month that Benny decided he must do more than merely avow his overwhelming love for the talented and so adorable Sheila. He would give her tokens of his love. She could have anything she wanted. The little tokens became larger and more expensive and finally blazed forth into diamonds, fine clothes and jewels. The spirit of giving got so firm a hold on Benny that finally, on the Fourth of July he forgot, proba-s proba-s bly, that this was also known as Independ- ence Day be bought her firecrackers $5 V worth of them. Perhaps, deep down, Benny ifK wondered why he disliked buying a sky-i sky-i ! rocket though he did and why he let it i . remain the last one to go off. ' 6 nal seen 'h&m So off before; - tney lked threatening. But i - s- Sheila's had to go off, too there , '4 " Au it went, sputtering slowly, then VV V l" gradually rising, gaining strength , " on tlie way up then reaching the clouds, bursting wildly, radiantly, j x - - V " I ' ley. Benny- now -sought -revenge. The next t-jV ', night hs sat himself down and recalled with rI astounding accuracy. evrything he .had. given the sli!! , ungrateful Sheila. Then he started remembering prices and put them down. Lo, $1,917 was the "-j ( sum. He'd show her; he'd sue her for the money fiT'v' . he spent on her, and, document in hand, he F" . marched into court. He had to admit he couldnt kr dope out women, especially Sheila, because she answered his charge with, "Of course, I'll pay J)fl?i him. He's entitled to it." And, after going over ' every item just to check up, she paid in full to the sum of $1,917. Wg "It was the only straight thing to do," she ll- J flashed. And Benny was silenced forever. !2slN' But Roy, whom she had married in June, 1922, knew of only one straight thing and that V)j was a straight punch to the jaw. Any time he (T felt a powerful right aching to be served he tried I Sheila. At any rate, so Sheila's complaint Vvj alleged. Five months later she haled him into court and was granted a divorce. $ For three years she remained single and l(yv5i worked hard in vaudeville. She got up a new act with Johnny Berkes as her dancing partner, jf j mjnev be had spent on her during a month I 5$V ever"sh courtship only to be jilted in the end I j( sne answered with this startling statement: ! 1 "e didn't have to take the case to court. Any I M suitor who is jilted is entitled to a refund, and, of f course, I'll pay him every cent he spent on me. 1 Any girl who lets an honest fellow spend his time Y) y and money on her and then gives him the. gate to TFs just as low down as a thief, and all these ! iljit-5 Kold diggers ought to be in jail." And she FnVV-v Pay ' "ar $1917i to be exact. y ' J1 'sn'' any wonder that Sl? Sheila Terry, already famous on 'ne vaudeville stage, be- , came famous all over again at "Dutch Treat" Sheila. Iff ft-P Little Sheila was bom in a ' h I (wJ sma" Middle Western town ' anc' a3 a cbfW found herself 1 an orPnan. blv Pa'r ' large brown f eyes with a hint of sadness in Jwv them looked at the world and 1 A wondered why she was made 1 " I (vi sar that way. She was f I v considered a rather morose child and often paused in her I. J precious few moments of play ' fs I tb'n'ci 't seemed. She would rSjp set her pretty mouth firmly j lyV and clench her tiny fist. Prob-ably Prob-ably she was saying, "If any- V ' ''Vl 1 body ever treats me nice and y y, tak-s me aw ay from here I'm ; gomg to be good to the whole i world," which, translated into 'I grown-up language, meant "If In jj I ever get a square deal I'm ' ' I P'n? to treat the whole world "7 17 on tne level from then on." I ly And the little girl never forgot j ' St- her promise. 1 - . c3 Her good break came one j 1 m day in the person of an Eng- i 'H ' V lish woman. The child's spark- ' WVm line and, at the some time. and they were booked for Chicago several weeks s. M, s ago. A peppy night's entertain- A? A iS".; nient was their first thougit 4V on thelr firet ln the V J i" Windy c'ty. Somebody sug- Si ' J? if gested the Montmartre Cafe, (if R V ireat music, wonderful leader i ' '.'v and the swellest place in town. 1 Svir Hj , So they went. Sheila and I Johnny knew clmost every- 3 V ' body 011(1 tll0s ttley didnt. -flrf know they wer introduced to. iff I "Miss Terry, meet Henri ff XV Gendron, leader of Uie or- I rV chestra." Immediately the air HV fji about them became charged. V, 'l . "Love," their eyes shouted at I each other. Was there realty anything in LU i?WJf t?taBi The rest of the evening v W I Henri played the dreamiest love songs, then 1 a few of Irving Berlin's melodies. 7T . JT,r, Cach selecUn be sauntered over to yhx aeJas table to see how thoy went across. Aa trV the night grew later it took him longer to find 4l out By midnight there was no coaxing him back to the orchestra and at three in the morning they If f announced their engagement. Iff N ,Jf7hP9 "wUtCh Trat" SheiIa !"d the J, J cost to herself of long engagement. At any rate she cut this one short. .When Henri Gendron 'E' called next morning to renew his song of love, ES Sheila met h.m more than half way. Th.y Jumped 11 Into matrimony that afternoon. But iher romance with Rubin had taught Sheila TOisI to put even marriage on a fifty-flfty basis. The , WK two therefore honeymooned over to Indianapolis frrjSr fneron?W ,Mrs- Getdron wns booked to ii, a Professional engagement. The- next Men- 1 day Henri returned to Chicago and tile Mont- 6V martre and Sheila stayed on N "We will both continue our own careers de- itvNW spite our niarnago," said Sheila "and will each R VVt Pfiy our way as we go alone." UAJ t for nothn.1 Ull6j hur i,JJutcl1 Tr8at" S1 $Mf Above: Headlines from Chicago Newspapers, Printed at the Time When Sheila and Benny Rubin Broke Their Engagement. Right: Johnnie Berkes, Sheila's Dancing Partner Just Before Her Marriage to Henri Gendron. " '! Into a great fire and then ' "r ' ' 1 ashes. He brushed the ' " . t'1 " J cked little thoughts JLJ?2?uiJi aside what had that to do with their love? Weren't they going to bo married! But 'Benny and Sheila quarrelled. They quarrelled quar-relled often, because sometimes Benny dared to get bossy. And one day Sheila departed, gifts and all, leaving Benny alone and more than a little piqued. They met again soon after, but Benny's pursed Hps kindled no last spark in Sheila's heart. And Benny went out as Le Roy Sedley came in. He was Sheila's partner in her act. It seemed very sudden to Benny when he heard that Sheila had become Mrs. Le Roy Sed- mmmm ..WlimU..'.WWi.l I . ilU!iiyiii..lll.wiuyi ...yi fp ,p i i,u i In vaudeville, too, and almost simultaneous with Sheila's success, Benny Rubin, a breezy young performer, per-former, was being loudly hailed for hla wit. "You can always get a laugh out 0' him," was the way one of his staunchest admirers boosted him. Then Sheila and Benny played on the Orpheum Circuit. This includes all the big time vaudeville houses in Chicago and west to the Coast. Occasionally Oc-casionally they played on the same Kt Is'MVBpaiwT ToBturo fWrlm lffl. j i . Sc self-reliant air touched Mrs. Westervelt Terry ' J 2sVTI an "10 c''''d, who did not even have a family name to call her own, became Sheila Terry and I got the chance in life she had prayed for. ; N As she grew up, with her pert face becoming JN'Vt pettier, she showed an undeniable talent for vl ) dancing. And soon the desire to go on the stage ( dominated all other hopes for the future. Tills ' ' vn C wasn't unusual, because at some time or other j 1 |