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Show Civic Concerts, Lyceum circuits, the Opera and the Symphony orchestras have never pulled enouo-h cash customers through the fcate to pay expenses. Yet each offers the Lnest entertainment in its field the great-(st great-(st arists. People will listen to the spiel of . carnival barker and pay pood coin of the realm to see the Wild Man of Borneo, who turns out to he a carnival roustalxut with a dirty win hirlinjr his dirtier head, and think Ihey've had fun. Hollywood spends millions hidlyheoin? a second-rate version of the only story they've ever had (the man, the maid and the dragon)-and it turns into a iecord-brealer at the box office. And the real class of the entertainment field The artists that travel the conceit circuits play to half-filled houses. Coming to Mil ford next week is a lady. who has been acclaimed one of the finest artists in the country. She is an American iil, who knows how to entertain American audiences. A quick-change artist, she brings excerpts from the lives of the greatest ladies of history. Her appearance closes the Civic Concert Series for this season and, like, tl gent who was complimented upon his wind in Biblical times, the best has been sav lor last. Only thirty tickets are still available. The price is one dollar, and the performance th. same as the young lady presented in ti metropolitan centers at four times that : mission price. Preservations may be ma through Mr. Parrer, or Mrs. Grace Jeffeson. Make this a "must" on your entertainment list. |