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Show UISTER IN IUSICAL SHOW When "A Stubborn Cinderella" appears ap-pears at tho Ogden theater tomorrow night, the audience will see in the character of tho college (resident, Rev. Dudley C. Fosher, a former minister min-ister of the gospel, and his wife as one of the chorus girls of the company. com-pany. From tho church to tho stage was 1 the jump taken last week by the Hew and Mrs. Dudley C. Fisher, of Woodlawn, a suburb of Chicago, where, until August I, Rev. Mr. Fosher Fosh-er was pastor of tho Ryder Memorial T'nlversallst church at Sixty fourth street and Kimbark avenue. For three .j ears he held this pastorate until both himself aud wife concluded that they just "couldn't make things go" any longer on the salaiy that the pastorate yielded. So the jumplng-off place having been reached, they jumped and landed In tho limelight of tho st5go and a II tt lo more publicity, perhaps, per-haps, than they had bargained for, but then they both have "steady jobs'" with steady salailes that are much In excess of the Income yielded by the Ryder church pastorate, and both are happy in being together In their new-work. new-work. Mrs. Fosher is a chorus girl in tho "Stubborn Cinderella" company, while tho former expounder of the gosroJ takes tho rol cif college president in tho same cast. And as to costumes! Mrs. Fosher objects to neither tights nor abbevl-ated abbevl-ated skirts. "Whatever people think of my costume doesn't bother me." said Mrs. Fosher. "I shall wear what ever my part lu the play calls for. Both my husband and I are rather liberal ubout some things. We don't believe that the clothes of a chorus girl will send her to perdition or tint a good man of the church Is any better bet-ter than a good man of the stage." Rev. Mr. Fosher has an exceptionally exception-ally fine voice, which, he hopes, will earn him a role that Is really worth while. co |