LONDON’S NIGHT
CONTINENTAL AMUSEMENTS. WITH LONDON’S MORAL MODERATION. Or Telegraph—x-resa Association—Copyright (Times—Sydney “Son" Special Cables.) LONDON, February 9. “The Times,” in a leader commenting on a song in the new Gaiety production “After the Girl,” by Paul Reubens, says it explains London’s night amusement. Life twenty years ago in London was heartily gay, sometimes grubby. Now the chop-houses have become restaurants, because wives and sisters prefer to dine out at night clubs. The result is a desire on the part of respectable women to share the midnight pleasures of the city— Continental amusements borrowed, with London’s moral moderation.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8653, 11 February 1914, Page 7
Word Count
98LONDON’S NIGHT New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8653, 11 February 1914, Page 7
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