Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 214, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1924 — Page 7

SATURDAY, JAN. 19,1924

JULIA SANDERSON JO BE BRIGHT STAR ATKEIISMONBAY Doe Jackson, American Pantomimic Artist, Due at Lyric, EtTLIA SANDERSON, star of the musical comedy stage, who Is making a limited vaudeville tour, will be the stellar attraction of the bill to be seen at B. F. Keith’s next week. Her last starring vehicle was ‘’Tangerine.” In her act at Keith’s in which she will be assisted by Rupfeld, composer and pianist. Miss Sanderson presents renditions of her repertoire of songs. Second honors of the bill will go to Frank Crumit who has returned to vaudeville. Crumit calls himself “The One Man Glee Club.” He is a comedian who can sing, play musical instruments and tell a story. The bill will Include: ALEXANDRIA —In a surprise act. j Nothing made public regarding him. j FRED BERNARD AND SID GARRY—Known as Southern Synco■paters. They Impersonate Eddie Cantor, Karyl Norman, Eddie Leonard and A1 Jolson. ' HARRY HOLMAN AND COMPANY will offer a comedy classic that has made Holman a popular player over the Keith circuit. The act is called ‘‘Hard Boiled Hampton." Holman will be supported by Violet Holliday and Florence Crowley. TED AND KATHRYN ANDREWS; are billed as “Vaudeville’s Smart Pair j of Entertainers.” Their act is new !

to local audiences but comes with the j stamp of approval Os other Keith houses where it has played. lOWA AND D’HORTYS —In a juggling act in which a trained dog takes p;irt. JOSEPH M. BERNARD —Has assistance of Miss Leona Beautelle in a one act playlet by Wilbur Mack celled, “Who Is She?” SCREEN ATTRACTIONS—IncIude Pathe News, Topics of the Day and Aesop’s Fables. -I- -!- -IGREAT PANTOMIMIC STAR TOPS SEW BILL AT LYRIC ' Joe Jackson, American pantomimic j star, comes to the Lyric next week ; with his collection of old bikes, and 1 his - ridiculous tramp make-up. Jack-’ son has been starred in several big New York revues, and he has long been a familiar headliner around the vaudeville circuits. The bill will include: “THE LAND OF TANGO”—A spectacular vaudeville production described as “a South American fantasy with Yankee pep and comedy ” It is presented by a company of Spanish artists including Petit Marita, Matilda Carpos, Herberta Martinez, Alberto DeLima, George Inez, Carlos Molina, Alcides Briceno, Manuel Valdespino and Will J. Adams. The scenes are laid in Havana. Vocal selections, instrumental numbers and terpischorean specialties are abundant throughout. EL COTA —Xylophonist in a program of jazz tunes amJ eccentricities. SAHAROFF AND SONlA—Entertainers in “A Rlt of Old Russia” in which they combine a little of everything characteristic of their native land. MONROE AND GRATTON— Farceurs, singers and dancers in anew comedy skit called “The Girl Next Door.”

ROBINSON AND PlEßCE—Funmakers in a travesty entitled “No More Saloons.” MELODY FOUR—A quartet of singing comedies singing new songs interspersed with humor. ON THE SCREEN—Mack Sennett comedy. "Skylarking.” the Pathe Review and a Martin Johnson travelogue "South Sea Preparedness.” -!- -I- -!- TWO HEADLINE RILLS ANNOUNC ED AT PALACE The two bills playing at the Palace next week are headed by “Carnival of Venice,” a spectacle, and Hal Fisher’s Collegiate Orchestra, in their order named. The photoplay for the first half of the week is a First National release and a Paramount picture is booked for the last half. The vaudeville for the first half is: "CARNIVAL OF VENlCE”—Depicting a night at the Mardi Gras. Mile. Donatella is the featured player JEAN MIDDLETON—A single billed as “Little Miss Melody,” in reality a violinist who has won the praise of John Phillip Sousa. EDDIE STANLE Y—Presenting •’Vaudeville Moments,” assisted by Patricia Kennedy, Babe Burns and Leo Leah. JOHNSTON AND HAYES—Billed as “Kings of Hokum Ala Carte.” THREE LEES —Have a comic surprise offering that they have titled “Watch the Pipe—No Dream.” For the last half of the week Gattison Jones and Elsie Elliott, dancers of eccentric and acrobatic dances, will headline the bill, assisted by Ha! Fisher's Collegiate Orchestra. FYank Mathews and Ada Ayres offer a comic skit “I Gotta Go Home,” written by Rex Conway; Indian Follies is presented by a cast of real Indians, offei - ing native pastimes, songs and dances; Gene Oliver and trio in an other comic bit titled “Fhinny F'ace and Pals,” and Armand and Poi-ez, International athletes who hurl each other through the air. On the screen the first half of the week will be “The Huntress,” a comic drama starring Colleen Moore. "The Light That Failed,” an adaption of Rudyard Kipling’s story of the same name, produced for Paramount by George Melford, will be seen the last half of the week. The short reels are the Pathe News, Screen Topics, an Aesop Fable, a scenio and a two-reel comedy. More Players for “Poisoned Paradise” FTed Stanton and Betty Brown have been added to the cast of B. P. Schulberg’s next Preferred Picture, “Poisoned Paradise,” from the novel by kobert W. Service. Other players in tiJs new production are Kenneth Harlan, Clara Bow, Carmel Myers, Raymond Griffith and Josef Swickard.

Sistine Choir Sings at Murat Sunday Night >

*. ~. ■.. , , .-Li' i .1 ONE CONCERT ONLY' SUNDAY NIGHT. ■ *

MYSTERY PLAYS AT LOCALISES (Continued From Page 6) the bed in which your grandfather had died — And none of the furniture had been touched for twenty years— And you had beer, warned of ghosts j and of a homicidal lunatic loose in the i neighborhood— And you had been hearing funny noises— And just as you dropped off to | sleep— AN ICY HAND The thrills of “The Cat and the Canary” are better experienced than | read about, but it can be said that | with the foregoing outline as a starter I they multiply as the show' proceeds. Without disclosing the eventual surprise, the audience first meets a group I of six seated in an old house at mid- j night to hear the will of an eccentric j millionaire who had died twenty years before to the minute. The proceedings carried out accord- j ing to his wishes develop the fact that the heroine is to be the heiress pro- j vided she spend the night in her grand- j father’s bed and show no sign of in- j sanity in the morning. It is by design a creepy tale involving sinister tappings, mysterious sliding panels, a hidden necklace, an old servant who communes with the j ghosts in the walls and a man wh<> j vanishes before your face to turn up murdered. The company coming to the Shu-bert-Murat the week commencing Monday night, with matinees Wednesday and Saturday, is the one that played at the Princess theater, Chic:igo, thirty-six weeks last season. It includes Emily Taft, Louis Kimball. John C. King, John Stokes, Clifford Dempsey, William Macaulay, Anne Sutherland, Sue Van Duzer and Gwyneth Gordon. Bank Gets Judgment The National City Bank today re- j ceived a judgment of $671 from a Superior Court jury on a SSOO note from Dr. John J. Briggs, K. of P. building. The note was issued in 1921. Dr. Briggs defended the non-payment or. the grounds of fraud, alleging that he gave the note to the now defunct Reed Food Company in exchange for stock, the stock not to be issued or tne note discounted until he paid for the stock. The company discounted his note, he charged. Judge T. J. Moll held that fraud is no delense as against an innocent third party. Nagel and Rubens in New Movie Conrad Nagel, Alma Rubens and the company now making “Blood and Gold’’ in New York for Distinctive Pictures, will leave next week on a location trip to Montreal.

MOTION PICTURES ENGLISH S .’Sfv „ I Eve.. S:ls P. M. ■ Veterans of Foreign Wars Present “POWDER RIVER” I Official War Dept. Wotlon Picture of B the WORLD WAR. Just closed a Are weeks run In Boston. R PRICES—SOc, 75c, SI.OO. Tax I Exempt. FIRST HALF NEXT WEEK LEO MALONEY —IN—“KING’S CREEK LAW” A Drama of the Texas Rangers CENTURY COMEDY "SHE’S A HE.” 10c—ALL SEATS—IOc MISTER SMITH’S Tomorrow and All Week The story of a girl who wanted beautiful clothes, ricliea and luxury. ALSO Buster Keaton In one of his funniest, comedies “LOVE NEST” All the 4 All the SEATS I TIME

The Sistine Chapel Choir of the Sistine Chapel of. the Vatican, Rome, will appear in a concert Sunday night at the Murat. Monslgnor Antonio Rella will direct. The program is as follows: PART I Greetings to the American People. . . . Reflce j Bonum est Conflteri (Good It Is to Confess) Palestrina j Oremus pro Pontiflce (Let Us Pray for Our Pontiff) Perosi j Exsultate Justtl (Exult, O Ye Just, In the Lord) Viadana I Tenebrae Factae Sunt (Darkness Was Made) Vittoria Alleluia Perosi PART II Adeste Fideles (O, Come. All Ye Faithful) Novello Are Maria (Hail, Mary Vittoria Benedictus Qui Venit (Blessed Is He) Perosi j Credo (From the Mass of Pop* Marcellus) Palestrina

Hempel Will Sing at Murat Sunday 1 - ' fv ’*sl ; V r ■ ♦?*.. h- A. ' s _ ,-4- '■ \ fr ,'i*’’ <■> <'to+•- „• . FRIEDA HEMPEL At the Murat at 3 p. m. Sunday Frieda Hempel will appear In concert under the direction of On o B. Talbot. Young Star Taken Vacation Dorothy Mackaill, who recently finished a featured role In Sam Wood’s Paramount production, "The Next Corner,” Is In New York for a month's vacation.

M9.T I0 _ N _ _ P 'CTUREs S:ew role, a thrill- H IA OF THE TRAIL OF == IN THE VAST WILLTE =2 F THE ARCTIC ='KATHLEEN KEY, EUGENE PAL- w ETTE, WILL WALLING, FRANK = = CAMPEAU, FRANK LEIGH AND FRED KOHLER IN THE CAST. | H FOX NEWS WEEKLY H n CHARLES B. LINES g APCILLO^RCHESTRA iiniiiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiijiiil^S^SißCS^i

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Matinee Musicale

On next Friday afternoon at 3 o’clock, Jan. 25, the Indianapolis Matinee Musical© will present another recital. The program is as follows: Nocturne Carl Them La Sevillane C. Chaminade Geraldine Trotter, Lucille Loektnan Wagner. Concerto D Minor Vieuxternps Allegro. Andante Reltgioso. Elmer Kruse. Mrs. Joseph B. Gallagher, at the Piano. “Bell Song ' <Lakme> Delibes Mildred Doughery Emry. Helen Julia Smith, at the Piano. (a) Le bon petit rol dyoetot Grandjany (b) Gitana Hasselmans Alberta McCain. (a) Minor and Major Spross (b) Cradle Song MacFadyen (c) Awakening Mason Mrs. James M. Pearson. Mrs. Robert Bonner at the Piano. Perpetual Motion In Octaves.... Emil Sauer An einsamer Quelle Richard Strauss (At a Quiet Spring). Polonaise in A Flat Chopin Mrs. Arthur G. Monnlnger, Artist Recital. Hans Kindler. 'Cellist, Murat Theatre. Feb Bth. Open to the public. MOTOR DEMONSTRATED Waukesha Man Reads Paper Before Indiana Engineers. More perfect explosion, greater power and economy were declared attributes ol the new type Ricardo motor demonstrated to seventy automotive engineers In the Whoeler-Scheb-ler Carburetor Company Laboratories Thursday afternoon by Harry Homing, Waukesha Motor Company. Horning read a paper on the motor before the Indiana section, Society of Automotive Engineers, at the Severin Thursday evening. Two hundred engineers and experts attended. A discussion of the motor was entered Into by Howard Marmon, Fred 8. Duoeenberg, J. H. Hunt of the General Motors laboratories, Dayton, O.; Q. C. Berry of the Wheeler-Schebler Company, ;ind Fred E. Moskovlos, former vice president of Nordyke-Marnion.

COUNCIL OF YOUNG PEOPLE TO HOLD SESSIONS' HERE Four-Day Meet Announced at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, The Presbyteriana Young Peoples’ Council of Indianapolis will hold Its ninth mid-winter conference at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, beginning Tuesday, Jan. 22 and closing on Friday.

It is hoped that at least 200 delegates will be enrolled for this conference. The purpose Is “to help Pres-1 byterian young people of Indianapolis to get acquainted with one another so that all may understand the unity of their church in the city and in the world.” C. Norman Green is president of the council. Other officers are Robert Fay, vice president; Augusta Taylor, secretary, and Dorothy Fltz, treasurer. The sessions will be held each night of the session. Prominent educators will make the principal address. WELSH PREACHER TO SPEAKSUNDAY Big Meeting to Hear Nephew of David Lloyd George, Arthur W&lwyn Evans, noted Welsh preacher and nephew of Lloyd-George, will speak at the Y. M. C. A. Big Meeting at English's Theater Sunday afternoon. It is Evan’s eighth consecutive appearance here. After graduating from one of the Scotch universities, Dr. Evans was sent by the Church of Scotland to the Shetland Islands. During the next few years he preached in all parts of Great Britain. His subject for Sunday. “Power,” will be illustrated by his experiences In both Europe and America. The Big Meeting Orchestra, under the direction of L. A. Von Staden, will begin a thirty-minute concert at 3 p. m. Dwight Murphy, baritone, will sing. Community singing will precede the address. Arliss Has Played Many Roles George Arllss, whose work as the Rajah of Rukh In "The Green Goddess” has won high praise from motion picture critics, has played Japanese, Danish, Italian, Ruslan, French, Scottish, English, Jew and American roles.

Baptist Ministers to Meet Monday Morning

By THE VISITOR T”“l HE regular meeting of the Baptist Ministers’ Union of In- . dianapolis, will be held Monday at 10 a. m., at the Baptist headquarters, 727-730 Occidental building. The Rev. C. P. Greenfield, pastor of the Tabernacle Baptist Church, will have charge of the devotions. The general theme of the meeting will be, “The Home Missionary Task.” The Rev. E. L. Hamilton of Anderson, will review the life and work of “John M. Peck,” early PioneerMissionary "The ITesent Day Home Mission Task,” will be discussed by the Rev. F. A. Hayward, executive secretary of the Federated Baptist Churches of Indianapolis. Church Plans to Present Musical Comedy Under the direction of J. Victor Richardson and Arleigh Waltz, rehearsals for the presentation of “The Only Girl,” a musical comedy by Victor Herbert in the community house of Central Christian Church, are now in progress. Feb. 1 and 2 are the dates for the production. A cast and chorus selected from the Central Christian choir includes Miss Edna McQuillen, Irmagone White, Mary Ellen Zink, Agnes Teaman, Almyra Davis, Alinore AusJn, Marjorie Merle Gerhardt, Desdemonia Lee and Ethelwin Arholter. Male parts are In .he hands of Ray Jackson, George Henke and Carl J. Turpin. \ Arnold J. Spencer will direct the orchestral accompaniment. Miss Flora Teaman is designer of costumes. Proceeds from the show voted to the church's gymnasium fund. • • • REV. PAUL W. EDDINGFIELD announce!) sis Sunday subjects at the Broad Ripple Christian Church as foilows: “The Philosophy of Prayer” and “The Unchanging Gospel.” • • THE MORNING SERVICE at the Central Universalist Church Sunday

MOTION PICTURES • , _ . . I] lifiif l A ROMANCE of the love of a Desert Sgi g j|j • I** fi 1 Dancer—a dream of Araby and tropical Si [£. \s4 Jr it M nights of love under African skies. An gjaHij: i r **isUw y, KS entirely new role for Norma —supported j 1 ifW| by Joseph Schildkraut and an excellent cast. |ji ll I Ii CIRCLETTE OF NEWS j|g|: HI MQMsmymtS, 1 SSHIBhR cisclS GiANnii oegar . lilt

will be conducted by the young men and young women of the church. Lambert Case will preach. • * * D. M. B. HYDE, pastor of Grace M. E. Church, announces that Dr. M. S Marble will address the Men’s Bible Class at 9:45 a. m. Sunday, and that he will speak at the communion service at 10:45 a. m. At night Dr. H. A. King, district superintendent, will preach. * * * REV. L. P. COOPER of the Calvary United Brethren Church announces his Sunday subjects as “Daily Fellowship With the Divine Friend” and “Spending Eternity With the Divine Friend.” • • * REV .L. C. E. FAJCKLER, pastor of St. Matthew Evangelical Lutheran Church, will preach Sunday_on the following subjects: "The Test That Tells” and "The Thought of Christian Parents at the Marriage of Their Children.” * * * DR. EDWARD HAINES KISTLER preaches Sunday for the new Fairview Presbyterian Church, at 11 a. m.. In the Fourth Bldg., Nineteenth and Alabama, on "The Tragedy of the Clay.” 7:45 p. m. he will speak In Grace Bldg., Thirty-Second and Capitol, on “Taunting the Church.” Midweek worship will be held in the F’ourth Bldg.. Wednesday at 8, his theme being “O’er Crag and Torrent.” * * • “AT THE LORD’S TABLE” will be the theme of Homer Dale, minister at Hillside Christian Church, Sunday morning. In the evening he wifi preach on “The Deity of Jesus —His Birth.” This will be the first of a sex rles of three sermons on the “Deity of Jesus,” the two to follow being “The Life of Jesus” and “The Resurrection of Jesus.” • • • A SPECIAL MEETING at the Had Place Methodist Church for men only

will be addressed Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock by Ed Jackson, secretary of State. His subject will be “Home and Country.”. Music will be furnished by the Shortridge band. Rev. Charles W. Stevens will preach at the morning hour. At night, Rev. Guy V. Hartman, pastor, will- preach on "Benevolent Fault Finding.” * • • REV. WILLIAM M. RUNYAN, evangelist, will preach morning and night at the East Park M. E. Church, Sunday. Services will be held every night next week with the exception of Saturday night. Dr. E. A. Robertson, pastor, states that interest is growing In the revival. • * * DR. FRANK S. C. WICKS announces the following order of senri.oe at All Souls Unitarian Church at 1 am., Sunday: f Prelude in B, Thomas - Swedish march, Sodermar.n; hymn 336 third service: covenanti; anthem. Words of aspiration. Responsive reading, twentieth selection; Scripture; hymn 400; notices find offerings. Mediation, Harker. Address, "The Value of the Bible." Hymn 445; benediction, postlude. Polonaise Militaire, Cboi‘in. • • • The Wheeler City Mission will observe special Homecoming Sunday afternoon and evening, inviting all of the converts and friends of the Mission to be present. Several of the Mission converts will tell of their conversions. A large picture of Mr. Wheeler will be presented. Mrs. Breece and others will sing. FIRE LOSS IS SIOO,OOO Elks Lodge and Pennsylvania Roundhouse burn at Valparaiso. Bv Times Special VALPARAISO, Ind., Jan. 19. Damage of SIOO,OOO was caused by fir* here within the last twenty-four hours. Shortly after a meeting of the Elks lodge, flames of unknown origin razed the structure, causing loss of $75,000. The Pennsylvania roundhouse also burned with an estimated loss of $25,000.

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