Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1928 — Page 8

PAGE 8

.‘HITCHY’ PLOUGHS WHEN HE DOES GOLF ‘The Baby Cyclone’ Concerns Love of Certain Women for a Brand of Dogs; Berkell Players Give Us a Chance to See Thriller. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN RAYMOND HITCHCOCK is still “Hitchy” of revue and musical comedy days even in vaudeville. He admits that it seems very strange to stand upon a stage and not be surrounded with about ninety chorus girls and much scenery. “Hitchy” misses the girls. That he also admits, especially the ninety. Yesterday when I visited the Lyric, I had my first chance to see Hitchcock in vaudeville. He tells you that this is anew game for him. Have always thought that real showmanship and knowledge of the theater would go any place. Hitchcock proves that point. He can’t sing, or doesn’t, and he can’t dance, or doesn’t. All of the real singing and dancing is done by two young girls who hail, as Hitchy says, from Philadelphia. After they get through with their last turn, he tells the audience that the girls should learn to take bows. At least seven, and when they have reached that number they should rush out with a trained seal and a lot of musical instruments and kid the audience into thinking that they could do more. Hitchy says he knows. And how.

Those who have seen this man on the stage in the big musical shows realize that he is a stage institution. He has carried that idea into vaudeville. He is Raymond Hitchcock in variety. He is just that and nothing more. If you don’t have a taste for Hitchy on the legitimate stage, well you will not relish the

diet in vaudeville. If you are on his band wagon on the revue stage, then you will be satisfied with him in vaudeville, because he is the same old Hitchy. Hitchcock admits that he knew Sophie Tucker at least the first five .years that she was 18. And that goes far back, I am sure. Without winking an eye,

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Raymond Hitchcock

Hitchy maintains that New York is a slow city, because it took that town eleven months to wake up to the fact that a show on Broadway was indecent. “And a guy from Jersey had to come over and tell ’em,’’ Hitchy maintains. “They call such shows instructive. But they are not. Don’t you believe it. I have seen all of them and they didn’t teach me a single new thing. Hitchy plays golf. Oh, yes. He states he may not hit the ball and the course may look like a plowed field when he gets through, but he plays golf just the same. To me there is only one Hltrficock. He is a big showman. He always gives me a laugh and he gave me many of them at the Lyric yesterday afternoon. His reception when I was present must have been most gratifying. And he sure is working in his own way. James Santry and Helen Norton are doing the same dances that they have been associated with for some time. They have the aid of a girl band, good at times and then fair. Showmanship is needed in this act to “sell” the band. About a ton of showmanship is needed by an act billed as Henry Rogers’ Revue. The men in the act are not using their personalities. They lack pep. The saving grace is a woman, who does tap dancing and another time when a girl and a lad do a chain dance. Bob Burns and Claude West are up to their blackface tricks and they have an easy time with their musical instrument stuff and their talk which may remind you just a wee bit of the Two Black Crows. Ursal March and company rush through something called “Good Night Nurse.’ It did not impress me as having much merit as a sketch. Marjorie Garretson is one of those jazz singers, who puts heat and lot of it into her jazz songs. She also has hot fingers on the piano. The girl ties up the act for a solid hit. Robert Gehan assists. I arrived at my seat just as the Littlejohns were finishing their act. Now on view at the Lyric. DOGS ARE DOGS AND HUSBANDS ARE HUSBANDS “The Baby Cyclone” does not concern babies, but rather a certain brand of dogs and husbands. George M. Cohan has put the jazz touch to the problem that arises when wives “love” dogs more than they do their husbands. He has taken that idea, and he has given it the Cohan touch to

such an extent that it becomes a speedy little comedy, filled with wise remarks and as wise situations. Here is a nifty, just a right little laugh, but done in that rapid Cohan manner, coupled with the smartest attitude that Stuart Walker has in the theater. The result is a mighty smart evening in the theater. This

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Gavin Gordon

dog loving business is all the bunk, but you know and I know that there

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are homes in real life that have I been put on the bow-wows by a little dog. And walking tljp dog is no joke in such homes. Cohan has seen the comedy and the possible tragedy in this situation. I flatly refuse to tell you any more about the story. If you will take my word for it you will have a corking good time seeing that dogs are dogs and husbands are husbands in “The Baby Cyclone.” The outstanding performances are as follows: 1. The work of Eugene Powers as Robert Webester, a husband, who after twenty-seven years of married life to one woman knows how to handle ’em. He has one major rule and it always works —pick up your hat and walk out. 2. The work of Charles Starrett as Gene Hurley, a man who is married to a dame who is wild over her pet dog. This is the best natural work that Starrett has given us. This chap is sure coming along nicely. ) 3. The work of Elizabeth Taylor as Mrs. Hurley, the dame who is wild over her pet dog. She has a husband, yes., but she can not see the poor sap when her dog is around. 4. The work of Gavin Gordon as Joseph Meadows, who had the bad luck to be engaged to a girl who went wild over a dog. Others in the cast include William Lawson, Katherine Hall, Jack Storey, Muriel Kirkland, Harry Holcomb, William Greer (splendid as the police officer), Rachel Sewall, Charles Dosch, Helen Foster and George Alison (fine makeup). The sets are all beauties, especially two of them—the first and the last. Now on view at Keith’s. tt $t a NEW MYSTERY PLAY NOW ON VIEW HERE It has always been the written rule of this department not to tell the story or plot of a mystery show. The Berkell Players are giving us a chance to see a mystery play new to this city this week by the name of “The Seventh Guest.” I see no reason' for spoiling the other fellows fun by giving away the plot or the solution of “The Seventh Guest.” You are confronted by this prob-

lem in this play:' Six people are in a room where a murder had been committed some years before. The seventh cuest is missing. You are concerned with what happened to this guest and then what happens to the host. You rather get the idea that this plax was written on some Friday the 13th. The first two acts hold up very well,

Edythe Elliott

and these two acts get your interest, but the final act sags sadly. It seems that most writers of this type of play have trouble in stretching out the mystery over three acts. The play is nicely acted and the effects are well handled. An improvement, a great one, is seen in the way certain lighting effects are controlled and maintained. From a scenic standpoint

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Verdict of the Stage

ENGLISH’S—“The Seventh Guest” is a mystery play new to this city. The Berkell Players are playing it nicely. First two acts hold up splendidly, but the third sags. LYRlC—Raymond Hitchcock is just the same on the vaudeville as he is on the legitimate stage, such as revues and the musical shows. He is a good showman. He is always Hitchy, even in the other days when he called for “Al.” KEITH’S—“The Baby Cyclone” is just the type of a show that you would expect George M. Cohan to turn out. Mighty smart and funny. Light? Yes, but good fun. Splendidly acted.

this show is right. You wiU be interested in the work of Mildred Hastings as Katie. This woman is good in character. William Worswick takes a hard fall in the first act which is a wonder. It is sure some fall and gives the show a whale of a thrill, just as the curtain comes down on the first act. The work of Larry Sullivan, Idabelle Arnold, Robert St. Clair, Edythe Elliott, Milton Byron, Hazel Haslam and Bob Fay come under the head of nice acting. The way William V. Hull plays Deegan, an air cop, is far from convincing. He plays it too nervously. Probably it is the headgear that worries Hull. It would me. Credit goes to Harry Hoxworth for the way he builds up much of the nervous tension and the mystery of the play. Here is a corking good legitimate work. Now on view at English’s. Other theaters today offer: “Hold ’Em Yale” at the Circle; “Half a Bride,” at the Indiana; “The Lion and the Mouse” at the Apollo; “The Street of Sin” at the Fountain Square, and “The Cossacks” at Loew’s Palace. RED CROSS WILL GIVE INDIANA FLOOD RELIEF Posey County Farmers to Get Seed for Crop. B.h United Press MT. VERNON, Ind„ July 17. Posey County farmers in need because of floods which swept lowland territory .will be aided by the Red Cross and Miss Alida Bigelow, national Red Cross representative, is already at work on plans for relief. Seed for crops will be provided by the Red Cross and also feed for stock used in work of planting crops. Farm experts are recommending that corn land made unproductive because of floods be seeded in Sudan grass, millet, cow peas, navy beans, beets, potatoes and turnips.

Old Folks Say Doctor Caldwell was Right

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TEACH TROOPS CIVICS Citizen Soldiers Will End Training Wednesday. Maj. Wood Unger, Indianapolis reserve officer and director of civics in the public schools, today conducted citizenship tests for members of the C. M. T. C. at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. The student soldiers have been taught civics throughout their thirty days’ training period. Training closes Wednesday and Col. Horace P. Hopps, C. M. T. C. commander, has invited tne public to come to the post and witness the progress that nas been made by the youthful citizen soldiery. Companies will compete in various drills, starting at 8:30 a. m., central standard time. At 10 a. m. there will be a review of the troops and trophies will be presented. Wednesday afternoon the soldiers will turn in their military equipment and be given their civilian clothes for the return home. 4H CLUB CAMP OPENS First of Nineteen in Indiana Begins in Marion County. Du Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 17.—Attendance of 3,000 is forecast at nineteen 4H Club camps to be held in different sections of the State during the next six weeks, in an announcement of the schedule by the agricultural extension department of Purdue University. The first camp is now under way in Marion County, with boys and girls from that county, Boone, Hamilton, Hancock and Morgan Counties attending. Next week’s schedule includes camps in Sullivan and Harrison Counties and at Portland Arch for Tippecanoe, Fountain, Warren ind Montgomery Counties.

& AT AGE 83

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STATE TO GET U. S, ROAD AID Indiana’s Share in Budget Is $1,921, 463. Indiana’s Federal aid for roads for the next three years will be $1,921,463, according to estimates made today by the American Road Builders’ Association, Washington. They point out that $219,375,000 will be spent by the Federal Government in 1929, 30 and 31 on roads in the United States and Hawaii. A total of $7?,125, 000 will be available each year. The F *vtes must spend a minimum of ±98,049,992 on the Federal aid i -.ads to take advantage of the appropriations. "The annual contribution of the Federal Government constitutes less than 7 per cent of the cost of road construction and maintenance each year in the United States,” the association report comments. “It is less than five hundredths of one cent for each mile traveled by motor vehicles during 1928.” With the exception of thirteen States, where more than 5 per cent of all land is non-taxable, the States must finance at least 50 per cent of Federal aid road costs, and in no case will the government contribute in excess of $15,000 a mile. Train Kills Bridge Painter Bu Times Special HUNTINGTON, Ind., July 17. Charles Murphy, 26, New York, employed at painting an Erie Rrailroad bridge west of here, was killed by an express train. Although warned of the train’s approach by fellow workmen, Murphy stepped into its path.

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AMUSEMENTS

r | VRIP c 7.: dg LI ill vx™ NOW PLAYING RAYMOND HITCHCOCK IN PERSON OTHER BIG NEW ACTS!

Ek jLISH’ST™ DPDtfPI I I Matinee DC.nrVC.UL. | We d.-Thur. PLAYERS! Sat., 2:15 Now Playing "THE 7TH GUEST” A Mystery Comedy Nitea: Matinees: 25c-50c-99c 25c-35c-500 next “MADAME X” WEEK Adapted from the French

_KEITH’S _ STUART WALKER COMPANY NOW PLAYING “The Baby Cyclone” Georre M. Cohan's Latest Success Nltely 8:30 Sharp. Mats., Wed.-Sst., 2:30. NEXT WEEK "NIGHTSTICK” A thrilling melodrama of the world's gayest street—Broadway. KEITH’S—

Dance Divorce Bu Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., July 17. Mrs. Edith M. Abney has danced herself out of a husband. A divorce decree was granted here to her husband, Harvey G. Abney, who testified she was in the habit of leaving home on Saturday and dancing well into Sunday. The husband was granted custody of a child.

STORMS SWEEP FRANCE Rain and Hail Follow Terrific Heat Wave. Bii United Press PARIS, July 17.—Varying climatic conditions were reported throughout France today with terrific heat vieing with heavy rain and hail storm. From Lyomas came reports of a temperature of 102 degrees. Intense heat at Perpignan caused a vast forest fire. At Vichy a drop of twenty degrees in temperature was reported alter a heavy rain and hail storm. Cellars were flooded and many windows broken by the inch hail stones. If your property is advertised to let, you should have no difficulty in finding the tenants you want. MOTION PICTURES

A College Drama ot I.ove hj With rod\ .A BOCQU® hi “vss /Iwtla A jj U 1 3SL §

JOHN HARRY op fox: "THE “SPICES COSSACKS" OF 1928" | With Anew idea in RENEE stage show, by ADOREE J? 01 ’. 4 V, !’ . ~ r* Great talent, An M. G. M. | j o t s 0 , fun. Picture Get , nto the EMIL SEIDEL | spirit, and Concert OUR NEW Orchestra COOLING | SYSTEM LESTER 18 NOW httttw OPERATING. HUFF | NOTICE THE at the Organ DIFFERENCE

[f&isdosiiw STARTS SATURDAY INDIANA THEATRE

AMIIO 2nd and Final Week Vitaphone Talking Drama “THE LION AND THE MOUSE” May McAvoy, Lionel Barrymo’.e n * u m u r VITAPHONE I MOVIETONE ACTS I NEWS

SQUELCHED RESOLUTION HIT NEW YORK MAYOR Indiana G. A. R. Asked to Con. demn Wearing of Lee’s Uniform. By Times Special COLUMBUS. Ind., July 17.—An effort was made at the meeting here in June of the Indiana department, Grand Army of the Republic, to pass a resolution condemning Mayor James Walker of New York for wearing the uniform of his grandfather, Gen. Robert E. Lee, in a parade. While business sessions of the G. A. R. and five allied organizations meeting here with it were secret, the

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CUT OUT AND BRING THIS AD WITH YOU REDUCTION SALE Stock of fine merchandise forced to sell JJ) O jV-r KJ in order to raise money for fall buying. This sale Is our Introductory offer to you of big values. We have taken over the stock of the Bargain Bazar and must now turn it into cash. DROP EVERYTHING COME IN TODAY

MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS Dress shirts, genii 1n e broadcloth. Neck band and collar attached. Sizes 14 to 17, $1.50 values. Closing out price—98c Each

In Our Bargain Basement TOMORROW, a lot of American Pure ALUMINUM in Baking Pans, Stew Puns, Percolators. Get ready for canning. Regular SI.OO value, your choice—--49c

MEN’S WORK SHIBTS Full cut blue ehfiinbray work shirts, sizes 14 to 17, regular 75c values. Closing out price—--39c Each

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dress trouseks Men’s fine dress pants, all sizes $3 value. Closing out price—s 2.39 Pr.

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shirts Men’s fine yarn blue c h a m b r a y work shirts, triple stitched, two pockets, sizes 14 to 17. A $1 value. Closing out price—--79c Each

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BLANKETS Part wool Nashua double blankets, large size, and gen ulne Esmond comfortable blankets, all are $5.00 values. Closing out price—s2.9B Ea.

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JULY 17, 1928

Walker resolution episode is revealed in an issue of the Banner, organ of the Sons of Union Veterans. A committee suppressed the resolution attacking Walker, the Banner reveals. Lafayette Native Buried Bn Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 17. Funeral services were held today for Jasper M. Dresser, 57, Chicago lawyer, and a native of this city, who died of cerebral hemorrhage Sunday. He was a graduate of Purdue University and practiced law here until 1895, when he went to Chicago.

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BATH TOWELS Good heavy Turkish bath towela, size 18x38 Inches, c o 1 o red borders. This is an exceptionally big value. Closing out price—15c Each

PERCALES Our regular 20c quality. 36 Inches wide, light, dark or fancy patterns. Your choice of the lot. Closing out price—15c Yard

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RAYON Plain color rayons, ideal for slips and negilee, 36 inches wide. Closing out price—--37c Yd.

DRESSES Ladies’ pure’ silk nat crepe dresses, a $6.00 value, good spring colors. These won't last long. Closing out price—s3.9B Ea.

BLANKETS Our regular $9.50 quality, all wool double blankets, buy now for next winter. Closing out price—s 4.49 Pr.

SWEATERS Men's all wool $5 value Shaker knit and sport sweater coats, 2 and 4pocket sty 1e s. Closing out price—s2.9B Ea.

UNIONS Men's SI.OO value ribbed or balbrlggan summer unions, short sleeves, ankle length, sizes 36 to 46. Clo sing out price—--69c Suit

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