Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 154, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1929 — Page 9
NOV. 7, 1929.
PEOPLE WILL DINE UPTOWN TONIGHT “Strange Interlude” Opens a Three-Day Return Engagement With Pauline Lord Heading the Cast.
"OTRANGE INTERLUDE” returns to Indianapolis this evening for 3 another three-day engagement at English's, and advance indication are that the second appearance of this unusual nine-act drama will be as enthusiastically received as was its first apperance here last winter. Since that time this same company has covered a deal of territory before it completed its swing around the circle in arriving here. Last winter, the company was bound west and now, after having spent the entire spring and summer on the Pacific coast, it is bound east again. Thirty-two different cities have been visited by this company during the eight months that havp elapsed since its first clamorous reception
here, and in each one of those cities the O'Neill play came with the same force of an explosion as it had when Indianapolis first saw it, and it left behind in all those cities something of the same sort of intensely interested discussion. After stops in St. Louis, Kansas City. Denver and Salt Lake City, "Strange Interlude,” following its Indianapolis engagement last January, played ten weeks in Los Angeles and Hollywood, and while there 60 many diverse opinions regarding the play were engendered that a great public debate was held, in which representatives of the newspapers, the church, literature and science took part. Clergymen, dramatic critics, trained psychologists, and novelists engaged in the symposium, and also Upton Sinclair, who falls into no known category. The hall was packed with spectators and many comments were made from the floor. In May and June, "Strange Interlude” played in San Francisco—to packed houses, of course. Here, though a public forum was also held on the subject of the play, at which Peter B. Kyne, Charles Caldwell Dobie and other well knowm writers spoke, most of the controversy aroused by "Strange Interlude” took an epistolary form. The San Francisco newspapers began to be deluged with letters from their readers—The Chronicle received some 600 in two weeks and established a "Strtmge Interlude” letter department in which from three to five letters were printed every day. So many urgent requests had come from smaller cities in California to present “Strange Interlude” there before the company left the state, that even though it was July, when the torrid San Joaquin valiey is the hottest part of the United states, the play was given in Fresno and in Sacramento before the company proceeded to the northwest for triumphant engagements in Portland, Ore., Tacoma, Seattle and Vancouver, B. C. Then heeding the requests of smaller cities lying between Seattle and Minneapolis, the company undertook a three week’s diet of playing one and two-night stands in such cities as Walla Walla and Spokane. Wash.. Missoula, Butte, Helena, Great Falls and Billings, Mont. Here was the old-time trouping with a vengeance—enough of a hardship for any ordinary theatrical company, but a double one on the “Strange Interlude” company j because of the fact that Its performance takes twice the time to present. With a performance starting at 5:30 in the afternoon, and with scenery for nine-acts to set up, late train connections would have been disastrous. But, of course, the show went on every time. The players took it as a great, lark and enjoyed their Wild West experience to the full, even when the theaters were sometimes a little less than luxurious. In one town, there were no professional stage-hands, and college boys, completely untrained for the work, were employed. The boys were so interested in the performance that they blocked up all the exits, gawping at the scenes, and when the players passed them backstage these “stage-hands” became starry-eyed with amazement. They had never seen any one with makeup on before. Back now where theaters are operated with trained stage-hands, the "Strange Interlude” company, fresh from its western triumphs, feels cosily at home again in Indianapolis where they were made so welcome by theater-goers last winter. This is the first of “Strange Interlude's” repeat dates, as it is booked this fall to repeat engage-
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ments in St. Louis, Louisville, Columbus and all the other cities through which it played on its way out from New York last winter. There seems to be no end to the tour of this company, since there are still scores of American cities that haven’t seen it at all yet. It is truly the theatrical phenomenon of the decade—in its popularity as well as in its unusual quality of its theme. This show starts promptly at 5:30 with a dinner engagement at 7:40 until 9 p. m. Watch your curtain time on this show. Today, Friday and Saturday at English’s. a a a Other theaters today offer: "In the Headlines” at the Lyric, "So This Is College” at the Palace, "Gold Diggers of Broadway” at the Apollo, “Illusion” at the Ohio, Gene. Ford and Glenn at the Indiana, "Broadway” at the Circle, burlesque at the Mutual, and movies at the Colonial. HOOVER TO SEE GAME WASHINGTON, Nov, 7.—President Hoover will motor to Annapolis Saturday for the Georgetown-Navy football game, according to present plans. He will leave the White House shortly before the game, returning immediately at its conclusion. Several cabinet members also will make the trip. A Sweet Stomach Yours,for the Asking If you’re troubled with "indigestion,” excessive gas, belching, heartburn, distressing pains after eating, it’s a sure sign of acid stomach. Correct this condition and you can eat almost anything. There are a number of effective j anti-acids on the market, but most of them give only temporary re- 1 lief. Often they upset the chemical balance of the stomach, retard : digestion, and do more harm thanj Siod. Don’t experiment. Pape’s' iapepsin is the tried-and-true i remedy you can always depend on | for instant relief and quick restoration of normal digestion. Pape’s Diapepsin does not retard but aids digestion, because it does not interfere with the flow of: gastric juices. It neutralizes acids, soothes the inflamed lining of the stomach, and it promotes perfect assimilation. nyrrn I cup * nd ma ** ■ Fap’ Diapfip*in I ■ Wheeling, W. Va. J Please eend me free box to try. j I I J Strarl j | P. 0 I I PAPE’S 1 DIAPEPSIN Helps Your Stomach To Help Itself
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
STOP SIGNS CHANGED State Will Use Larger Markers on Roads! Four-foot ‘Stop” signs, placed from'seventy-five to 100 feet from the intersection, is the new order in the state highway department, it was announced by Director John J. Brown. "Increased speed at which motor cars now travel are responsible for the new order of the commission, Brown advised. “Several years ago, when there were considerably fewer automobiles on the highways and their speed was several miles slower than modem models, a ‘Stop’ sign two feet across, placed fifty-feet back of an intersection, proved ample warning. Conditions have so changed because of faster moving and congested traffic as to demand the larger sign placed at greater distances.”
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