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Show pRCYlSNpTTEr- Mi'" w TorU Tribune SfcaS- Inc.) ""M rnRK i)!r 9 lh? pr f T a litt: breathless from JmTeooA deeds. 8Cm t0 bc' 'Cnicnt. Such ardent fcf"1' vfV have been perform -S" il for periods of recu-IProrfiises recu-IProrfiises r rind planf, ror w .doings now engage thera PD Lo It disturbed only by lrI.VnV Thoughtless -ntfr-s15.. ..T,r Run' h and Judy" Is"kp narrold frolic known as presented But w . rim of better things The Jmore duel In Juliet Im-s Im-s the Bclasco-Warfleld "-Tfco Merchant of Venice." FB hi time Is an old story to Iff Norman Trevor, they I l, "King Henry V" ere the i' Ulon for th- Hard burns "jTWiei Atwlll N in training flTnsro for Henrj tV," tT hot nc have grown for mi it Is more dlfflt ult fV Mr Barrymore's "Ham-Etta "Ham-Etta for Mr Zlegfeld's Fol-u Fol-u play to 2( 1 a WCI !: WKlyn and other disregarde t liur Walter Hampden looks iETVard the brighter lights fTuttan performing as he does (C33.-IMUI01K siu.krsp.-.ir,-.!.! HT The reverent Russoplilles RJLron'thelr knoi i, waiting for Eeow Art theatre "Peer K is apprehended, has been taostponed not abandoned, by K Guild. Mr Aug the fine apostle, goes ahead National Theatre moveraen liomewhat vaguely; and Mr S&JW. tlu' rllt-,p tu-kci K.-ijorkcd K.-ijorkcd out a scheme whore-Stbv whore-Stbv playhouses will sell ill Tinls ocr one counter, thus Libor the speculators These H days foi the drama i m Sn honest authority that Mr n cannot but lose $400n each Tea Mr Warfield as Shylock. Ibs play to the capacity of tho ... wonders if It was sheer coinci-L coinci-L jwtt tte current regeneration t iJot business began immedl-iifttr immedl-iifttr Mr. Thomas was made it.? tri. Perhaps it was, but It is Ittot things began to look up ni Mr Eflanger and the other ?J Mr Thomas with thc holy Tie imutt) plays seem sudden-kn sudden-kn vanished, for Instance, and rtc scheme of the theatre to lunmei a more dignified and KUb ipresslon The tr.wn Is tJ ient. adult entertainments juj'.t are attending them with Slua. A track-weary dramatic He'd me yesterday that he had las whamed of his vocation jar tain In any of ihe -" othri I lii. be has been writing about katres. Mr. Thomap. at nnv r?i-Ihre r?i-Ihre had his Influence on the for he Is the most dlsttn-Rrf dlsttn-Rrf am of the American theatre lb devotion to it is Intelligent, rJ; ted sincere. I suspect he JBryport recently for the drama Bh Eiljhborhood than Mr Hays fcf tas clnedromes or Judge Lan-athletics. Lan-athletics. Wit morallHt nr.t-pu-of-the-worM, politician dip-Hl dip-Hl liosrr.an and playwright Mr 4 e?CSfJn!i ':,riu1 to tell the audi- i ml'IS!?! BUI,Ch JudV-" 'ng Mr 1 ' Ingham annual exhibition at he! a v;:7rmr; in; among the n.ost luxurious of the mu- slca comedies dressed with an a I no Krm and some romance bv -Miss Anne Caldwell. Beauties In I s ! chorus are so freoucnt aa to be mo-1 notonous The Astaires. Prod and Adeu dance and act nnd the Dooleys ' J-hnnv ,n,l I'a v, .,M un,, mag, jocunj flip-flap, and KSS ! "ot ttroisa When a floral ims'hr;; '? ' ihded ... Mr Dooley .across the footllrhta says -Aiu-t tliat sw,n; horse go with It!" Not B0 ffCod ! a hlle later reman b game in which old men base a little ball after they arc too aged to chase anything else As i: ter in the usual cafe scene he fe ommenda a brand of liquor to i patron "it will make you see double dou-ble and act single." says he. Misi' Dooley also has her cmi.-.i.-ai moments, mo-ments, planned as she say" t., ,n ,trlgue the Intelligentsia." ':Did you, eVer ,il',.thp placc wllt,re I was vaccinated vac-cinated She Inquires of Mr. Dooley 1 No. 1e his r-xp..tant rep. -Then"1 she answers "we'll have to drive past there some day" The play was .-on- , " l ed for Miss Blsii Janls who how-1 ever, preferred her leisure; and for I Joseph Caw-thorn w ho broke a leg I whlie rehearsing In Philadelphia The ghost and mystery plays of the ! wee inc lude 1 it , th, L ,, , an(J Listening In " It i3 the Law " by Elmer Rice and Hayden Talbot, tells I about a 'young nian (Mr Arthur Hohl) who cursed by a sinister pre-1 natal influence, achieves an intricate murder and an ingenious revenge 'against his rival In love p., Ks B0 wicked a marplot that when the heroine he-roine (Miss Alma Tell) juts him ho frames up one of the most malevolent, malevo-lent, vindictive schemes known to villainy vil-lainy In the drama. It is so monstrous mon-strous a device tht strange to sav. it Is incredible even In a theatre. "Lis-Itening "Lis-Itening In" Is Just one of those me-j anderlng ghost stories, seeming to be made up as It goe aalong. In It an1 elderly spook, unlike most of the vl- 1 Hants frcm the supper spaces. Is aluable help to those with whom ho converses He gives them tips on I the stock market as he sits, a green horror, In a haunted house. Ho tells them when to buv .and when to sell and he Is otherwise valuable to those I whom he scares half to d?a:h w.th hli communications. Of course, tho ; story Is weakened nt tho end when Hr. Carlyle Moore, tho author, deem !t necessary to explain the apparition ' as a fraud The ghost proves to Imj Just a counterfeit, made up of mesmerism, mes-merism, eioctric iight3 auto-suggestion and gullibility. Mr. Ernest Glen-dlnnlng Glen-dlnnlng appears In It delectnbly as the grand-nephpw- of the old wraith., who receives with an attractive In- I trepldlty, the ery confidences from I the spirit world |