Word: hellos
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...Hello Paris. The headliner in this latest outcropping of bad taste produced by the Brothers Shubert is that exponent of scatology, Charles Partlow ("Chic") Sale. Mr. Sale is the man who brought the subject of rural sanitation to the immediate attention of the U. S. public last year when he published a slim volume called The Specialist which has sold some 650,000 copies. As a side issue he has also endorsed a cathartic (Ex-lax). But the first and principal vocation of Mr. Sale remains the theatre. He has been on the stage for the past 18 years...
...Hello Paris Mr. Sale indicates a pronounced delicacy toward the subject which has made him most of his money. Only once, when he wanders out on the stage with a pine board, does he capitalize the utility which has made him famous. For the rest of the performance he comports himself like a good rube character actor. He takes the part of the grandfather of a family which has grown rich in Oklahoma oil and which has decided to go to Paris to see the sights. The attraction is adapted from Homer Croy's novel They...
From the lift stepped Dudley Guy Gray, vice president in charge of traffic. He walked toward the president's office, stopped to say hello to a few clerks. They noticed he was in a good mood, an increasingly rare thing in this slim, purposeful man of 61, who had been in the railroad game since his boyhood, with Western Maryland for 17 years...
Author Sale, 36, vaudeville monologist (opens next week in Hello Paris, at Newark, N. J.), found "The Specialist" one of his best acts, wrote it down hoping to sell a few books to friends (TIME, Aug. 26, 1929). When not trouping he lives in Scarsdale, N. Y., with his three daughters. Test copies of the new Ex-Lax campaign included the straw-munching Specialist's accounts of a rural traffic policeman who took Ex-Lax, be- came healthy, smiled so much he was made an official; the yarn of a dentist who did no business, gave Ex-Lax away, made...
...mess boy on the cruiser Renown when we took the Prince to Canada. I have no work now. I couldn't resist the temptation to say 'Hello, Prince' to an old shipmate...