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R AT Unless otherwise indicuted, theatrical uclices und reviews in this cofumn are written by the press agencles for the respective amusemeat company. i MARTY DUPREE AT PALACE. Beginning today, Marty Duprec's Follies, now at the Palace, will offer an entire change of bill and will oftch “The Good Ship Razzle Dazzle,” Dbill which is promised to be as good if not better than the one in which they made the big hit here the first three days of the w . Marty has the finest tabloid h’m\\ t has ever been presented in this cily and Pal- ace patrons should not fail to sce the new bill the last of the week. The comedy is in the capable hands of | Bennie Drohan, one of the finest |Which are certain to greet Marty and comedians seen here in many a day, |her Follies the last three days of the hd Frank Murray, another unrking}\ eek. On Friday night there will be zood comedian and the wit which [an amateur night for local talent and they offer is as clean and entertain- |all desiring to take part should leave ing as could be. Mr. Drohan made |their names the box office now. quite a hit in the show just finished | The photopl attraction beginning and Sl Dok Ve aiow 3 today will pr “Rackbone” with an all-star cast in the leading roles. ext week Hoyt's lan entire new cast | Wittiams. PONJOLA AT C:\Pl'l()l:. Today for the last half of the week ;!I\n- Capitol starts another fine bill of R | Keith vaudeville features. The vaude- ville will have five big attractions | presenting as the features, The Five | Lamys, yaudeville's mest sensational gymnasts in a series of ‘startling sur- prises. The Capitol Revue presents a nifty variety offering featuring excel- lent songs and dances by a group of five talented artists, Nash and O'Don- nell will be a big hit with their skit, “Almost Single.,” A refined girl, a victim of circum- stances, decides that the world is not | for women but for men only., Mas- querading as a man she seeks to hide herself in Africa where she is thrown into a maelstrom of excitement, ad- venture and romance. This briefly is the theme of “Pon- Sam E. Rork-First National , which is at the Capitol now. “Ponjola”™ is a vivid picturization of Cynthia Stockley's famous master- | plece of South African gold field life. It tells the story of an English {noblewoman who is disguised as a man, fights the curse of *“Ponjola,” Ithe new bill. Miss Dupree will offer new songs and dances and will again be as big a hit as before. Madeline | Boland, the primn donna with a fine voice, wiill be heard in ncw songs, {and Wallace Roberts, Louis Caron and Wallace Melville will also be | well liked. Marty's great singing |and dancing chorus a the best group 6f girls that has yet graced the Palace stage and their work is a real delight to hear and sce. It is sured that “The Good Ship t Dazzle” will prove very good enter- tainment to the capacity houses a as- he featuring Lew AND HER MUSICAL COMEDY FOLLIES Presenting “The Good Ship Razzle- Dazzle” Don’t Miss Bennie Drohan Frank Murray and Marty (.reat Dancmx Lhonw “B \(‘I\BONE" With An All Star Cast 'RIDAY AMAThUR N IGHT ~—— Next Week — HOYT'S REVUE All New Faces TONIGHT — FRI, 5-BIG TIME ACTS—) Keith Vaudeville Featuring THE CAPITOL REVUE A Merry Melange of Song and Dance with 5 Clever Artists Nash - Ol’Donnell \wde\flloa Best Gymnasts The Five Lamys TTOTHER GOOD ACTS ANNA Q. NILSSON JAMES KIRKWOOD TULLY MARSHALL it “PONJOLA’ The Story of a Woman Who Masqueraded as a Man For Love ! MON, = TULS, = WEI THEVANITY SHOPPE A Musical Comedy Playlet With AL WEBER And Living Models The Vanity Shoppe Will Give Away a Beautiful Gown on Wednesday Night and Six Pairs of Silk Stockings at the Mat inces To Lucky Tadies, wk—"The Vanity Shoppe” — LYCEUM — Now Playing Scene from EDWARD DILIONS FLORENCE DIXON HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE featuring THE COLONIAL FOUR Coming Monday CAMEO KIRBY with JOHN GILBERT \ REXMERE ORCHE‘STRA Britain’s <cncational playe The boys that m a hit at + theater Inst week fes this treat. EVERY TUESDAY AND SATURDAY (Incinding 15¢, PANCING PEVENINGS ADMISSION Taxes) —Ladies Gentlemen 50 Revue comes with § 'and Darrow, a couple Bennie Drohan, Comedmn With Pal the soul destroying drink of the gold miners; fights for the man she loves and willingly offers to sacrifice her- self for the man by standing trial for a murder which the man commits, Other popular screen favorites in the picture are Tully Marshall, Ruth | Clifford, Joseph Kilgour, Claire Du Brey, Claire McDowell and Bernard Randall, COLONIAL QUARTET—LYCEUM One of the best headline acts to play | here in a long time is the Colonial | Quartet, now being featured at \hv Lyccum where a dandy picture and | vaudeville bill is being shown. These singers have the latest hits, feature | novelty selections and add some ec- centric work of their own, Also on the bill is Luecy Gillett and Company, in an original juggling act which tops others brought to the city recently, Jack Marley, an eccentric comedian with a box full of laughs, and Vale of acrobatic dancers whose steps are different than the usual run of vaudeville entertain. ers, On the same program is a spe- cial comedy attraction flashed on the silver sheet, the latest news reels and a super up to date photo drama, “Women Men Marr, “Women Men Marry” is one of those with many scenes of gay life and fashionable eclothes which are proving so popular with movie fans, It is really a study of soclal values. LICENSES SUSPENDED The police department has been notified of the suspension of automo bile licenses of the following person: Dr. A, P. Bush of 140 Main street, Ru. dolph Anderson of 430 Park street, Teofil Gajda of 191 Broad street, Jo- seph Smigel of 79 Broad street and Frank Yablonski of 12 Silver street, B redomae— Best coffee, 38c. advt, “That Old Gang of Min A serenade melody won- derfully fox- Russell Bros, ~— {against the trotted by the California Ramblers and sung in close harmony by the Shannon | Four on Co- lumbia Rec- ords. A-3970 © A-3976 “-bi:‘ Conpeny Columbia PARSONS THEATER—HARTIORD TONITE=ALL W K | Arthur Goodrich's | Clever Comedy GEORGEM. | COHAN | c," Dresents the Infernational Comedy Sensafion SO THIS IS LONDON/ | . ENTIRE ORIGINAL NEW YORK CAST wwit i sspeese, Lawrevce 1 Orvay, Donald Gallaber, Lily Cabiil, I the others 50, $2.00, \Il|~ $2.00. £1.50, §1.00, e —— ‘Parsons’ Theater—Hartford ° » Wed. Jan. 30 Mat. & Eve INNEWAND OLD SONGS- Dirachion WILLIAM MORIS COMPANY OF ARTISTS Prie | something of ap upturn | values today at the |a slight sa ! dential nomir Msfly anue Now At The ace BY DR. C, C. ROBINSON SOCIAL PROGRESS Social progress aims to carry out the program of a distinct betterment in il reproduction and the enactment of Just and hygienic Lealth laws. At present a cry is being lowering of our raised vital | powers of resistance and the germ- plasm of reproduction. Both sexes seem to have taken it for granted that a wild attack on their nervous and muscular systems is the proper way to indulge their sportive whims. Weakening physical powers by ex. cesses, over-excitement, loss of the proper amount of sleep, results in loss in stamina and pervous energy. Just what the real physical condi- tion of our race is today, as the re- sult of soclal unrest and changed living conditions, is hard to say: /T believe, counting all advantages and disadvantages on both sides, we have made distinct progress in racial uplift as a whole, although in certain parts of our country chronic maladies are increasing. If you have an opportunity, health detective and see if you can find the social progress in the com- munity where you reside on the up- grade. The formulating and carrying out of a true eugenic program will be the great health work of this gencra- tion. Under the knowledge we gather from the growing sclence of cugenies our country will keep its solemn obli« gation, that transmitting a pure, unde- filed 1ife stream is the highest trust in our social progres: GRAIN VALUES RISE Government Interest in Agriculture Caunses Stocks to Show Some Added Strongth Today. Chicago, Jan, 24.—Government | movement toward helping agricultural | [interests in the northwest led to | in all grain start, Corn trad- ing continued to lead in activity, ~.\.|tn" vnfavorable weather a bullish factor | and with other markets outbidding Chicago. After opening 1-8 to 8. higher, May 580 to 80 1.8, the corn warket held firmly above yesterday's | lutest figures, Wheat trade play lacked volume, b responded to an upturn in quotations | at Live s¢ of jomestic rpool and to scantiness receipts. The npvnnm) X ranged from 1-5 to 3-8 higher, 1.09 1-8 to 1.08 1 nd July 5-8 1o 1.07 3-4, was followed by | g and then a little rally a shade lower to a | 47 5.8 to 47 3-4, ar to the initial whiel May 1.07 arted at er, May and later held r range. Provisions were rned by the course steady, apparently of hog values. Reed Will Decide Saturday If He Is to Enter Race| 24~ United Stat «d will meet his , it was an- nounced to. and probably will de- definitely whether he will m ign for the democratic presi ation. The democratic state committee s here Monday and wmany of « fricnds are expected to remain yver for this convention Jrerson to Reed rtiment in Misso whether the Missot national conventic d they are senator Saturdag Jan A Louis, ames &t Kenalor friends he By vide a camp: have been il to out actermine gation to the for Reed 1 expec port to the Lol"ollea Gel;vB;ckinz Of Non-Partisan Members 24.~Four of the county conven- held yesterday throughout | Dakota, instructed their dele- | we convention to | 6 to work of Sena- ot neir Fargo, N. D., tisan league orecment at conve ompiled ac the by {ton * i | with the | 1o0ks to on ‘HARYARD GONSIDERING LIMITING ENROLLMENT Official Declare That Time Has Come | When Question is Really a Vital One Mass, Jan. 24.—The| ation of the number | of students at Harvard university is | considered at length in the annual r port of Prof. Clifford H. Moore, chair- man of the committee on instruction made public today. “Our present augmented numbers'” the report says “have made more ac- curate certain familiar difficulties of housing and instruction. xxx An in- vestigation made during the year showed that a large proportion of recitation and lecture rooms as well as laboratories was being employed | | to capacity and that rooms were often overcrowded. xxx “It is evident therefore that the time has come when the question or limitation of numbers must be con- sidered. Although it is the duty of Harvard university to give the best | | training possible to as many duly |qualified and willing students as it | {ean deal with effectively it will sadly | fail if it confuses mass production of graduates with real service, It will| }nct be easy to determine the exact! size of the student body that ¢an be | most successfully trained and som experimentation will do less lm' reeded but the main consideration must always be the educ al o:w.l A committee is now considering what | measures if any, shall be taken.” | 10 VISIT SOUTH ABERICA | ON 15,000 MILE CRUISE Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Johnston and | Cambridge, question of lim LIGHT CAKE of delicate tex- ture—rich ¢! late icing — just right—what more could you want? Bake it BESTwith DAVIS BAKING POWDER ASSOCIATED PRESS 10 HAVE SAME DIRECTORATE Five Dircctors Whose Terms Expire Have Been Nominated (o Suceeed Themselves, ’ Chicago, Jan. 24.—At a meeting of the nom'“aunug committee of the As- sociated Press here yesterday, the fol- lowing five directors whose terms ex- pire in 1924 were nominated as can- didates to suceeed themselves: | Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Johnston Victor F. Lawson, Chicago Daily |2nd daughter, Miss Agnes A. John Né ston of 376 West Main street, will W, leave New York Saturday on the RAHGW. |steamship “Vauban" for a tour of Frank P. the countries of South America. Dur- Journal, |ing their trip they expect to touch at 1. Lansing Ray, St. practically every country of South Democrat, America and will cover approximate- | Frederick I, Thompson, {1y 13,000 miles before returning to the ham Age-Herald, | United States early in April, It was voted wlso to nominate for| COmbining business with pleasure, directors the following: | Mr. Johnston, who is active in Cham- Ralph H. Booth, Saginaw, ‘bfir of Commerce work, will act as a | | representative of the Connecticut |Chamber of Commerce and will study ‘lho work of the International Cham- | |ter of Commerce in the southern | countries, especiaily in Brazil, where | |this work has progressed rapidly | within the past few years, Leaving New York th will touch lat Barbados, Windward Islands, Rio Janelro, Montevideo, Uruguay and Buenos Aires where they will spend |about two weoks making excursions | Miss Agnes A, Johnston Sail | Saturday | Cowles, Spokane Spokesman- MacLennan, Topeka State Louis Globe- Birming- Mich,, , Tele- ylor, Portsmouth, Ohio, Louis T. Golding, St. News and Press, Leonard K, Nicholson, leans, La., Times-Plcayune, As cundidates for director ceed V. 8. McClatehy, resigned, following were nominated: Joseph Knowland, Oakland, |to points of interest, | They will stop at Asuncion, Joseph, Mo, W Or- { to suc- the Para- |and ¥ land | ey, €al,, Tribune, | where they will travel inland Harry Chandler, Los Angeles, Cal,, | BUaY, Times, and view the famous waterfalls Frank H. Hitcheock presided that country which are sald to he chairman of the meeting today largest in the world, being twice Edward Flicker as secretary, |wide and considerably higher than The following committee members | Nlagara Falls. “At Brazil they will journey attended the meeting cave the ship and will Eastern Division: [through the mainland to Rio Janeiro two Jerome D, Bare ¢ A num, Syracuse, N Post-Standard; | Where they will spend about | Edward Flick | Bridgeport, Conn., j wesks : Telegram and Sunday Post. they will Central Division: Charles |to Trinidad and make their last stop meral, Stubenville, O at Barbados from where they will % sall for the United States landing In N Charles M. Greenway, Journal, ew York about the second week in April, Western Division: cock, Tueson, Ariz, as and Leaving Rio Janeiro go | D, Si. Herald-Star. Flint, Mich,, | Frank H Citizen Hitche of | to Instruet the the | as | Southern Division: H. O Chattanooga, Tenn,, Times; Cohen, Atlanta, Ga., Journal, WILL 0PPOSE Pmcflor | adier, Port of Salma Cruz Is b In Hands of the Rebels By The Arsociated Pross Vera Cruz, Jan the Dallas Nev Cr adio vin | peort o talina the revolus | by General | the gunboat The power of It was attacked mtest His Brena, aided by | Progreso. The capture gave t s Delegates. | rebels complete control of the Pacific coast from the state of Jalisco south- | ward. The forces which attacked | 24.—state | Salina Cruz have commenced a move. snyder in o |M°Nt against Santa Lucrecin and”have been reinforced between this town he would O i oppose Governor Pinchot as one of |#hd San Geronimo. forces will attack Santa the seven delegates-at-large to the re- publican national convention and |Important railway trunk “would appeal to all republicans to | Yet In the hands of an Obregon gar- defeat him at the polls.” His rea. |Ti80n, under the 00 | sons for the opposition were that the | ©ra! Gome governor “is not a Pennsyfinian in spirit.” That he “is not a republi- |can,” that “as governor of ihe com- monwealth he was cast into offic through a political storm,” and that in th vention, if elected, he “will , bring into that foram an intrigue and a bloe h as will refec only indig. nantly th egates ar make nsylvania the ridicule of its sister states Mr. Snyder ernots, Gov §)~ State Treasurer Snyder to C Election as One of Stat at-Large, Harrisburgh, Pa., Treasurer Charles statement today declared Jan. A an comman a Canadian Rail\\n,\:s Bond Issue for Dominion Firm Yor Canadian N 000 bond is cate, according to was influenced desire to aveid the rate tuatior which would chase of the group, coming otation of a lc last fal d conclusively ( its own financing. Rail 0 A Canadi yndi- New York bankers some ¢ e risk in excha over a pertod have attende cale tional 1c to on other d ared tha nchot nor at his the oniy ared” in riticism of retary Mel. no na- He aith. his serving under ng from within concluded his statement ration that to “let him r the sake of ‘peace’—a Pinchot peace—will not be aceepted, T believe, by the republicans f the state. 1 protest against his be- ng accepted as a delegate Aw x- ey iuence 1 con command to prey upon the repub- ans of a man who i not pledged to any candid we know wiil not support a date that the people of Per desire » Is and will goes 1, the knows ee & of the ' this country the the $150,000 it was said Is pur- & fan Dominion demonstrat. Wbility to do Pr aftiliations. “has b | tional Nn':m’ said the gove ful to eve anada’s rnor y unf nd to Taft he was ‘bo Mr. Snyder lec go as a nt this foisti Pennsy and Ionpos: only % hom is 1 continue the ¥ men and non-combatants re- principles ar « end dogma without them. These REPFORT RUSSIAN PLOT. London, Jan. 24.—A pateh from Conastantinop discovery of an extensive of Russian communists. Many are said to have been made e conspi Spiritnal Menife<tations An Amerd stronomer « disc Iving n aims to 11 aroend , additional N th. This vertising dodge | Fassing meo a part of a bootlegger. (London). res % Show 'Keep the Ch During these days many children are complaining of head. ache, feverishness, stomach troubles, and irregular bowels, 1 mothers only knew what MOTHER CRAY’S SWEET POWDERS for CHILDREN Will éo for children no family would ever be powders are 80 easy and pleasant to take and so ef- fective in their action thyt for over 30 years mothers have used them Don’t Suffer From Piles Sample Pack mid Pile Treatment Now Off Free to ve What It Wil Do for You. Pyramid Pile Treatment gives quick relief from jtching, bleeding or protrud- ing plies, acts as an antiseptic, quiets of the Famous i Pyramid Is ('enllnly Hna and 'nk' Such Wonders So Quickly. the nervous strain, stops pain, reduces inflammation, breaks up engorgements, puts you back on your feet, saves you easily and quickly from danger of infec- tion and operation. Send for free trial and prove how wonderfully effective they are. And you can get them in any drug atore at 60 cents & box. Try them free, first, FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 637 Pyramid Bldg., Marsha!l, Mich, Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper, Name ..ovvieresnrnsncssnrrnsssnnnes Street . City .. BOY SCOUT NEWS January meeting of the court of honor comimtiee the Boy Scouts was held at the Chamber of Commerce last evening for the pur- The of | pose of examining candidates for ad- ranks. The present Sullivan; vancement in the scout members of the were Cl\ulrunn Vice-( tary George and Dliss the school committee Rev L. I . Hand or department and Deputy Commissioner € Morgan were visi= tors at the meeting. Ernest Dyson, Arthur Barkman and Theodore Swan- son of Trooy the Lincoln school aneis Traver an arl Scott of 4 of the church were passed into the class scout rank. George and Walter Coldwell of Troop end Euclid Hartung, Harry Fancher, Wilmer Barnes and Wililam Baker of Troop 4 passed into the first class rank. The following merit badges were successfully passed: Henry Rockwell of Troop 2 at the South cliurch (ears pentry); Richard Porter of Troop 4 (music and signaiin Monroe Harwood Troop 2 (ploneering); tlarry Fancher of Troop 4 (swimming life saving): Theodore Stalk of Troop 4 (tfiremunship); Leon C. Brad- istant scoutmaster Troop 4 ng and firemanship) court of honor commiitee voted scout executive to ls- that hereafter cluss ranks map as Center second Curtis Troop o0 (signa The to scouts for t sue orders applicant present their xhibit The court « moets every I month at the at which s come, { honor committea Wednesday of the Chamber of Commerce ssions visitors are wels B TItussell Bros, == advt MOTHER! Clean Child's Bowels with “California Fig Syrup” st coffee, Hurry Mot Lilious, Pabics feverish, California Vig No other regila little uxative the and no drugs. Say druggist and t upon genue which cone s %0 o - and the mach ow without Contains ties or fornia™ ts griping nar thing void count ildren Well!