New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 7, 1924, Page 5

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NEY" BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AU [ =l i = ) mlmuln |!!:||I h lL 'l|‘ .!l'li)l‘llFl 'l ' L. AT IHE Culoss sthorwise tndicaied. (heatrionl sotioss and seviews 8 this suluma s wuitten by the press sgeacies 101 The reepertiie smuMmen! fompany. Aaasaad s ol i oL Al TN MONTAGUE LOVE AT CAPITOL. BORROWED HUSHANDS—LYCEUM Today an entire ehange of Nauum‘ Beaytitul Viorence Vidor, one of will be offered at the Capitel for the screend. most captivating little Mlance of starred in “Borrowed traction, the personal appearance of | which opened a three the famous movie star Montague days' engagement at the Lyceum Love. Mr, Love has turned from the [theater this afterncen, She is sup- screen for the present time to fulfill ported by & cast of gapable .c!on’ some vaudeville engagements and is and actresses, headed by Roekeliffe | offering a monelogue that is quite en- Vellowes, a popular leading man, tertaining. “The King of Wild Horses," soon A# &n added feature The Runaway is to come to the Lyeeum, but starts | Four is offered. This is one of the best ing Sunday night and econtinuing | quartettes in vaudeville and will make through next Wedn: reen & big hit while playing here. The version of one of the decade's most Three Romany Girls offer “Musio |widely read novels will be shown-= That Charms" a very entertaining |“The Man from Brodney's” e CODUIDGE TOACCEPT -~ patrons as the girls are very talented musiclans. ivans gnd Pear! present a comedy singing, t§!king and dancing novelty that conthins some original ideas in the line 6f umusement, Dave and Tressie are a colorad pair who are excellent dancers and sing- era and who offer an act that Is very good from heginning to end, The photoplay feature on this pro- gram presents Anna Q Nilsson, Mitehe!l Lewis and Iaymond Hatton in "Halt Dollar BilL™ To Renew Pledge in Memorial| Gontinental Hatl — Washington, Avug. 7, — .\lomorlll’ Continental Hall, which is to be the setting for the formal notification Aug. 14 of President Coolldge's nom- ination by hi§ party for the presi- (dency, has already gained its*notch In history. There the Arms conter- ence was held, and there, too, Wash- Ingtonians have seen and heard King Albert, Georges Clemenceau, and many other men of note, While 1ts auditorium seats but 2,- 000, radio will enable a countless mul- |titude to hear the notifcation pro- BRITISH‘TRADE SLOWED UP BY HIGH PORT DUES Port Charges In Fngland Declared FAigher Than In Countries On thé Continent Liverpoo!, Aug. 7.—Higher port charges In England than those on the continent are handicapping trade se- veraly, It was ceclared at a meeting | ceedings, of the Chamber of Commerce. One ceremony will have a peculiar and speaker sald that British goods were | pathetic significance, for his last pub- severely handicapped in overseas 1.ar- | lie appearance in Memorial Continen- Ikets by the d'ffcrence between e (tal Hall, on the occasion of his ad- treight rates at 1'rifish and continen- | dress to the business heads of the tal ports. government on June 30, was likewise F. Russeli 'toberte gecretary of the the last time he publicly appeared Liverpool Stecamship Owners' assoie- | with his son, Calvin, Jr., who died tion, satd thcre was a differenees of | shortly thereafter. about three shillinge a ton in port | The edifice is a fitting amphitheater and Jendling charges between Liver- | for the ceremony for the chief exeeu- pool and Hamburg, Antwerp, Amster- | tive. It faces the east, as Mr. Cool- aam und Rotterdam. In the continen- |idge will, on the steps of.the Capitol 121 perts® men worked longer hours next March 4, if the electorate en- at cheaper rates, | dorses him to succeed himself in the Unlesd workmen couid be brought | White House. Vermont marble, from to see that the cost 5° seivices ren- | the president's ndtive state, was used ercd and goods manufacocd must | in the construction of the entirs hall. be brought within reach of the pur- | The national society of the Daugh- chaser; trade was bounl 14 wave the 'ters of the American Revolution | country, he declare’. raised Mentorial Continental Hall as a tribute to the patriots who achieved American independence, There are held the congresses of the seciety, R 5000000000000 0 s srsss st e e Thursday, Aug, 1 " INNOTED BULDING For President Coolidge the ! T te 1:20 p m.='Twenty of Good Reading T:20 te ;15 p gram. Soprane, i accompanist §:06 p m.o="Bafety # | 9t 10:30 p, M~ gram Le800s VOICES IN THE AIR m meazse, Musical tenor Home KDKA (Westinghouse ~—Fast Pitteburgh.) 6 p. mo~Baschall scores; dinner concert. 6:50 p. m.~Childrep's period, 645 p. m.~News bulleting T p. mo~=Raseball scorus ‘Shrubs and Perennials Bloom in August.” T:18 p. m~Farm program T:140 p. m.—Btockman report primary live stoek markets & p. m~Concert by the Little Symphony orchesira 9156 p. m.—Arlingten time signa Weather forecast, Maseball scores, 15 p. m.~Conecert, —_—— | wnz | woo (Westinghouse—=Springfield.) 6 p. m~Leo Relsman Hote! Lenox/ Enaemble, 6:30 p, m.~~Bongs. 6:40 p. m.~Leo RMeisman and his Hotel Brunswick orchestra. | T p. m~Results of games played | by the Eastern, American and Na-. tional leagues, | 7:06 p. m.~Market reporis. 7110 p. mo~-l Wram (Willard Storage Battery (o .t 1and, Ohie.) Baseball scores 6 1o T:80 ner coneert L3 That of 6 p. m.=—=Dinner concert and baseball scores. §:30 p, m~—Mueical program Rosary ehoir KDKA venport, lowa,) p. m.~—8port news and | forecast, 9 p. m.~Orchestra program Baritone soloist WAAM R. Nelson Co.~Newark,) 7.80 p. m~James Vincent M | and his entertainers. | 8 p. m~Reviewing the | leases by the Alm industry 8:16 p. m,—Operatic selections, R:45 p. m.—Harry Knox and | entertainers. 10 p. m.~Catello's Radio !tainers. 7:30 p. m.~Bediime ‘story late 9 p. m.~Concert by baritone 10:86 p. m.~Arlington time nx-“ KYw (Westinghouse~Chicago,) 6 to 6:30 p, m.~Dinner concert: woo 6 to 6:10—~Joska DeBabary's or- | chestra, 6:10 to 6:20—Paul “C'ollegians. 6:20 to orchestra. Whiteman's lice reports. 10:55 p. m.~Time signals. 11:02 p. m.—~Weather forecast :30—~Joska DeBabary's| WHY YOU NEED ORGANIC IRON Practical Advice on How to Develop Great Energy M?Endurance | The food you eat contains earbon, Whenyour food is digested it is absorbed from the intestines into the biood. When the carbon in your food comes in contact with the oxygen carried by the iron in yourblood, the carbon and oxygen unite and by so doing they give off tremendous energy, thereby giving you great force, strength and endurance. Without iron your lood carries no ox yren and without oxyren there is nothing to unite with the carbon in your food, g0 that what you eat does you no vou do not get any strength from it— s like putting coal into a stove without a fire. You cannot get any heat unless the coal unites with the fire, The strongest weapon with which to pre- vent and overcome colds, pneumonia, kidney troubls, rheamatism, nervous prostration, in fact almost any disense or disease germs is plenty of good rich, pure blood, strength, ener- & and endurance and the greatest energy carrier in the body is organictiron, not metal- lie irnn which people u take, butorganic irom like the iron in spinach, lentilsand apples and like the jron contained in what is known . as organic Nuxated Iron, which may be had ; from almost any druggist. B W If you have heen taking metallic iron with- which owns the whole block, with ad- ministrative offices in the rear, rep- resenting an estimated value of $1,- 000,000, The hall and its furnish- 1 ings cost $700,000, Verdant trees guard the marble while hall and velvet lawns surround it. Across the roadway stretches the President’s Park, lying between the Washington monument and the White House. To the north of the hall stands the Red Cross building, and te ite ! south the Pan-American building. The gorner stone of the building was laid in 1904, Handsome mahog- any furniture was donated by states as time went on, and the building and grounds were beautified, until in April 1917, the project stood com- pleted. Sixteen immense drum eol- umns support the roof of the frant portico. Three pairs: of bronze doors span the entrance. States’ coats of arms add to the grace of the interior, jand flags representing the 48 ecom- ponent parts of the I'nion hang from | the comiee of the auditorium. Meta) | chairs, framed in mahogany and up- holstered in green leather, line -the | auditorium, with its three gallerias. | Cream-tinted walls, decorated with m',:db,l,.em,.;fih il:z;p{m’{lhatgxrnl'l‘iahl';’xn- ‘.‘:nrlandu of truit and leaves, will look a Iron will not help you, Nuxa b3 own on the Coolidge notification ey Tan ao ]ty | | ceremony. Ornamented -scrolt work adorns the ground-glass ceiling.” In two weeks time. It has been used and highly recommended by former United States Sen: the south gallery hangs a full-length | portrait of Martha ‘Washington. A tors, Members of Congress, Judges of U. (Courts, physiciansand prominent men so that large table, a reproduction of that en which the Declaration or Inde- pow millions of people are using it. Satisfac. | Fesults are puaranteed of the mannfac. | pendence was signed, is on the plat- form. tarers will refund {onr money. Sold by all | form From this setting, on Aug. - 14, drugeists in tablet only, America is to hear Mr. Coolidge ae- cept in his own right the leadership of his party and renew his pledge of NOW PLAYING public service, THURS. — FRIL — SAT, BORROWED HUSBANDS WITH ¥L.ORENCE VIDOR and ROCKLIFFE FELLOWES $300 SUIT Guiseppe Romano of Hartford, has entered an action for $300 against Agnes Ripple of this city. He is rep- resented by James A. Curry of Hart- ford. The plaintiff s named as a de- fendant in a recent action brought by Agnes Ripple recently, The actions are the result of an automobjle ae- cident, which occurred in Hartford last April CAPITOL TONIGHT — FRI. — SAT, KEITH VAUDEVILLE Featuring THE PERSONAL APPEAR- ANCE OF THE FAMOUS MOVIE STAR Montague Love In & Vaudeville Monologue Vaudeville’'s Best Quartet RUNAWAY FOUR SUN. — MON. — TUES.—WED, “THE MAN FROM BROD- NEY'S” -PALACE- HARTFORD ALL THIS WEEK THE POLI PLAYERS with MR. ARTHUR HOWARD and MISS WINTFRED ST. CLAIRE Direction of Mr. A, H. VAN BUREN Presenting MR. EDMUND ELTON (Guest Star) est Hon -0 easy now to k CHOOL dresses, party frocks, even every- S day rompers and playthings—you love to have them spick and span looking, clean and dainty when the children are under the friendly but critical eyes of neighbors. Today you do not have to pay the price you used to pay for cleanliness—today you can have a snowy wash and still keep your energy, your spirit, A new kind of laundry soap that millions of women are now using saves them the hardest work of wash day, the constant tubbing that was so harmful and tiring, INSO is not “just a new soap” —it is an entirely new kind of soap—creamy xpecillyo dothe fumilywah ially to do ily more quickly and easily than ever. It l::::lwlvel quickly and comp| in boiling water, and Jy penetrates every of the clothes with its o —— it ——c— THREE ROMANY GIRLS OTHER BIG ACTS Anna Q. Nilsson, Mitchell Lewis and Raymond Hatton, In ‘Half A Dollar Bill' in his new play “Faint Heart” wriltsy by Phil Danning Patrons uee reqaesred io make their Hesersations eurly as the sale of seats for this weck 1z very large. rich soapsuds. Use Rinso orsole Minutes planis alk | (Detroit Free Press—Detroit.) Holy | (Palmer School of Chirepractie=Da. Neather Palmer Bchool of Radio orcheatra Enter- 7:30 p. m.—Sports results and po- Pride in their fresh clean clothes Famous Manufacturers recommend Rinso for washing their products MAKERS OF Wamsutta Sheets Van Heusen Collars Boott Toweling Fruit of the Loom Fabrics GUST 7, 1024 Wk (Radie Corp. of Ameries pro ton, D, L) Washing ws 2l P m.=Childrens hour A p m~Talk on Matoring pro-y m. ~=Rong feeita i mo=Plane ecita P m.=To be announced m.=Danes program by Macias' L'Aiglon arohestra 9:85 p m =Time forecasts b p Pete! 6 1a Rogy 1008 in eve 983 signa and neather elul WMAL Radio Corp.= Mass.) Hilis Dartmouth, (Round Dinner musie TP mo==Mid-week ser T:80 p. m.—Maximilian com d-planist 743 p m.o—Jack Kimber tene . 8 p mo=Maximilian Mitnitzky 5110 p. m.o=Jdack Kimberly £:30 to 10 p. m.—WEA] ab group fpm fAnal Mitnitzky bari=| g4 ket ip 5D m m Country | s A1b p WAAC 8.4 p (Bhepard Btoces— Roston.) 6:30 p. m,—~WNAC Dinner dance § p. m~=Program to be announced The B50 p (American Radio and Research Corp, ‘General —Mefrord Hillside, Maas.) 7:30 p. m~Closing stock market | reports. Agriograms. Boston police | reports, | 746 p. his| No, 324 8 p. m.—Evening program: (1) | Talk, (2) Musicale (3) Weather | report and Waltham time | wen oore 7:40 p v 7:46 p. m.~—Code practice, lesson| § p, m (John Wanamaker = Philadelphia.) | (Federal Telephone and Telegraph | Ca.—Buffalo N, Y.) Vincent dance or- | 6:30 p. m.—Dinner music Lopez and Hotel Statler chestra, Now, just soaking in the suds of this new soap loosens all the dirt so that getting it out is easy—it simply floats off. The grimiest of play clothes and the meanest of cuff-edges need only a light rubbing be- tween your fingers with dry Rinso. . Then a thorough rinse carries away the loosened dirt and all the soap solution, too. No bits of soap left to stick to your garments. Nineteen leading washing ma: chine makers endorse Rinso: American Classic, Apex, Blue- bitd, Coffield, Gainaday, Getz, Haag, Horton, Johnson, Laun- Dry-Ette, Meadows, “1900” Cataract, One Minute, Poole, Ring Vac, Rotarex, Savage, Sunnysuds, Sunbeam, all say “Use Rinso!” Women have found that the qualities that make Rinso market report 1 » n Telep 1 pm Ga Philtharmoni are Raying phy's Minstre New Booka. Nat'l, Bank Blig—Room 310, Dissolves completely! War (Asolian Hall==Neas Gotham Hotel Concert ope York City) " P m hestra P mo=Financial Develops menta oo and Tolegraph T:d4 p m.=Gotnam Hotel Concert &%, rehestra ey Mid. S opoomo=Weekly French lesson, gt Naltate S0 p mo—=Estey organ recital 1h pomo=l', & army Night, " i0 p. mo=Waldarf-Astoris danee Country and his New York Clay.) musie Husiness WEA} Vineent Lopes T3 o » oo AV WM and Ciothier—Philadel phia.) 1g¢ Meyer Davis Bellevare concer: orchastra an¢ 6 pom 1 Hote Fratre haselall scores Hoy Heout Radie corps. m -~Vairmount Park Sym spom and produc S0 p ports Ny Hediime Timely WHAS aid Loutaville Times Ky storie Talks to Motor 1Courier Jou 4 m. —oncert orchestia What the by Comtort's 8 = Wild Waves Onw-hour concert of Internationas Four-minute Child Wy late important pews hutleting Oificial central nd« vrd time announced at 9 o'clock, 0o 9 p Four-minute Bunday sch m m.—Performance of Mur ) far WGy Electrie Co N.Y) Schenectady WJIAX - (Ur 1 Co,~Cleveland.) Hryan liros, Program of and Russian numbers m.~—RBaseball scores m.-=A Few Moments With S pm Hungarian —Radio drama, "Silas, the Organ recit Scientific Chiropractic Corrects The Impaived Transmission of Nerve Energy Which Is The Primary Cause of Disease, DR, FRED C. TORKELSON Chiropraetic Physician Telephone 2008 Hours 10-12, 2.5 Mon,, Wed., Fri, Lvenings, 7-8. “Yonr Future Depends on Your Health” eAlways use enough Rinso to get big lasting suds after the clothes are in eep them spotless! so wonderful in the laundry also make it a splendid household soap, “The magic-like way it eleans " says one; “wonderful for g floos” cys another, 5 7 that does not i my hards”, writes a third. A fourth says, “the most satic. ry thing for washing pots end pans. I wse it, too, on walls weodwork ad for general ¢lanine %% = " the makevs of Lus, to do the faruly wasi 23 wonderfully as Lux does all fine things. Already more than a million packages of Rinso are used every week! You have surely used Lux with ' asure— then try Rinso, too. With these twe soaps all your laundry and houschold cleaning problems are solved for good! Get a package—reqular size ot big new size—from your groc:: oday. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass, RINSO ; . boiling. washing maciiines

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