New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 26, 1925, Page 11

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N O y Migeign pe Al utherwise ndicated, theatries) written by the press ugencies for L HANDICAP” AT CAPITOL o Dixle Handicap” Claire sor maked her wnee at the Metro-Goldwyn:Mayer udio sineé returning from Africa, vhere she had the leading role in *A Son of the Sahara,'" “The Dixte Handleap” 1s a screen vergion” of Gerald Reaumont's Red Book Magazine 'story which was adapted by Waldemar Young and lirceted by Reginald Barker, It is at the Capitol theater now, The Keith vaudeville show topped by a big offering “Shadow- land”, a fantastic speetacle danced by & company of beautifully formed eolor shadows. It is a novelty offer- ing with a big cast. Other acts in- clude Hal Neimamy one of the Four 'CAPITOL Tonight—Fri.—Sat. Keith Vaudeville “SHADOWLAND" A Dance Fantasy BERRICK & DEAN HAL NEIMAN BERT SLOAN s Smith & Strong . ‘me[lixie.Handicap" LLOYD HUGHES FRANK KEENAN T S;l'ndny “LISTEN LESTER” “THE LAST MOMENT” PALACE Tonight—Fri.—Sat. MILTON SILLS - DORIS KENYON | HANT MY AN KEITH VYAUDEVILLE Featuring BINGHAM & MYERS " BILLY STENARD " HARPINS & McCLAY Sunday THOMAS MEIGHAN “Coming Through” LYCEUM NOW SHOWING TWO BIG FEATURES | WINE OF YOUTH + A KING VIDOR PRODUCTION —And— BABY PEGGY “The Fanily Secret” START NEXT & “LAST LAUGH” | A MASTERPIECE DIRECT FROM NEW YORK PREMIERE SHOWI LADIES' MATINI This Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady To 'Best Scats. S lle'fiLnll “Dragnptad 7 S\ T SR first IrINI('ll'-l ™ ] ) [ - 1 \,:‘_’” nuticer and reviews W thir dolumr an the respec'’ o amusement company Horsemen; Berrick and Dean in their mirth provoking skit “Elop- g Bert Sloan, the hazardous wire stepper; and Smith and Strong, | “Goldan Voloes Krom West,” On Bunday night two features will be offered, one presenting the pic. turizaflon of the famous musical comiedy “Listen Lester,” ahd the other Henry Hull and Doris Ken- yon in “The Last Moment,” ' the Golden BABY PEGGY AT LYCEUM Although Baby Peggy, the child soreen star, is appearing at the Ly- | coum theater in “The Family Secret” ~this is by no mefns the only big attraction there, for there is an- other feature production, “Wine of Youth,” the first * installment of Galloping Hoofs,” starring Johnnie Walker, and a selected comedy and the latest news reel releases. In “The JFamily Secret,” Baby Peggy has a part in a real drama of domestic trials. She has the part of the daughter of a heart broken mother. Befriended when lost, the child later recognizes in a burglar the man who saved her. At the same time, the burglar is shot and this brings about one of the picture's most startling climaxes, MILTON SILLS AT PALACE Milton Sills, one of the most ver- isatile of . screen artists, presents |another side of many-faceted dra- matic brilliance in his latest First National photodrama, “I Want My Man,” which opened today at the Palace theater. “ The Keith vandeville will of- fer four high class attractions head- ed by the Seven Vanity Girls in a song and dance revue that is clev- erly done. Other acts offer Billy Stenard in a_zylophone specialty; Harkins and McClay variety artists; and Bingham and Myers, a very ca. pable comedy team. Beginning Sunday for four days Thomas Meighan will be the attrac- tion in “Coming Through” with Lila Lee. INCENDIARY FIRES IN BINGHAMTON SUSPECTED — One TFireman K’illod, Eight Others in Hospital in Latest Outbreak Binghamton, N. Y., March 26.— Fire department and police officials of this city today were conducting an Investigation into the cause of a seéries of fires in this city recently which culminated last night in a blaze that coet the life of one fire- man and sent eight others to a hos- pital, | Several investigators have express- i ed the belief that the fires were all | of incendiary origin. | Fireman Brainard was killeq last | night by a falling timber while fight- ing a fir€ in a four-story brick bus- iness and apartment biock in Wash- | ington street. The property damage | was $70,000. The eight injured | firemen are expected to recover. Earlier in the day a blaze of myl-‘ terious origin was discovered in a bin of the Lowell school of business but it was extinguished before much damage was done. Another | fire started mysterlously in an of- fice and apartment building in State | street late last night but was put| out without much difficulty. Whitel';rne Honey . lar Prepared by (ISH. ENGAGEMENT RECITED IN COURT 0f Movie Actress w York, Maroh 26.~Testimony intended to establish whether there was & romance and an engiagement between Lilllan Gish, motion pleture actress, and Charles H. Duell, presi. dent of the company for which she formerly worked, has assumed im- portance in the trial of Duell's suit fn the federal court here to compel her to make pictures only for his company. Statements made on bhehalf of Duell, at the time he started the suit, referred to an engagement, which Miss Gish denied. George W. Newgass, who was at- torney for Miss Gish in 1923, when she made a will naming Duell as executor, was questioned regarding {the supposed engagement at yester. day's session by Max Steuer, Miss Gisht's chief counsel, Newgass said he understood at the Confronted with evidence tending to show that he had advised Miss Gish to waive $60,000 in percentages on one of her pietures and that he per. mitted the aetress to allow Duell, as trustee, to draw her salary, he said: “I thought that was all right be- cause of the engagement hetween jthem. It was all over town,” When pressed for details, Newgass sald that Duejl had told him of the engagerfient while they were playing gOIE last August, ““Then he never revealed this great {joy to you until after there was no éngagement,” Steuer commented. Miss Gish shoek with laughter. The actress, who nibbled a raw carrot throughout Tuesday, yester- day drew sketches with a pencil— | occasionally writing a note to her [lawyer. She explained Tuesday that (nervousness and as a stimulant to her complexion which observers say has lost some of its youthful bloom. BOOTLEGEING IN HUMAN BRINGS OER FRONTIER Armenian Immigrants Being Smug- gled Into This Country From Canada Ottawa, March 26.—Existence of a great system of bootlegging in humanity, whereby Armenian im- migrants were smyggled or brought into the United States and Canada on passports illegally obtained, has been charged by Georga H. Alex- ander, an Armenian, on trial here for conspiring to ebtain a passport under .false pretenses. Letters produced by - Alexander, who is acting as his own counsel, implicated officers of the Canadian department of immigration. Evid- ence produced at the trial indicates that the systeéfn had ramifications in New York city. ‘When Alexander was arrested last month at Galt, Ont., the Reyal believed they had uncovered a cen- spiracy in which aliens were smug- gled through the use of counterfeit passports and immigration permits. BANK DIRECTORS TO FIGHT Failed Putnam Bank Officials Deny Liability of Bad Loans Putnam, Conn., March 26.—Direc- tors of the closed First National Lawyers Have Tilt Over Plans time that the couple were engaged. | |#he ate raw carrots as a sedative for | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1925. LOPEZ FORBIDDEN YOUR BAKING ) cone RIGHT DAVIS BAKING POWDER T0 GET BROMINE FRO SEA WATER (Steamer to Sail in Search for Chemical B Ot | | New York, March 26.—The steam- .ship, Ethyl, formerly the Lake Har- |minia of the United States Shipping |Board, will sail April 13 from Wil- mington, Del., on what is described :as “probably the strangest voyage ever undertaken by a vessel of com- meree,"—to extract bromine from the ocean. A world shortage of bromine, which “threatens to hit both indus- try and science,” caused the Ethyl to be fitted out as a factory for re- |covering bromine from the seawater, it was'announced by the American Chemical society. The bromine.seek- ing vessel will call at no port, but will roam the ocean and extract frem its waters her cargo of bromine, called essential to medicine, to mo- tion plctures, to photography and to {the Ethyl fluid of motor fuel, The rapid devolopment of ethyl gasoline |in"automobile operation is given as the cause of the shortage. . Chemical experts who are mem- bers of the American Chemical so- ciety estimate that each 1,700 gallons of seawater contains one pound of bromine. A. M. Maxwell, vice presi- dent of the Ethyl Gasoline Corpor- ation, owners of the steamship Ethyl plant, said in entirely new process of bromine extraction would be empley- ed. This process, Mr. Maxwell re- lieves, will enable the Ethyl to ob- tain 100,000 pounds of bromine each month, Sucecss of the veénture, he said may mean the equipping of a fleet of bromine ships and the crea- tion of floating chemical industries for the recovery from the seas af | rich mankind.” . | “The voyage,” he said, “is an ex- periment unique both in chemical { manutactura and commerelal naviga- ‘tlon. The success of this venture may give an entirely new aspect to {the manufacture of bromine, which | heretofore has been laboriously re- |covered trom mineral aprings and from the potash deposits of Ger- Mr. Maxwell said that the steam- ship was purchased at a price “com- parable to or even below that at| | which land on the seashore could lh" purchased for the plant it car-| (ries.” i | BEER EW ONE | | Wallace Béery is said to have the | | finest role of hig screen career in the | {mew Paramount piecture, “The Devil's |Cargo,” a Victor Fleming preduction | atrocittes tn the arens under dispute in the recent arbitration, Peruvian Envoy Denies DISCOVERS COMET . : | the prov-| [ondon, Mareh The Morning Any Chilean Atrocities incos o Tucus, Arica and Tarath | oy rojors that Frot. _Bichard Santiago; Chile, Maroh 16, — The | F7e0 Mh¢ Repltra 4 Schorr, director of the Hamburg Chilean torcign office delivered to | “other valuable constituents to en- {many.” | Canadian mounted police said they | bank, who have baen told by coun- |ypich’ will be the feature Menday, | sel for the receiver that they are Tyegday and Wednesday at ths Cap- hled liable for bad loans to the ex- iy, Hq is featured in the cast tent of 370,000, have engaged John |ajong with Pauline Starke, William | F. Carpenter as attorney and intend | Collier, Jr., and Claire Adams. Ray. to fight the case. {mend Hatton, Dale Fuller and other 10 BROADCAST Alboe Preveats His Giving Les- sons Over Radio New York, March 26.~Vincent Lopez, orchestra leader, was re- strained at the eleventh hour last nights from broadeasting in person the firat of a serles of music lessons over the alr from WOR radio sta- tion. E. F. Albee, head of the Keith Vaudeville Circult, it was, an- nounced, had forbidden Mr. Lopez to broadeast over the radio during the period of his contract with that organization. Mr. Albee,/in an interview with the station officials, who heped for a concession, further announced that under no ctrcumstances would he permit any artist or employee of the Kelth organization to broadcast during the term of his or her con- tract, Mr, Lopez last night faced the first barrier in his long experience with broadeasting. Often, while announcing the selection to be played by his orchestra, he has called attention to the vaudeville theatsr 'In which the orchestra would appear the following week. Rather than disappoint an audi- ence, estimated at 1,500,000 persons, George Beal, Mr. Lopez’ studio man- ager, broadcast the first lessons. authorities of having committe The very last ingredients is THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULTS ‘A Godsend to the Bilious! At Fifteen She Saw a Life of Suffering Before Her~At Twenty-five She Has Enjoyed Ten Years of Good Heal 1 take um you and um’:l it was to me when | began taking Beecham's Pills, | am a woman twenty-five years of age and [ had been a comstant sufferer from bilious attacks followed by severe keadaches, About ten years ago, | read am jtem in the paper concem- ing Beecham's Pills. "1 gave them a trial and they cer- tai:;;/ proved to l‘az :/ondeflzl,w-l haveneverbeen vitheut themeinee, "I hape all persons whe suffer in this manner will not hesitate to try them. 1 shall continue their use v cen always.” Mre. EDNA DEAN C Provideoss, R. L » Taks ‘s Pills for ilimuness, eonsi siom,vick iAoy e Bl DT Y teanag ™ or Bette Heatn Lol Beecham’s Pitis The New | third the usual time! , Let Your 5 senses 4 Judge these 4 big things % Charges of gross nagligence in the issue of loans were made, and it was 3aid that the legal limit for such loans was excceded in many cases, The Wikasms & Carleton o, Hartford Conn. and for sak ot af grocery and general steves Seeley’s Entertainers Ronan Fountain Orchestra C. Smith, Vera Setley, Anna Howarth; Rialto Quartet and Numerous Others, Jimmie Nesmith at the Piano, For Engagements, Terms, etc., w. Apply | H. C. SEELEY, 24 Washingtoh St. Assisted by Miss and Other Well Under the Auspices of EVERYMAN’S BIBLE CLASS TRINITY M. E. CHURCH Tomorrow Evening at o'clock Tickets 30 cents — CON ? ERT — ¢ Wennerberg Male Chorus Phone 515-2 Elsa Nordstrom Known Soloists recommend it. gestible, more palatable The male stimulates the milk contént incr ishment for the baby. Form the habit of dri Milk everyday as long Sold by all druggists glass packages—and in with resultant losses. / aboon to nursing mothers BORDEN'S, the Improved Malted Milk, is a perfect food for nursing mothers. Doctors Mothers find in Borden’s Malted Milk a food tonicthatis highly nutritious, yet easily digested by the most delicate stomach. Delicious, too— with note of the excessive sweetness found in other malted milks. More nourishing, more di- flow of mother'smilk. This benefits the mother and insures an abuadant supply of good nour- ittoday. Your druggist sells it. DBorden's THE IMPROVED MALTED MILK_ -in the square package |big names appear in support, | “The Devil's Cargo” is an adapta- ition by A. P. Yeunger of the story, |*““The River Boat,” by Charlées A ittaker, than any other brand. the milk glands, while eases and enriches the nking Borden’s Malted as you nurse your baby. in 7 and 15 oz. square 5 Ib. tins. Start taking rushed to your grocer your grocer. Fresh from our ovens. —serve it, freshness and flavor for days. Six expert bakers combined to make White Rose. Try it today. Telephone your grocer now for a loaf. © Massackwetts Baking Co., 1025 VERY day firm delicious loaves of White Rose are rushed to Then to your table. No more than a few hours after it is baked you slice it Fine grained, deljcately flavored, satisfying bread. So rich it keeps its The forelgn minister stated that [university observatory at Bergedorf the press today coplea of a cable!aper an Investigation of the charges [on Monday discovered a comet of message rom the Peruvian Deputy | he wag in a position to deny em-|the eleventh magnitude in the neighs Mcl.tan who accuses the Chitean|phatically the Peruvian wsecusa- borhood of the constellations Lee d | sions, and Virgo. | — JUDGE —~MADAM: for long life atter Stands up - that really [it's the kitchen-tested pancake flour!} pancake you make just as perfect as the first one off your griddle! For your batter—please note-—stands up for 45 minules. Because Gold Medal Pancake Flour is kilchen-tested. And the proportion of exact. Perfect pancakes every time—in a = o Crochr Forpure,downright goodness . Have you ever tasted more delicious pene cakes? They are digestible. That comes from purity and ric . For long-life batter . . . The last person served just as good pn:c:kln as the first. Your g:ter stands up for 45 minudes. That comes from ex- mixe? ingredients. For speed and ease in making . . Pancakes made in a third the usual time!’ All ingredients ready-mixed. Simply add water. For day-in day-out uniformity , . . Today or next week—the same rich crisp, golden-brown pancakes. Gold Medal Pan- cake Flpur pever varies. Itis kifchen-fested. Other Kitehen-tested Gold Medal Foeds: Gold Mcdal Cake Flour Gold Medal W heat Cereal Gold Medal Purified Bran - GOLD MEDAL PANCAKE FLO Created by the millers of GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

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