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W R N—_ [T{{]] TIE iATE I 'i‘l A uwnmmmfitmm-umu-um“ -mnwfiuw&mht&w'wn—u—lm. [k r"' m)d .I. M II |l!l| lll WONDERFUL BILY AT PALACE The Palace opened fits Sixth An- niversary Week program yesterday to capacity houses that were loud in their praise for the show which this theater is offering as a celebra- tion for its sixth birthday, There are seven all star Keith acts on the bill which comprise the greatest bill |10 entertain. of vaudeville that this theater has| . The Keith vaudeville bill has five | offered in many a day. It is hard | great acts featuring Al Garbelle and to pick & flaw with the entire shuw,‘"}:’]‘"”"‘]:“"'!‘“ L ApiSie s ol fotiel and the seven acts are all top notch- w:mm': Al ers in thelr respective lines. Hill | d ng 18 simply gorgeous and the cast contalng very and Quinnell_open the show with 8| clever people; The Norvelle Hor coméy varloty OffSHUP.EDM. 8 &) ugtten i vhinre fEudio,” dono In reat cracker-jack; Jim Gradyia & singing | ponemian style; Mack and Velmar miner, having been “found" for | ogone iy Writing Room Wrangle Yeudeville by &, Kelth: sooutidnitie 740 and Byron are a.fine. palr. of gosl mine districts. He has &1 eX-1comedians and thejr bright wit and DepHousl volce and wag anc0tdsd efk | natter {s the hit of the showi the| cores yesterday; Marlon Bunshine, | primrose Four aro callod 1,000 | formerly of vaudeville's greatest sis- | pounds of Harmony,”-and sing de- | ter act Tempest ‘and Sunshine, and | jigpypyy)y, On ¢ Thursday Buster lately a gtar fn musical comedy has | Keaton will be seen in the Dayid | returned to vaudeville with H(-nrY\mmro stago success “Seven | Marshall, popular song writer: as | Chances,” planist; Julla Curtls s the cleverest y | singing comedienne seen here in | S —— LYCEUM many a day and her numbers offered | in mimiery are real artistic; Flo and | NOW PLAYING ’l PR Frank Innis provide the comedy hit | A mustf JACKIE COOGAN AT CAPITOL In his latest Metro-Goldwyn pro- duction, “The Rag Man,” which is now atythe Capitol theater Jackie Coogan " has a story that is timely In its application, for it is & beauti- ful argument against race preju- dices—though of course its reason for existence is not to preach, but of the show with their remarkable | comedy act. This‘cduple are a sure laugh from start to finish and harl‘ the audience last evening in spasms | of laughter throughout their turn; the Fife Lazy Bar Blue Blowers offer the last word in jazz and prove real entertaining with their jazz band ' features; “Young Love!" offered by a piness be earned” |nest Thompson Seton, cast of meven clever artists offer a musical comedy revue that smacks| with smartness and talent and was very well liked by all. The photoplay POVGLAS M(RBANKS w The TH(EF of BAGBAD Haveyouevereasn a2 4--+- feature presents Tom Mix, not in his | usual cowboy role but in the tme\ rola of “Dick Turpin,” a tale of an | English bandit, This is the grcatcstI that this popular star has yet ap- peared in and it s really worth while | seeing. On Thursday Colleen Moore | will be ofered in “Sally” with seven | more all star Kelth acts. | —_— | THIEF OF BAGDAD—LYCEU" Owing to the delightful o ot Douglas Falrbanks in “Th of Bagdad,” showing this week nl\ the Lyceum,.a special matinee at 10 a. m, next Saturday has been set for children. Sunday's and Mon- day's audiences that saw titls great picture came away fully cognizant of the fact that it has in no way been overcstimated, either for scenic bgauty or individual acting. This is truly an impressive enter- tainment and magic is so astound- ingly demionstrated on the screen that one can hardly guess where the real ends and the make-belleve starts, Fairbanks was not content with a magic rope that could be climbed when apparently supported by nothing, so he also put in the Past Indian basket trick in’ which a boy disappears in a wicker ecrate after he is supposed to.be impaled with a dozen swords through it His picture boasts also a deflle of dread adventure in which are & fuming dragon and a glgantic bat. | Then there is a magic rose bush info which ‘a prancing steed tosses | the young thief and thus starts the | proof of a prophecy as to which will win the heart and hand of the | princess. - .ovs wna‘a rrincess?* Have you ever seen a White Horse with wings fly through the clouds? Have you ever seen the Magic Rope, live dragons and bats as bigas elcphunts7 Have you ever seen an “Invisible” cloak? PALACE | TODAY AND WED. 6TH ANNIVERSARY TAR KEITH ACTS “YOUNG LOVE” Cast of 7 People . HILL & QUINNELL - JIM GRADY MARION SUNSHINE Henry Mal";l!::ll at Piano JULIA CURTIS FLO & FRANK INNIS 5 LAZY BAR BLUE " BLOWERS-5 A Tale of an English Bandit TOM MIX IN ‘DICK TURPIN’ R P CAPITOL TODAY AND WEDNESDAY | | Al Garbelle & Co. OFFERS HIS GORGEOUS RE- VUE WITH THE 1 DANCING CARENOS jflé Norvelles Mack & Velmar Thurs. - Colleen In “SALLY” 7 — Keith Acts — 7 Moore Lane & Byron Primrose 4 BUST] R l\FlTO\' CHANCES" | | | Fox Trot Collegiate | Learn to Dance! PRIVATE LESSONS FOR YOUNG LADIES Male and Female Instructors Steinhaus Dancing Studio | Tel. 3042-4 United Bldg. "FUNNY? Yits a Scream! BUSTBR KEATON CAPITOL THEATER THURS, FRL, SAT. {| critical condition for several | ments, | bury, LIFE OF ADVENTURE IN FAR OFF LANDS at Lecture Here Equally at home in the jungle and e salon of a premier, Mrs.. Er- | who will speak at the South Congregational | church tomorrow evening undér the in Mrs. Seton to Tell of Wanderings LIBRARY GROWING auspices of the New Britain College | club, has had far more adventures | than falls to the lot of thé average man, let alone a woman. S8he has hunted a “rogue” or mad elephant, | was the first white woman to wit- ness the private marrlage ceremon- (les of Chinese royalty, watched a | (‘him‘!n revolution and had a bullet | pass through her clothing dand kill a coolle next to her, was head of a | motor corps of women which tnok\ food to the front during the World | War. TITor this last service, Mrs, Se- ton was thrice decorated by French government. Besides being a noted traveller and aventurer, she is a feminist of world repute. A leader in the suf- fragist movement here, she has also done much for the women of |other countrles. *A Woman Ten- | derfoot in Egypt” and “Chinese Lan- terns,” two of her books, tell of modern educated women of the Far and Near East and show how rapid- ly the Oriental women are progress- ing. Mrs. Seton has done much to {further the Camp Fire Girl move- | ment in this country. Her subject tomorrow evening will | be, “Interesting Experiences in In- dia.” Although often frightened at the | | predicaments in which she has | found herself,” Mrs. Seton says that she has always found them so inter- esting that she forgot her fear in her more academic interest in how things would turn-out. Thus she is able to give graphic and impartial accounts of her many adventures all over the world. | The public is Invited to hear her | speak here tomorrow evening at the {South church parlors. The meeting | will begin at 8 o'clock. OBERHALTLER GIRL " IES OF POISON the | ‘acid She Took Dose After Attack by ex-Klansman Indianapolis, April 14, — .\liss‘ | Madge Oberhaltzer, 28, alleged to have been the \lcum of an attack by D. C. Stephenson, former grand ‘dr:\gnn of the Ku Kilux Klan, died | today. | Miss Oberhaltzer had been in a days a8 the result of polson which she | told her parents she took at Ham- mond, Ind., after an attack. Stephenson was indicted on five charges, Stephenson is at liberty under 26,000 bond pending a rullng by Judge Collins to quash the indlct- which charge assault and battery with intent to kill, assault and battery with intent to rape malicious mayhem, kidnapping and | conspiring to commit a felony. Miss Oberhaltzer had been uncon- | scious for two weeks preceding her. death, Tn connection with Stephen- scn's indictment, Dr, John K. Kings- her physiclan, filed an affi- davit stating that she could not re- cover, She was well known in Jchrml eir- cles in Indiana, She had served as secretary treasurer of the Young CAPITOL THEATRE GREA] J | Starting Next Monday Three Days Only April 20, 21, 22 ‘STEAM OUT A COLD WITH THE VAPORS OF *with thelr eagor interest | lery at certain hours, which made | under the auspices of the People's |ago the | visited regularly by great numbers | son is that tight-laced corsets are | | no longer worn by the young women | lof today who are ! keeping their health.” RATTLE SNAKE OIL An oll Indian ®ay and the best vay to get rid of 1 cold or a tight, ¥heezy chest, sronchitis or asth- na, is to take a Jowl of steaming 20t water and pour a teaspoon- ‘ul of Tex Bailey's Rattle Snake OIll n it Put your 1ead over it and reathe the strong, sowerful, penetrat- ng vapors into the lungs. The reliet is instan- aneous; thest vrapors work quicker than any other known medi- cines. Be sure you get Tex Balley's; used for rheumatism, catarrh ralgia, headache, backache. tired feet and a hundred other uses, Di- rections on the package: 35c, at your | druggist.—Adv. it is neu- |Fight Corset Gone for an organization connected with the public school system, and also was formerly employed in the office of the state superintendent of public inatruction, Earl Klingk and Earl companlons of Stephenson, are un- der indictment with him on the charge of consplracy to commit a felony, INPOPULAR FAVOR Gentry, | (Continued from Second Fage) | lowing weeks people attended, many coming more than once. Mr, Jones came out often and everyone en- Joyed talking with the artist himself, ! Other artists came to thls one-man show, and’ colored the atmosphere ! in such things and thelr endless discussions. “'Beginnipg March ninth the Hart- | | ford Art school exhibited the work | ! of students—charcoal drawings from | | lite, olls, costume studles, and de- sign. The variety of the display drew many, and some of the students were in charge of the gal-| again for the falk of the studios. “These exhibitions are stimulating. | Next fall T hope it will be possible to start earlier in the season with | perhaps an exhibition by a group of artists, for it has been sald oulshle that we have an open minded com- | mittee in regard to exhibiting plc- tures. “Let us have tempting things to offer, so that our museum wifl not | become simply a dusty relic of the | past. “Respectfully submitted, “GRETA E. BROWN, “Librarian.” Good, Despite Benefits London, April 10.—The tight| ‘lvu)\ml potatoes, | ate oven, Breakfast—Stewed prunes, cereal, thin cream, fish hash, toasted corn bread, milk, coffee, Luncheon = Luncheon French endive with French ing, brown bread, rhubarh white cake, milk, tea. Dinner — Brolled lamb* chops, creamed aspinach banana and peanut salad, peach cabinet pudding, whole wheat bread, milk, coffee, A child under school age should beserved a small plece of the cake and a dish of plain stewed or canned frult for his luncheon lessert in place of the sherbet, His salad should consist merely of very finely veal, rhet, | minced endive without the dressing. With the exception of the banana and peanut salad, a chiild four years old may have all the rest of the dinner suggested, You will like' this “luncheon veal” concoction. It suggosts a possibility for “left-overs” of any kind of meat | worth trying out. Luncheon Veal One pound veal steak, 1-4 flour, a scant teaspoon salt onfon, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, boiling water, mashed potatoes. Trim veal carefully and cut Into cup 1 slice cups dress- | small pieces. Mix flour and ealt and | roll meat in mixture. Melt butter | and lard in a hot frying pan. Add slice of onlon and prepared meat. Brown meat quickly on both sides. Remove onion and add boiling wa- ter. Cover closely and cook one hour over a low fire or in a moder- Com- bine with the gravy. Remove meat from gravy | |and chop meat very finely. Arrange meat | and gravy mixture {n ramekins and | | cover with well-seasoned and well- | beaten hot mashed potatoes. Don't | spread the potatoes smoothly over | corset has disappeared and will never come back because science has declared against it, Professor | W. W. Dixon, of Cambridge univer- the meat, rather drop lightly from the spoon. Put into a hot oven to brown potatoes and reheat meat. Rhubarb Sherbet sity, asserted recently in a lecture League of Health. London Twenty years hospitals were | of girls and women suffering from anaemia, most of them workers in | factories and offices. | “The kind of anaemia which the doctors of those days had to con- | tend with has entirely disappeared,” averred the lecturer, “and the rea- | cook In just enough water interested 1in | | PARTY GOING TO EUROPE | Herbert Berndt of Greenwood | street, Mrs, Elizabeth Wenz and | son, Andrew of Belden street, and | Miss Emily Seipel of Curtis street, have booked passage for ‘s three | months' tour through Germany and Switzerland. They wlll sail next month. ALWAYS HUNGRY Growing children are almost always hungry and demand an abundance of vitamin- rich food. Scott’s Emulsion is vital-nourishment that helps children keep their strength and grow normally. Most children need Scott's. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J._24-10 'v Three pounds rhubarb, T lemon, cups sugar, 1-2 cup seedless ralsins, 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin, 1-4 cup cold water. 2 | ments ag to their part in the mob | TR ‘,»rrm-t to be able to seck ir Cut rhubarb into inch lengthe and | vent burning until soft. Add sugar to pre- cidentally found the « stronghold while on a trip to the site of the anclent Mandan villages at Forg Clark, ten miles farther. north, ® Mr, Welch plans to explore the ruins this summer. The fortificas tion embraces about six acres ad« joining the Missourl river. ELOPE T0 NEW YORK Josephine Carazza and Charles Duts ANCIENT FORT 1S UNGOVERED IN . D Believed to Antedate Lewis and Clark Expedition and stir until dissolved, Rub through ! a colander, Refurn to the fire and bring to the bofling polut. Add the rafsing which have been “plumping’ in bolling water to cover for half an hour, Use the water as well as the ralsins, Stir in latin which ) been softened in the cold water, Re- movd at once from the fire and stir until gelatin is dissolved. Let coo and turn fnto the mold an jce cream froezer, Freeze n Mandan, covery threy county, N. D, April 14.—Dis- of an ancient fortification, miles south of Price, which ante Lewis and Clark expedition was announced today by Major A. B. Weleh, Man dan postmaster, Indidn student and ton, Jr., Slip Quietly Out of Town ; In Oliver | And Are Married, dates the News of an elopment in which vo New Britain residents were prin- cipals came to light today through historian, he announcement of the marriage Major Welch L in New York city last Saturday of ford, curator the North Miss Joseplitne Carazza and Charles rical soclety and I, W. Jr, of Arch street, They urcheologlst, a week will reside at 251 Arch street, of and serve 9 with ‘White Cake of One-half cup butter, 2 dered eugar, 1 cup water, 3 cups ) Button, cups pow ugo ac- DO NOT FAIL TO SEE THE Heywood-Wakefield Carriages PR p— The Home Furnishing Co. R. R..ARCADE rvice, Inc.) BIRNBAUM’S || THE NEWEST CARRIAGES SULKIES and STROLLERS The season’s finest' Baby Car- riages, in & wide variety of styles and colors here for your selection. They are reasonably priced and will delight the heart of any mother. A quality seal on every wheel identifies them as genuine Heywood- Wakefield. Furniture Store 381-383 MAIN ST. HAS THE . NEW MODELS OF Heywood - Wakefield Baby Carriages flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 5 eggs (whites) cup of the floiir sifted Lefore meas- SEE OUR LINE uring. Add water and beat ‘mixture OF well. Mix and sift remaining flour and baking powder, Add to first H d-W. kefield €ywood- Vv akerie in the whites of the eggs beaten un- til 6tiff and dry on a platter with a C L wire whisk. Turn into a dripping arriages pan oiled and floured and bgke 30 This 1s a delicious moist cake, (Copyright, 1 516 MAIN ST. Arrest 17 Men for Tarboro, N. C., April 14—Seven- teen arrests have been made in con ction with the action of a mob | tly in taking Joseph A. Needle- the Martin county jall at Willlams- ton, . and performing a_crude operation on him, Needleman was been held on a charge of attacking nled in a statement issued at the | hospital where he was taken after the mob had maimed him. Offi last night said that 14 of the 17 Cream butter and sugar, Add 1-4 - mixture and beat until smooth. Iold minutes in a slow oven. w. f Max Zucker Attacking Salesman man, young tobacco salesman, from | a 17-year-old girl, which he de- persons arrested had signed state- | attack, and that they expected to serve seven or eight additional war- rants in the next few JTHESTIPR R A Heywood-Wakefield Carriages WE HAVE IT of all participants next month, READ HERALD C TFOR QUICK R 40-56 FORD ST., Hartford Permanent Waving Demonstration SEE OUR LINE OF Heywupd-Wakefield Baby Carriages WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON OIL AT 2 O’CLOCK We Will Demonstrate Hairwaving on the FEUGENE MACHINE WITH SKIN SACHET “THE BIG FURNITURE store VITH THELITTLE Prices 130 MM BT, NEW BRITARN, OOWM, YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND Lucille Beauty Shop Room 101 Booth's Block Tel, 638 The average family finds that it costs no more for the upkeep of a Series 80 than for a smaller car. And all the time there is the personal satis- faction of driving a Pierce-Arrow. Ask for a demonstration. Financing arrangements are offered by the Pierce- Arrow Finance Corporation, a banking institution ERGEARROW at Buffale plis tax HONEYMAN AUTO SALES CO. 139 ARCH ST. "Phone 2109 Baby's Health and Comfort INETY-NINE vyears of successful man- N ufacturing experience have been con- centrated in Heywood- Wakefield's latest Baby Carriage designs. As a result of this longexperience and the suggestions of three generations of mothers who have used Hey- wood-Wakefield Carriages, this new line represents the maximum in comfort, health, beauty and quality. Heywood-Wakefield Carriages, Strollers and Sulkies have A Quality Seal on Every Wheel. Itis an attrac- tive red and gold hub-cap placed there soyou may be sure of getting a genuine Heywood- Wakefield model —a fine Carriage at a re- markably low price. Ask any good furniture house to show you theattractivenew Heywood-Wakefield line of Baby Carriages, Strollers and and other Juvenile . Also our Reedand Fibre Furniture, Porch and Lawn Suites, Cane and Wood Chairs, Cocoa Brush Door Mats and Cocoa Floor Matting Look for A Quality Seal on Every Wheel A red hub-cap with gold letters,