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, CHANGES INTRAING " .. A, New orrcis_GTENNA COLLETT IS Za, - Qy It n‘.{:9 T an“l!!fi Jhflfl !|in..l.!.!u !.!...III\“ o ‘:.‘_' e Unless_ otherwise Indicated, theatriea) notices and reviews W this colump are written by the press agencies for the respect'te amusement company. CADET ORCHESTRA AT PALACE The feature Keith vaudewille at- traction at the Palace today and for he balance of the weck s Jack Anton's Cadet orchestra, an excel- lent aggregation of 10 clever musi- | clans, Other acts are Vee and Tully in a_good novelty offering; Kelly and Stone, “Ripples on th Hea of Song,” and Leonard and. St John,/two clevor girls who imper- | sonate Wesley Barry and Coogan. The photoplay bill will present double features offering Charlie Chaplin and Marie Dressler in “Til- lle's Punctured Romance,” six reels of screams with Chaplin at his very Jackie best. The other picture will of(l’ri the Thomas H. Ince speclal “En-| tleement” with Mary Astor and Ian | Keith in the leading roles. George Bunny, a former local resident has | a role in this picture, “HEAD WINDS” AT LAI‘ TOL “Head ~ Winds,” the feature co-starring House Peters with Patsy Ruth Miller, “which opened at the Capltol theater to- day, 18 a thrilling story of the sea, | its people and its romance, thanks to the able hand of Director Her- bert Blache. The keynote of “Head Winds" is novelty, for it deals with an un- Usual situation in an vnusual way, Yor instance, in the story Hous Peters is cast in the role of a mil- | lionaire sportsman who in order to win the love und respect of the girl | he loves finds it necessary to kid- nap her and spirit her away to sea. The Keith vaudeville is offering five very fine acts featuring Mar- rone and I'Acosta in “A Dance Sen- sation” with Senorita Carlita and Mile. Galla, with Bedford Holimes at the piano. Jenniep Bros. offer a LYCEUM| NOW PLAYING DOUBLE FEATURE BILL HIS FORGOTTEN WIFE Starring MADGE BELLAMY | HARRY CAREY ~In— T “BEYOND THE BORDER” LADIES' MATINEE This Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady to The Best Seats, CAPITOL TODAY—FRL— PATSY RUTHMTLLER ok cash Keith Vaudevnlle N'arrone & L Acosta in A Dance Sensation with Senorita Cariitc Mile. Gallo Bedford Holmes JACK STROUSE “JENNIER BRO " Keith Favorites Holmes & Le Vere in a gcomedy skit “THEMDEL\ ES” Harmon & Sande Two exceptional voices in “WE A\'l) us” LO\1 INUOUS SHOWS Begmnmg .\undav i “TAKA-CHANCE WEEK” e ~—————— | _____;‘L_'——"———’—_.___'__—__==J Universal | trapeze novelty, Jack Strouse Is a monologist and offers "Over the Telephone.”” Blg time. favorites are |Holmes and LeVere, and thelr | comedy skit “Themsely Har- mon and Sands are, Kelth = head- liners. The shows are continuous liandly MRy “QUO VADIS" COMIN \We of the present day may find | church-going and long sermons a !bit irksome at times. However, new inspiration for worship can readily be found In “Quo Vadis, the First National gpectacle coming at the Palace theater beginning Sunday. . 7 In this new film version of the Slenkiewicz novel, scenes of the early Christlans being | the lions in the Arena by the tyrant | Nero, to hide his own crimes, are | vividly re-enacted. TWO FEATURES—LYCEUM Laughter is akin to tears—in mo- tion pictures as well as in real life. That's why the sparkling humor of |the tense, human drama of “His orgotten Wife" which 1s one of the | Lyceum features are so effective in |combination. The cast presenting this story consists of Madge Ballamy, Warner Baxter, Maude Wayne and others. The companion feature is Harry Carey in “Beyond the Border” sup- ported by Mildred Richardson. Willlam Scott and Tom Santschi. The action of this story takes place, as the title implies, be- yond the border where anything might happen. Carey reveals an | entirely new side to his screen per- sonality for he has the role of | western sh by a crook. | The latest release, episode | “Galloping Hoofs, bill. | Starting Sunday and |for four days of next week is the | stirring ames Oliver Curwood story "Ihrm-‘ son of K MEET TO DISD Washington, Ay The na- tlonal suff ssociation, orgar | before the Civil war to obtain the vote for women, called a meeting here today to disband. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt and Miss Alice Stone Blackwell of Boston, long leaders in | the association, were among the principal speakers on the program. PALACE Beginning Sunday Night #Cast of 20,000 Presented at Regular Prices and with " KEITH VAUDEVILLE _ PALACE TODAY—FRL.—SAT. Keith Vaudeville Featuring Jack Lintor CADET ORCHESTRA 10—Musicians—10 "KELLY & STONE VEE & TULLY _LEON ARD & ST. JOH\'* DOUBLE FEATURES | CHARLIE CHAPLIN oL Tillie’s Punctured Romance 6 Reels of Screams “ENTICEMENT” George Bunny of New Britain hurled to | Harris, Jack | a fift, defeated for office |PIACC8 a8 well as continuing | : NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY; APRIL 23, 1925. INEFFEGT SUNDAY Two Traing Discontinned Under Daylight Saving Schedule Changes in train schedule will go into effect at 2:01 o'clock Sunday morning wjth the advent of daylight saving time, Although the majority WILL BE INSTALLED Google To Take Post ol President—Banquet to Be . Held May 8 The local Y. M, H. A. will begin its second year with the installation of the newly elected officers at a meeting to be held tonight at its clubrooms, These are Samuel Google, president; Harold Lipman, vice-pre- Samauel of shifts are mere ten or fifteen min- | ute alterations in time, one train, the | last train out of here at night for Berlin has been discontinued, while | |the 6:656 commuters’ train from Ber- illn to Middletown has 0 been | |dropped, making it necessary for passengers to leave this city earlier in order to catch the train ahead, Following is a list of changes directly affecting New Britain, all| figures being in standard time. Al- |though this makes It appear that trains have heen changed by approx- imately an hour, it must be remem- |bered that this 1s made up by the fact that daylight saving time is one hour ahead of standard. On the Hartford-Bristol line, west- \ bound, the 9:19 in the morning has |been set back ten minutes and will | leave here at 8:29. The 10: hi met with similiar treatment and will | ‘pass through New Britain at 9:35. | The 12:31 has gone back one minute | to 11:32, The 8:236 from Hartford to | Waterbury has heen dropped, but its place will be taken by a new train coming from Boston and leaving here at 2:24, 12 minutes earlier than the former one. The 8:19 on Sunday morning has heen pusbed ahead .10 minutes to 7: Eastbound trains have shifted to a less degree, The 5:10 In the after- noon will leave at 5, five minutes llater, and the 9:45 has gone back four minutes to 8:49. The 11:57 on Sunday morning has been moved up a minute to 10:5 A new train fmm this city to Ber- Iin will be‘run at 7:30 o'clock in the | morning to connect with Middletown |and Hartford. This allows tha old | 8:33, formerly linking up with these | set back 24 minutes to 7 and con- | t only with the 8:06 for New | o0 [York. The 8:45 steps up ten minutes | also 1s on this| to T:36 and the 9:30 slides back ‘vl.rar' to 8:33. The 5:50 out of Berlin for Middle- |town will be discontinued, so that the 5 from here to Berlin will be seless for Middletown-bound travel- ors, who will now have to leave this | city at 4:04 to catch the 4:20 for| Middletown or at 5:15 to connect| 1 with the 5:88. The last train at night for Berlin now leaves at 11 | this will be taken off Monday and |there will be no trains after 8:33 | | o'clock. 1900 Novices to Be ‘ Initiated at Equator Aboard H. H. 8. Repulse, April 23. | —The Repulse, hearing the Prince of Wales on his South American and South African cruise, was halted last | w York, to be Byitish Motorcycle GOES OVER LINKS (Takes T4 on Course British Woman Did in 68 By The Assoctated Press London, April 23,—Glenna Collett, former American woman golf cham- | plon, took a 74 for the short Rane- | lagh course In her first competitive | round in England this forenogn. The course was done yesterday by an English woman, Miss J. Winn, in 68, cqualling the woman's record for the layout The' event was_ the | medal play toyrnament, started yes- terday, largely a soclety function, but | one in which most of the prominent British women golfers were entered Playing with Miss O rman, of Providence, as partner, Miss Collett's card was: 54363444 ayed on an empty stomach, having been tempted by a | rainy London morning to rise so late there was no time left for breakfast before the starting hour, Except for her putting, which w she was fairly steady. She took three putts on seven of the greens, but was down with only one long one on two others, xcept at three tees her driving | was ae fine as one ever sees in wom- sldent; Al Copelard, secretary; Max Horenstein ,treasurer. The new president is a well known | resident of this city. He is a gradu- ate of the New Britain High School, the Bentley School of Accounting | and Finance and at present is a| student at New York University. An announcement will be made to- | night concerning the banquet which | will be glven to the retiring officers | at the Burritt Hotel on May 8. An| effort has been made to have \'KSI§~ |tant T. 8. District Attorney Georfln H. Cohen and several other promi- | nent men attend. Industry Is Gaining TLondon. April 23.—The Daily Ex-| press, under triumphant headlines, | proclaims that the British motor- cycle industry has beaten the Ameri- can and now leads the world. The United States, which in 1918 had | | complete control of this branch of | the motor industry, shas gone back | in the race, the paper says, giving | place to Great Britain, which during | {he present year will produce 140,- 000 motorcycles as compared with ‘Am(‘rim\‘s 48,000 last year. Lemon Removes en’s tournaments in England. At the 240-yard fourth, her tee shot Janded on the green, and she was only 40 vards away from the pin on her drive to the 195-yard second. It was a clammy morning, Miss Collett, who had not recovered Y Lines, Wrinkles | SqueeZe th night beneath an almost starless sky | to reccive Neptune's protest against | crossing the equator. Neptune's part was taken by a lieutenant-command- er, attired in robes reminiscent of c iy druggist will those worn by the African chieftains supply for a few | received by the prince during his sents, shake well | stop-off in Nigeria, and he was ac- ind you have the companied by a green-clad “Daugh- /-\ very ‘mildest anti- | ter of the Sea” who is being present- wrinkle lotion to | | ed to the prince today. ne hun- | tighten relaxed skin, erase fine .mns | dred novices (those who have never | and, eradicate crows-feet. crossed the equator hefore) are to} \l’l'l‘.l"" this sweetly fml:l'll“l' e recelved into Neptune's realm. lemon lotion into the skin at night. | e By morning most-of the tell-tale | UKRAINIAN DANCE DUET wrinkles, tired lines and crows-feet | nian dance duet in costume are smoothed out, giving a more | Wwill be another feature of the Folk | youthful contour to cheeks, chin, | | Song concert to be given this eve- throat. It leaves the skin velvety | ning at the Eliha Burritt School at!soft, clear and fresh. | |8 o'clock. Miss Mildred Uhryn and | TBeauty experts use this astringent | Miss Sylvia Uhryn of New Britain |lotion for enlarged pores, also to {will give the dance during one of hieach and whiten sallow, tanned [the intermissions of Miss Cook's | skin. | Iprogram. A Russian instrumental | Mix this harmless lotion yourself duet' by New Britain artist will be |since it acts best immediately after | |another pleasant surprise, Miss Cook | prepared. | will sing in Ukrainian, Russian, Pol- |1sh and Czéchoslovakian, of two lemons in a jottle containing [ CARDINAL 0'CO! L RETURNS New York, April ~—The steam- ship Lapland, on which Cardinal |O'Connell of Boston {s returning from Europe, is expected to dock about 5 p. m., today. The ship was 87 miles east of Ambrose channel | lightship at 8 a. m. CROSSWORD DANCE Newington Grange Peerless Orchestra FRIDAY NIGHT CAPITOL THEATRE’S “TAKA— ? CHANCE ? ° WEEK” Every feature of our program will be a surprise— the feature picture {s—a secret. THE KEITH VAUDEVILLE ACTS ARE A MYSTERY You know what the Capitol has done in the past— and we're asking you to “Taka-chance” on us— YOU CAN'T LOSE BEGINS SUNDAY, APRIL 26TH _ &3 (hree ounces of Or- | »hard White, which | | invitation ¢ Geeman Candidates To Let rather loose, | ashor | from her.voyage from New York only Monday, showed she had not | yet adjusted hersolf wholly to the | English clinate After luncheon, Miss Collett went out on the course and watched Miss ‘Ju\(fl Wethe the Hritish woman champion, play the final holes of her round, Miss Wethered did a 71. {Rosa Ponselle lll | Replaced by Easton Atlanta, Ga., April Rosa Pon selle, who was to liuve sung Rachel In La Juive here last night, was un- able to appear and Florence Easton eplaced her, Miss Ponsclle, suffer- ing from an attack of tonsilitis, has been confined to her hotel® since Monday when she was to have ap- peared in “La Gioconda,” opening a serles of performances by tio Met- ropolitan Opera company in Atlanta ELECTION SPEECHLS Whole Know What They're Saying Berlin, April 23.—To ecnable not only all Germany but also the out- side world to hear the radlo cam- palgn speeches of the two principal candidates, Field Marshal Von Hin- |denburg and Dr.- Wilhelm Marx, which will be delivered tomorrow, the ministry of posts has arranged | through govern- to broadcast the addresses the Koenigs Wusterhausen ment station on a wave 1,480 metres with a sending appara- tus of five kilowatt capacity. They intend to speak 15 minutes cach, Hindenburg In his own home | at Hanover, starting at 8 p. m., Ber- lin time, or 2 p. m., New York time and Dr. Marx at 9:30 p. m,, or 3:30 p. m., New York, from Nuremburg, Whgther the candidates can be | nheard in Amerlca depends upon at- | and mospheric conditions, in the opinion | |of the postal-authoritics, leadin of washmg mac say “USE RINSQ” length of | New Gotham Is in Depths of Degreda- ton and Filth, New York, April 28.—New York | who are is pletured as the modern Babylon, degraded below Berlin or Paris, in | the entrance fifty-first annual report .of the New slon of vice, made Licentious and salaclous matter |mv- | veyed by st licensing law for ducers and a clarific against obscene iiterature York Anti-Vice MODERN BABYLON “What a chorus it would be," the Socicty Bays | report asserts, “if all of the theatri u.u producers who are at the pres. | ent time oxhibiting licentious shows on Broadway, and all the publishers of books and magazines and plotures disseminating salaclous products, were compelled to stand at places ! business and cry ‘Unclean, Unclean, Unclean, York soclety for the suppre public today. | , motion pictures and ands 15 held responsiblc society advocates a state n of the act ! fair.” It charges that the “so-called dean | sure of the sponsor for a even theatrical profession is th Yes Journal Just for a Change Try sometime adding a little cream to HELLMANN'S MAYONNAISE when you use it on fruit salad, or an extra dash of lemon when you serve it with fish, You will be as delighted with these variations as with the original dressing free—Book of Salad Recipes Desk 000, Richard Helimann, Ine, Liland City, N. 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