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p— NORMA SHEARER AS ‘THE SNOB' CAPITOL John Gilbert Co-Star in Brilliant Film Feature “The Snob,”" the first. production for Metro.Goldwyn by Monta Bell, brilllant young film director, who startied the picture world with his direction of “Broadway After Dark", one of the year's biggest hits, 1s booked as the feature attraction at the Capitol theater Monday, Tuesday wnd Wednesday. A great deal of Interest attaches \taelf to this plcture because of Bell's sudden rise to prominence as a di- rector, and because of the success of “Brqadway After Dark” and “How to Educate a Wife,” The young director has demon- strated his versatilfty by filming two widely varied stories in his first two pictures, and “The Snob"” 1s an en- drely different type of vehicle, It is an unusual story in one re- spect at least, In that the central character is an unsympathetic one, and most of the picture is used to create this personality, For Sunday night two fine photo- plays will be oftered. One will pre- sent Katherine McDonald In “White Shoulders,” and the other Yakima Canutt, the champion cowboy, in “Branded a Bandit."” The Keith vaudeville show for the first half of the week will show flve supreme offerings and include Kav- anaugh & Everefte Co., a company of six clever entertainers. They carry special scencry for effects in their dancing and singing revue: Al- vin & Alvin are a pair of European comics—a popular form of acro- batics and clowning abroad; Bobby Jackson & Ida Mack have an act entitled “In a Book 8hop” and there Is something to please every taste and in this respect the skit offered by them proves the rule; Jack Goldie In the “Black Spasm of Joy" is a comedian of the linger longer, laughing kind and Paul & Massa are variety entertainers, COLOR CUT-OUTS Aladdin’s Lamp LOCKED IN THE EARTH | This is the end of the first Y\Nk'!; picture-story of “Aladdin or. the | Magic Lamp.” Children who cut | aut the pictures every day will soon | have a whole set of Aladdin dolls Watch for more of the story next| week | Ihe magician placed a ring on Aladdin’s finger. This will protect | you from any dangers you may meet vith,” he said. At the foot of the stairs every- | thing was as the magician had said | it would be. After fastening lhe‘ lamp sceurely to his belt Aladdin | filled his pockets, his sleeves 'and | Loth arms with the beautiful fruit | that grew all about him. ‘ “Give me the lamp! Give me Vhe\ lamp!"” demanded the magician when he saw Aladdin coming up the | siairs. When Aladdin refused be- | cause his hands were full of fruit, | the magiclan became very angry, | thréw another pinch of powder in the fire, and the earth closed up once more, locking Aladdin in its | blackness. (This beggar's disguise should be | colored grey and saved till later in the story when the magician will put t on. Watch for more this | | e e T S B PAIN GONE! RUB SORE, REEUNATIC, ACHING JOINTS Stop “dosing” rheumatism. It's pain oly.. St. Jacob's Oil will stop ahy pain, and not one rheuma- | tism case in fifty requires internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrat- ing St. Jacob's Oil right on the ten- der spot, and by the time you say Jack Robinson—out comes the rheu- matic pain and distress. St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism lini- ment which never disappoints, and loesn’t burn the skin, 1t “takes pain, soreness and stiffness from aching joints, muscles and bones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache ind neuraigia. Limber up! Get a small trial bot- e of old-time, honest St. Jacobs Oll from any drug stors, and in a | moment you'll be free from pa aches and stiffness. Don't suffer! Rub rheumatism away. strange ta (Copyright, 1 YALE FRESHHEN ALL APOLOGIZE Forgiven for Riot When They| Pay $800 Damages New Haven, June 6.—Members of the Yale freshman class were ab- solved from all further penalty in connection with their rlotous cele- bration last Sunday, when the fresh- man discipline committee, meeting representatives of the freshman fac- ulty yesterday, presented a written apology to I'. Hfi Bangs, instructor in English, who was roughly handled In the outburst Sunday. The apology was signed by every member of the freshman class. At the same time, the committee , handed over $800, a , Asegclated Editors, Inc.) dollar from each member of the class as an assessment to pay the damages of the riot, After they had presented the apology, which was in the form of a roll of names 36 feet long, the discipline committee, composed of representative members of the fresh- man class were given a lecture on the seriousness of riots by the dean and were told that nothing further in thé way of penalty would be re- quired. The apology read as follows: “We, the undersigned, as members of the x x x class of 1928 of Yale university do hereby apologize to F. H. Bangs for flouting the authority of this university official on the oc- casion of the freshman riot in Ber- keley Oval May 31, 1925. We do this on the understanding that it does not necessarily imply that we as Individuals had any part whatso ever In this affair. Respeetfully sub- mitted to P. T. Waidon, dean of freshmen on this, the fifth day of June in the year of our Lord, nine- teen hundred and twenty-five.” | An | Hepha Ganymede (cup | |U | Hermes 3 | Ghost of Phaedra.Florence Hans: | Ghost of Euryidice. |Ghost of Luicides. . G Phylli NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1925, JUNIOR HIGH WILL PRESENT ‘ULYSSES’ Classic Greek Drama to Be Pro- duced Thursday Evening “Ulyss a three-act drama by Stephen Phillips, will be presented by the puplls of the Central Juntor high school at 8 o'clock Thursday evening, June 11, for the benefit of the school library, It Is a drama of classic Greece, dealing with the wan- derings of the legendary hero as re- lated in Homer's Odyssey, There fs a prologue, followed by three acts of two scenes each, the locales being ones unusual to the stage and in- cluding the seats of the Olympus, the banqueting hall of Ulysses, and Hades. The acting and stage settings are of rather than the modern school, the latter. being more suggestive than particularized and the former being more full of orations than at pres- ent. The large cast is as follows: On Olympus Zeus (Jupiter)......Richard Beebe Posefdon (Neptune) Gh . verett itchell Hermes .Edward Ryan Athene (Minerva) .. Marporie Young Aphrodite (Venus)....Greta Roseen Ares (Mars). ...+ Howard Turnrose voovo. . Ludwig Lyon an) . Louis Landino Demeter (Ceres)....Eleanor Arendt Artemis (Diana). .. Eleanor Pregent er e .Ovide Hogaboom | In Hades | | | | riv Frederick Schmalz Ryan lysses. . u .Edward ca be: ely Himberg e bey e Gertrude Anderson hosts of Lovers. s = ..Charles Sheehan, Violet Timm .Ella Olson | At Protesilau Ghosts of C Charon. ., Ghost of Terrerias. ... Harry Mullen Ghost of Anticlel gods on | the classie, | |of the world, showing countries and Arthur Cliftgrd Idren,Catherine Are: na, Violet Timm, Arthur Carlson «v.Everett Mitchell host of Agamemnon............ «v.Joseph Crowley la (Mother of Ulysses) ...........Harrlet C Furle.........Emily Klagle, E lyn Peterson, Margaret Burke, Lilllan Luess, Agnes Zoltalo Woe of Tantalus..,.Armand Zenga | | | Woe of Sisyphus....Everett Mitchell |Woe of Prometheus. ... e .. Theodol On Earth |Athene. ... «o..Marjory Young | | Hermes. ... ..Edward Ryan Calypso. Gladys Gorman ...Nora Tomasso | Charles Dumb Katherine Shiel Willlam Holcomb vvee.Carl Ramsay | .Richard Hovhanesian | .Norman Vining | Walter Perschy | Henry Connelly | .John Wiley | | Penelope. . .. Telemachus Euryclela Antinous. Furymachus Ctesippus. Eumaeus, Melanthius. . Pefraeus. .... Pheldon Melantho. . +vv..Marlon Rand | Ciytl. . . .....Helen Conrad | Chlorls. Dorothy Shanahan | | Elpenor +ve..Thomas Neuman | «vvesaTheodore Steege | 3dith Fichman ..John Reld, | Lothaire Siegel | Phoclon | Phemius. | Satlors | William Buckley (AN d madam ¥ eSS R | Lothaire Siegel, Alvhild Sundell | | The action of the play deals with | {the perlod -of Ulysses' wanderings | |and return, as follows: | Prologue Seats of the gods on the summit of Olympus with an imagined view ers. | Act One Scene 1—Forecourt of palace of vases, Scene 2—Shore of Ogygla With sea ve of Calypso. Ship of Ulysses ached just out of sight. | Act Two | Scene 1—A gloomy barren shore. | back a vast cove. Scene 2—Descent into Hades, Act Three | Scene 1—8hore of Utica. | feature is a refreshing soclety play, next week, D story of a little country girl who |that the whole tang becomes ume Heene Z—Interior of Ulysses' ban- | Those who saw the famous Aus- |\was determined to dance her way [T4Veled. The cast that Warnep quet hall, |trian comedienne Mitsi in “Pom |1 fame. Hroadway In all its taw- |Prothers selected for this ploture ine —_— jPom™ and later In "Mitsi" wlil wel- \qry artificiality and fascinating gla- [¢'des Loulso Fasends, Willard |eome this opportunity of scelng |yiour s the basic them of the |louls, Dorothy Devres, Cullen Lane [Mary Philbin in the screen version |wiory. frene Astalre s country |91 and other well known stars. L [of Mitsl, ‘The picture is produced Ibred little girl und when she gets «| 10U Tellegen, that consumate |under the title of "The Kose of |joh in u Broadway chorus her beauty |A¢tor of stuge and screen, and Paris" when it opens Thursday, |nd shyness proves a strong lure for |Charming, vivacious Patsy Ruth | 'The story tells of a gir) just aD- |(he men about town who shower Miller were never more happily cast | proaching womanhood who has been | hor with fowers and unwelcome at- |!han in “Those Who Judge” the FE BRI an inmate of a convent over #ince |(uniions, Iinally the girl scems |Thursday feature that shares the s |the death of her mother, which Wa# | peipjessly mixed up with two men [S¢reen with “The Rose of Paris. Double B]" Suuday__Bmadway shortly after tho child was born. The |ang it in only through the efforts e |mother had been disowned by &lof ('ogkie Dale, another show girl |READ THE HERALD WANT ADS. |wealthy parents because of her m | Bll[lel‘fly Shows Moflday riage and on his death bed father commissions his purtner find his daughter. Others in the ¢ Sunday evening the Lyceum Is of. [of “The Rose of Paris" are fering its patrons its usual high |Cain, John Sainpolis, Dorothy R: class program of double features ler, ('ino Corrado, Doreen Turnr: “The Monkey's Paw" and “Just A Wife" while for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday the - feature play will be “A Broadway Butferfy” while the bill for the last half of the week brings Mary Philbin in “The Rose of Parls” and “Those | Who Judge” with Lou Tellegan and |ously funny. It is the efforts of atsy Ruth Miller, partner and his ultimate finding “The Monkey's Paw” is one of |the little heroine that provides those Intriguing mystery dramas not | pretty little love theme. unlike “The Bat” and the companion Edwin J Smith and Cesare Gravina, Me lo which the |bats the men of the world and be KEEP KOOL at CAPITOL PARK ', SWIMMING POOL ) “HARTFORD'S BATHING BEACH"” \ ’! - —And— MOMAUGUIN BATHS Formerly Swift's—East Haven EXPERT INSTRUCTION FREE By COACH HUNT, Champion Professional Distance Swimmer and Recognized Amateur Champions, ntirely New Kind of Motor Car Travel Changing ougranspoflatzbnlhbits We predict that within a month after we have deliv- ered your Chrysler Six all your ideas of travel will be changed — revolutionized. Instead of traveling by train, nine times out of ten you'll travel in your Chrysler Six. 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THE BENNETT MOTOR SALES CO. 250 Arch St. \ (Opp. Grand) Tel. 2952 CHRYSLER The Touring Car - §1395 . eton - 1495 The Coach + . . 1545 The Roadster - . 1625 The Sedan 1825 All prices {. o. b. Detroit subject to curvent govcTwment tax. We are pleared to extend the convenience of time.payments. gttrective plan. Chruler deale @nd superior Chrysler service everyuh, o Ask gbout Chrsler's The Royal Coupe - $1895 The Brougham 1965 The Imperial 2065 The Crown-Imperial 2195 SIX DETROIT. OXKMULILE In Okmulgee, Oklahoma, is an oil man whose business takes him often to Denver, to Detroit, to Lima, Ohio, and back to Okmulgee. Some trip! He used to do it by train of course. Now he makes it in his Chrysler Six with ease and comfort and is an enthusiast over the newer and better way. DETROIT CLEVELAND TOLEDO A Detroit man goes to Toledo frequently on busi- ness, then to Cleveland and back to Detroit. He used to do it by train, usually on the sleeper. Now he travels in his Chrysler Six, starts at his own time in the morning, makes Toledo and Cleveland the same day, transacts business in each place and is free to start back home when he chooses, regard- less of train schedules. Results that only Chrysler Six delivers, owners say, make this newer travel method the safe, sensible and comfortable way to get about. st Robert | Brady, Charles Puffy, Alice lof the scenes are lald in the resorts f Paris and many of the scenes In little rose of Paris com.- | rals them at their own game are uproari- Monday's special attraction is the ars | the | to oy any SU YAKIMA CANUTT World’'s Champion Cowboy in the of the MO He Didn'i Like CAPITOL TODAY—“Code of the \\'est"-——lfleith Yaqdeville NDAY NIGHT—Two Excellent Features “Branded f\ Bandit” — TUES Simple Home Things KATHERINE McDONALD The American Beauty in “White Shoulders” — WED. 4 Louis B.Mayer presents Productioro Based on Helen R. Martin's mooel. Adapted and Directed by Monta Bell With NORMA SHEARER JOHN GILBERT CONRAD NAGEL :# e H You Know Him! The man who's too goed for the rest of the family, who cuts a great figure in the social world, and leaves hic wife at home—waiting and hop- KEITH VAUDEVILLE 5 — Excellent Offerings — 5 ] Featuring KAVANAUGH AND EVERETT (0. 6 — Clever Entertainers — 6 Speqia] Scenery, Singing, Dancing D MASSA JACKSON and MACK a ——in Variety Offering “The Book Shop” JACK GOLDIE ALVIN and ALVIN 'l;he Black Splash of Jo European Comics and Music Daily — “OLD HOME WEEK” Continuous Shows S COMING! UNDAY O “THE MONKEY “JUST A WIF MO oS ’ — Star Cast — Star Cast 0y e Bt DOROTHY DEVORE LOUISE FAZENDA b WILLARD LOUIS JOHN ROCHE ULYAN TASHMAN CULLEN LANDIS D iy Wilham Beawdine Cand]eat Bupring and o e tabe Directed by William Beaudine ~ LADIES™ MAT. TS This Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady to Best Seats