New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 9, 1925, Page 13

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I e “THE SNOB” AT THE CAPITOL Monta Bell, Harry Rapt's. direc- torial discovery, hit Ms third successtul film in “The 8nob,” the Metro-Goldwyn picture which open- ed last night at the Capitol theater for an engagement of 3 days. Bell, in this picturization of Helen R. Martin's popular novel, has gone far from the usual film plot and treatment. His direction of this play ranks with Rhis first sensational suc- cess. “Broadway After Dark.” The Keith vaudeville bill has five very fine acts hended by Kavanaugh and Everett's Revue, a fast song and dance offering well dons, . Jack Goldle provides the comedy hit of the bill with his blackface comedy offering. Jackson and Mack were also big.favorites with a neat skit that brought plause; Alvin and Alvin are Euro- pean clowns in a good novelty act; and Paul.and Massa entertain royal. ly with-a fast musical offering. T hows and music are continu- ous daily, “A Broadway Butterfly’—Tjyceum, “A Broadway Butterfly” {is the photoplay attraction now being presented the Lyceum and it is just the type of picturs the public likes since its has plenty of jazz and pep, a dash éf melodrama, a love theme that is quite involved and in addition shows some real scenes of New York and its theaters and cab. arets. Clever Loulsq Fazenda, pretty. Dorothy Devore, Willard Louis and other favorites present this drama of the little country girl who goes to New York to dance her way to fame, little realizing the pitfalls that are ahead. The picture speeds up immediately. The girl gets a job in a Broadway chorus and begins Keep Cool at the CAPITOL A REFRESHING PROGRAM OF KEITH VAUDEVILLE AND PHOTOPLAYS Today and Wednesday NORMA SHEARER ~JOHN_GILBERT —fin— “THESNOB” T KEITH VAUDEVILLE KAVANAUGH, EVERETT \ h 6— Clever Dancers —6 ALVIN & ALVIN PAUL & MASSA 5 TJACKSON & MACK Continuous Shows and Music LYCEUM “A Broadway Butterfly” —With— % Louise Fazenda and Dorothy Devore, Colleen Landis LADIES' MATINEE This Coupon and -10c Wil Admit Any Lady to Best Seat, EVERY AN ¥ Uuloss otherwise indlcated, theatrical motices eod reviews W this colump are fibnhmufiuhmmnw_o’nz. them plenty of ap-|. BASEINS NS psiN to attract attention of the men, The bill for the last half of the week brings two features and Mary Philbin, star of "Fool's Highwayd takes the role malle famous by M: i the play “Mitz1" in its screen veryl slon which is “The Rose of 'Pa this 18 & comedy drama with a kick in every scene and plenty of ludi- crous situations. POLI PLAYERS PROVIDE COLD SHIVERS APLENTY Mystery Play Well Presented—'The Last Warning” Replete With Thrilling Situations, (aameiaeyr pIBISH 4d) Shades of Edgar Allen Pos and whispers of Bax Rohmer! Screeches and screams from:the audjence at- tested fully to the success’ of “The fast Warning,” the Poll Players' of- fering at the Poll Palace 'thedter in Hartford this week. . Spooks and shadows stalk across the stage of this play which, at times, is even more thrilling than “The Bat.” The play deals with.an old theater and the efforts of a com- pany to reproduce “The Snare,” a play in which the leading man had been 'stricken down while sayfng his lines years before. Throughout this play the “haunted theater” grips the audience by the hair.and more than once one feels the hair rise on his head as the eerie melodrama is un- fold.. The ghost of John Woodferd, the leading man who disd in his part, is supposed to haunt the thea- ter and haunt the theater it does. However, it does not phase the com- pany and, in spite of the fact that one leading man is done away with' and another goes through exper- fences that are enough to turn the hair gray the play is produced. The work of the cast this week is admirable, Arthur McHugh, the manager of the theater and a for- mer police detective, 8 played by Walter Scott Weeks in an admirable | manner. Arthur Howard, as Quelle, “ star of the show, capably carry off | thelr respective parts, ¥ 'The play was written by Wads- | worth Camp, a famed creator of dé- tective storles and ghost narratiyes. He certainly lives up to his repft tion. “Park your nerves outside, should be the sign in the lobby of the theater. Next week the Poll Players will be aeen in, “Ths Flirting Flapper.” Howard Blair, well known . femals impersonator, will.ba the guest star. Wins *Scholarship ~ at Camegi'e Technology Lawrence E. Smith of 237 Corbin avenue, a junior in the department of physics, College of Engineering at Carnegle Institute of Technology, has been awarded a George H. Smith memorial scholarship of $50 as a result of excellence in scholas- !tic work during the past year, it was annouficed at commencement exercises of the Pittsburgh inatitu. tion today. Willlam Burton Gooby of 10 Madison street was graduated with a certificate in sheet metal. He was one of the class of 350. Dr. Thomas §. Baker, president of Car- | negie Institute presented the gradua- tion documents. . Explains Intricacies Of Zoning Ordinance Provisions of the zoning ordi. | nance wers explained to the ordi- | nance committee of the common council and a group of city officlals by Vice-President Ennis of the Technical Advisory Corporation last night. Three residential, thfes busi- nees and one Industrial zone are | contemplated. Accessory bulldings, | such-as warkshops, will be allowed | in all districts, but the space they may occupy will be fixed by ordi- nance, Eide yards, near yards .and distance from the street line will ‘be fixed, as will also the number of families to an aors, which differs in | each zone, Before the ordinance is | submitted for action, another meet. | ipg will be held. p Lake Compounge FIREWORKS WEDNESDAY NIGHT DANCING Bill Tasillo and His Orchestra Will Furnish the Music For the Dancing NIGHT story and cut out the dolls every day you will ‘have a'whole set of dolls with | Marion which to act out the famous old |Thompson, and Albert Bissell Phelps, tale COLOR CUT-OUTS . THE LAMP BRINGS RICHES This is one day's chapter of the of “Aladdin.” If you eolor «"To hear is to obey, answered the ring genie and before he had time to . breaths Aladdin was onee more in his mother's house, Aladdin and his mother were 8o poor' that they decided to sell the lamp to’ buy food. But when they | started to polish it to make it look prettier herrible | than the ring genie ap- | apother genie even more pearad before them, “What dpst thou asked, the thee.” wish?"* lamp stand ready to From then on whenever Aladdin | or his mother were in need of any- the genie of, the lamp and immediately thitig they had only to ask it was theirs. the director of the company, and| * (\ayo the mothér's dress laven- Jean Ofiver as Dolly Lymken, the | .." "y haq in purple, with the | head band to match) Assoclated Ed1- (Copyright, 1925, tors, Inc.) READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS.FOR RESULIS Thousands he | “T and the other slaves of | serve MILLER WILLS GO T0 SUPERIOR COLRT Trust Company in Doubl Re- . gardingBeneficlaries The superior ecourt has been asked to interpret the terms of wills drawn by the late Darjus Miller and Mrs, Elizabeth R. Mjller, the Hartford Connecticut Trust Co. as, trustes of the estats being anxious to pay th claimants, ‘but being in’doubt as to who are entitled to: benefit, Mr. Miller left a'truet’ fund of $500,000, the income to be paid to his widow and she'to dispose of it in her will, . 8he left the money to rela- tives in direct bequests and through two trust-funds of ' $100,000 each, the income of which was to go to two sisters, A®codicll ' to her will created a trust fund of $10,000 for the payment of $600 ’armually to JIda M. Sproul. There are’a large number of relatives who’are claim- ants under the will'and tife Hart- ford bank is anxious,to have, their respective shares settled Uipon by the court, Mrs. Miller left $50,000 each |to Burdette 'C. Thayer | Willis M. Thayer of Hartford and Susan Thayer Newton of Fairmont, | W. Va., who are the children of her sister, Mrs. Mary A, Thayer of En- fleld; and $25,000 each to Alice | Ellzabeth Phelps, Margaret Phelps, | Elizabeth . Thompson, Bamue| Wol." | cott .all of ‘Warehouss. Point: Hugh | Bissel), Paul Bissel), both of Boston; |andi Willlam Biesell of Schenectady, |N.. Y. Other parties to Phelps, H the Nettls suit are 3fesell |all of Warahouss Point; Eva V. M | Bissell, Southington, whose deceased hushand, Charles Humphrey Bissell, |was a nephew and beneficiary of Mrs. Elizabeth B. Miller; Hezekiah | Bissell, Pasadena. Cal. Charles Sam- | et Phelps, Meriden; and Georgs H [ Phelps, Woodhaven, T, 1. Tha action s brought through | Robinsen. Robinsen & Cole for the tr which sets ont it 15 upon by the court, EXPLAINS SUIGIDE Man's Act, New York, June % (A—Financlal of Milford, | | i | | | the. claims as soon as|{rom an argument Verkikas stagted | didn't have any, but he iy alleged to | | Financial Situation and Reverses in | ton at the corner of Westerly and | Love Cause of Lynn, Mass,, Young | ward Paskovitski of 637 West Main | i | straits and disappointment in love, | according to contents of several letters, led Sidney Rudlett, 30, said to be of a prominent Lynn, Mass., night in'a rooming house in West Are Eating Bread for Reducing and Watching Weight Off Come the Pounds as %n;en (Men Too) Eat This New A ET THIN while you eat all ; you want—of the best bread you ever tasted! You'll have plenty of company—thou- sands are eatingit daily. Wallace has solved the problem of how to reduce, Get a loaf of this good bread and start reducing mow. Watch your weight come down as you build health and strength with this thoronghly good and nourithing bread. Lose Weight Daily Somé repdrt twenty-five or thirty pounds loss in the first month. This should be easy for most people. This bread abounds in nourishment. It's a food, not a fad; it is healthful, not harm- ful. No wonder thesbread is in demand! Foritisa bread every- body likes —a“real, delicious bread—with a nut.like favor you'll enjoy. No guesswork in the scientific For Reducing PARKER BUCKEY New Britain, Conn. Kind of Bread mixing and baking of Wallace Bread; it is always the same and always acts the same. Begin each meal with two slices and see how surplus flesh dieappears. Eat all you want; a whole loaf a day if you want it. Nothing harmful; no drugs and no thy- roids. Just good bread and abounding in vitdhine. Deli- cious toasted. You meedn't be fat if you like bread! Sold all over the city. ! More Loaves Tomorrow A previous announcement in this newspaper swept every loaf fromdealers’ shelvesbeforenoon; this time we are ready to supply’ all who ask for Wallace Bread Thousands of fresh loaves baked tonight. Nearly every store sell- ing bread has been supplied. If your grocer does not have it telephone or write us. Fortheconvenienceof those living out of the city, we have arr: to mail 6 loaves, prepaid, for $2.00. Send this amount to the address be- low and a loaf will be mailed fresh CO. family, to end his life by gas last | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 192y ’ i street. The medical examiner | gave a verdict of suicide, These letters were ‘nddressed to Mrs, Busie Lancaster, Swampscott, Mass, and Lynn, Mass. They were sealed and the police did not open them. Two letters were addressed to the father, 36 Atlantic avenue, Lynn. One of the latter said. “Susie has thrown me overboard once more. If I had a dollar for svery time ghe did that, I would in- vest it all at six per cent and become rich.” continuing, the letter sald “the majn reason 1 am sore is that you promised to paint the car last spring and let me have {t. You painted it all right, but I never saw it.” BEATS, UP FATHER, | SENTENGED T0 JA1L Graboski Given 80 Days for| Blacking Parent’s Eye Thirty days in jail and a suspend- ed sentence of 60 days was the pen- alty imposed on Willlam Graboski ©f-284 Clark street by Judge Willlam €. Hungerford in police court this morning when the young man was | arraigned on a charge of assaulting his father. The assault took placs | last week and as a result of the | beating.the father has been display- | ing a highly eolored optic The father told ths court that his | son beat him after they had become | embrofled in an argument. He com- | plained fo. the ypolice and the aon | was arrested by Detective Sergeant | George C. ElNnger. | Frank Verkikas of 4 Union street, charged with assaulting Mrs. Eliza- beth Barron of 18 Spring street, was | given a suspended sentence of 15 days and placed on probation. Ver. kikas was already on probation for a previous offense and when the | court placed him on probation again, he appeared puzzled and sald “I am already on probation, does that| mean 1 have to report'to Mr. Con- | nolly twlee a week?” | According to the story Mrs. Barron, the assault tald by | resulted | when she refuged to sell him a bot- tle of beer” She told him that she have Insisted that she did. Charged. with. stealing lumber from a house that is under eonstruc- West Main streets last week, FEd- street pleaded guilty and was fined ‘Tne eternal question~ hat to eat ? heres a simple way to answer it On picnics and motor trips —Borden's Malted Milk is con- venient to carry and prepare. Take it on all your summer outings. In emergencies—yon can serve this delicious, nourishing food ata moment's notice. No cook- ing, no fussing. All you need is s bowl, 2 spoon, some milk, 1nd Borden's Malted Milk, and you have a refreshing meal in 1 jiffy. If you're out of milk, mix it with water and you still have a nourishing drink. MALTED MIL » At your dealer's in comvenient V0 \w\»‘:‘ 7 and 15 ounce glass packages. \‘ yes :“‘.’. Get one today. 1 Spaed \ \ \ SR, AR L R 3 $10 and costs. Judgment was mm‘hrolr‘h of the peace and assaulting | stormy, the decoration will be pest. pended In the case of Rom!-wj\h;, Ethel Ryan with whom he|poned. Friday evening the lodge i8 Kraczinski of 132 Beaver street, |boards at 104 Rockwell avenue, was | invited to visit Unity R: arralgned on a similar charge fined §5 without costs. He was ar- | meeting the occasion Atty, Stanley J. Traceski appeared [rested last night by Supernumerary |bors' Night, for the two men and he changed the |Policeman Edward Carroll after | pleas of not guilty entered last week |Mrs. Ryan made a complaint to the | to gullty and Aselstant Prosecutor | policeman. | Willlam M. Greenstein, after pre. - senting facts in the case to the WILL DECORAT of a Brighton woman troubled her court,”recommended a small fine In| Btella Rebekah lodge, No. 11, will | greatly because several years be- the case of, Paskovitski In whose decorate the graves of ammd] fore she stole a cake at a cookery cellar the Jumber was found | members Friday afternoon, meeting | class, She has sent the school board Thomas McGovern, charged v\"v;n- the cemetery gate at 2:45 lv;'hr-a penny stamps. Consclence Won Brighton, Eng. — The conscious - Something new to give salads more appetizing zest Or COURSE you know the health-value of salads, “A salad a day is the new health way.” But you must make them tasteful and tempting—else your family tires of them, So you will welcome the news that Gulden's now offers you a new Mustard specially blended for salad dressing use. It's a wonderful blend of the finest mustard seeds, You can iz Guiden's rich olive oils, pure vinegar and rare spices, Saladressing Mustard with mayonniase or other dressings. Or you can make a special dressing from recipes on label. This mild mustard is also splen- did as a sauce for fish, for creamed or stuffed eggs, as a batter for fried tomatoes, ete. Flavor—the first step to good digestion IN THIS new product Gulden's has retained the pungent mustard tapg which food authorities recommend for arousing your fastebuds—the sensitive nerves of the mouth, The mustard-flavored food stimulates them to quicken and increase the flow of saliva and other digestive juices, For this reason Gulden’s has been called “digestion’s best friend.” But while the Saladressing Mustard has the pungent mustard tang, the skillful blending with the other ingre- dients has tempered it for delicate- flavored foods. Crisp, appetizing, sat- isfying—but mild! Your grocer has Gulden's Saladress- Jing Mustard in generous-sized bottles, 15 rents. Try it tonight—see what a Helightful relish it adds to your favor- ite salad dressing. GULDENS SALADRESSING MUSTARD By the makers of Gulden’s Prepared mustard It is delicious on all meats and many vege- tables, e HREE meals a day—and all those between- meal occasions,too—cease to be such a bug- X aboo if you've learned to keep Borden's, the Improved Malted Milk, in the house. It's a perfect boon to housewives—especially in hot weather, when appetites are finicky, digestions easily upset, and there are so many extra un. expected demands on the larder. Borden’s Malted Milk is a refreshing summer drink, with a delicions flavor, free from the sickish sweetness of most malted milks. It has the satisfying food value of a light meal, yet puts no extra strain on your digestion—an im- portant point in summer weather, In fact, doc- tors recommend it for people of all ages—chil- dren and grown-ups alike—to keep them fit. Az a light lanch—whea you're too tired or hot ot busy to get yourself a regular meal; mix yourself a brimming glass of Borden's Malted Milk. Nous ishing enough to sustsin you till dinnertime, Once you've formed the habit you'll find a thousand and one convenient uses for Borden's Malted Milk. Get acquainted with it right away. Send the coupon below —with 10c — for a trial package. Ot order some from your druggist. Be sure to ask for Borden's, the Improved. For it is actu- ally more nourishing, more digestible, and has a more delicious flavor than any other malted milk made. DBordens THE IMPROVED Between meals—2 tall gless of Borden's Malted Milk will relieve that tired feeling and satisfy your hunger without overtaxing your digestion sad spoiling your sppetite for reg- vlar meals. Take it in the mid- dle of the morning—after 8 hard day's work —at bedtime to overcome insomnia.

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