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with artistic columns jolned with lagellke ribbons of light, and the walks and flower beds will be out- lined with lights set In the ground, Electric lights, too, Wil flash out the flags and coats of arms of Great Britain and Argentina, placed at appropriate points, and searchlights and indirect glow Ifghta will also be used with effect, Mingled with all will be a pro- fuse display of streamers and flags of both countrles which will make the city gay with color during the day as well as at nlght, Speclal pains will be taken in the artistic «decoration of the strects leading to the mansion where the prince will live, GLENGOE WOMEN PLAN GLUB HOUSE ONE HOJSE FORM OF LEGISLATURE This Is Being Advocated in South Dakota Plorre, 8 D, June 13 (@) — South Dakota, first state in the unlon to adopt the Initlative and referendum, and fiest state to es- tablish a system of rural credits as a branch of government, is inter- csting itsclf serlously in another governmental innovation — a one- liouse legislature, The unicameral legislative reform in proposed and sponsored by Rob- et Emmett Dowdell, a veteran Democrat and state senator, but it las galned support from so. wide a range of politcal thought in the state that it alre; looms a8 o muy Jjor issue In the legislature of 1927, The plan contemplates elimina- tion of the state senate and house of representatives, now composed of | 46 and 103 medbers, respectivel and the setting up in their stead of a gingle honse with from 16 to 41 members, This hody would meet Great Comfort Glencoe, 1L, June 12 (P)—Origi- |nating in 1564 as 4 reading circle, |then step by step Into a circulating library and literary club, the Wom- at leust |an's Library club of Glencoe, affli- cnee every three months, to enact [ated with the federation of women's lation, and it could |clubs, plans the construction soon of ontinuously or wh {a clubhouse which will stand as a cver there was nced for it to sit.|monument to the principles and Ws members would be eleefed from |achievements of its ploneers, and digtricts in proportion to population, | headquarters for the activities of the and with little regard for county present day woman. lines. The club is the fourth oldest wom- Senator Dowdell first proposed an's organization in the United the plan 17 years ago, but not until | States and from its Inception has recent years has 10 found gencral support or galned |ment of the community. That spirit cnough adhcerents to bring it before |18 carried into the building program the leglslature for serious consid-|of the new structure, which will be cration. The stale senate, at the the first unib of the Glencoe plan of 1925 session, sed by a handsome |future commercial and residential majority a resolution by Dowdell 8rowth. It has been designed to fit eubmitting to the voters of the state |0 harmonlously with the village constitutional amendment 1o abol- |P}an of building, sh. the house and senate and get| With its ground site, {he club- | ] p the unicameral law-making body. house will have a value of approxi- | he resolution died in the house, Mately $250,000. The cost will be | vhen adoption of an unfavorable Met by the club membership. From smmittee report prevented it from |!he sources which are expected to | oming to the floor for debate on its | 4s¢ the clubhouse, the bullding com- merits, but Senator Dowilell already |Mittee estimates an income of §24,- is working for its submission to the 980 and disbursements of = $15,760 1927 legislature, and he has much [!¢2Ving an annual surplus. | rong support in the state. Among | The architectural features of the i@ influential advocates of the unj- |Predect are striking in their individ- ameral system is former Gov, Ualityand comfort. The modified ‘narles N. Herreid, republican, |English style of Tudor was adopted | Many of the newspapers of the |Pecause it met the desire of the Hate favor presenting the plan to|¥emen for a rustic, informal and the voters for adoption or rejeetion. |UnCitified type of architecture, car- ‘Even if the Dowdell proposal met |TYINE With it the fecling of the sub- | Ath no more setbacks, however, it | UrP and the homelike, ould not b put inte effoet uatil| The building, although broken by 930. A constitutional amendment |WIN& bays, gables and offsets, will ‘ust be submitted to the vtocrs by € 4rawn lr:{;ether in one harmon- ‘glslative foint resolution and ap-|1OU8 unit- The exterlor will be of roved at a regular election before [TOUEN stone, timbered above. becomes effertive, The lopistatury | Provides for women's dressing rooms eets again tno ears hence ang |SPacious corridoms an auditorium | he plan could not be presented to |71\ & large slage. lounge, stage he voters until 1928 ,dressing rooms, dining room, kitch- Eald ien, pantries, offices, balcony, com- ymittee rooms, projection room, men's |club room, smoking room and am- Iple storage space, with additional |basement rooms in connection with [the heating and fuel compartments, TEMPERANGE FOLK ARE SEEKING A1 (Asking Help From England's Teachers JUENOS AIRES IS PLANNING WELCOME “reparing Big Reception for English Prince | Buencs Alres, June When the Prince of “'uenos Aires by night for the firat me, he may wonder whether he s a prince of the Arabian Nights, nd what genii have transformed his southern metropolis into a daz- /ling fairyland of light and beauty 13 (P Wales gces Oxford, ¥ The British g, June 13 (M) National Temperance Illinois Soon to Have One of his innovation |sharcd it purpose with the develop- | | most popular hostess. Mrs. Brown, widow of a rich Pittsburgh | that most of it was nothing short | of “ahominable.” COLOR CUT-QUTS s— Aladdin’s Lamp THE PRINCESS 1S WON This 1s one day's chapter of the story of “Aladdin.” Cut out and save the paper dolls and next weck you will have the whole set. . . When Aladdin heard what the Sultan had sald he was overjoyed. He rubbed the lamp and when the genle appeared he asked that it | bring him forty basins of gold fillea with jewels, “I alko wish for forty black slaves, magnificently dressed, to carry the basins and forty white slaves, also magnificently dressed and mounted There’s blood in the moon, in London, and Mrs. Harry Brown (above) is doing battle. Her antagonist is Mrs. Corne- 3 ¢ behind,” he sald, lius Vanderbilt Sr., and both want to be known as London’s| No sooner had Aladdin uttered | the words than there was a com- [ motion in the strect ang the pro- | cession appeared before the house. | When the Sultan saw the won- | derful gift he was mors than de- | lighted to consent that his daughter I'clings with almost pathetic faith to|should marry one who could pre- the English tradition of roast beef sent him with such gifts, and leg of mufton. 1t is all non-| (Here is the Sultan's hunting suif sense to gay that a man shonldl have [ of brown velvet, Cut it out and save a pound of grilled steak.” It il he needs it later in the story). Lessons designed to remedy the | (Copyright, 1325, Assoclated Edi- monotonous meals in the average | tors, Inc.) home will be one of the ajms of the newly operated munleipal conrses in domestic sclence, says Lady Trustram, who avers that if neces- | sary she will roll up her sioeves, don an apron and teach a ciass her- | sclf. coal baron, gave a night. ENGLISH WOMEN DISLIKE CODKING Bored With Work, They Serve Poor Meals party from midnight to 5 a. m. on Derby Old Clothing Needed For Near East Relief Thursday, June 18th, will be Bun- dle Day for the Near Bast Reliet in [ New Britain, dovoted to collection of 014 _clothing which will he shipped ° children in London, June 12 (#) — An- nouncement was made recently that the Jondon County council had ar- ranged to start three special cen- ters where girls would be taught to Soviet Govt. Sends Large Platinum Cargo Necar East Relief London, June 13 (P—The Daily | phanages, i cook. This news was made known \fail says a shipment of platinum | o New Britain Fire Department simultaneous! I the denlunclasi{valued et £164,000) (about’ $4,607- | undar ihe direotion of Chist Nobre tion of middle-class cookery by Sir 700) arrived in London yesterday, will devote ifs varous fire t!.fl»r;n'. Alfred V'ripp, surgeon-in-ordinary consigned by the Russian soviet goy- to the collection ;u the clothing All to the king, who aroused the ire 'ernment to a London bank. bublletachaol elildre ot ,hf'(.’,,y of many women by his assertion ——————— will receive bundle tags early in the |week each tag being in two parts {one for his own family, and one for FITZGERALD—JOHNSON The wedding of Miss Lillian Luth, daughter of Mr. and Mys. John Bur- dick Johnson of 347 Church street, and William J. zgerald, son of Mrs. William Fitzgerald of Smalley Sir Alfred said publily is one thing which commonness, dullness, and even boringness of an ordinary middle- class table more than the abomin- “It there makes for fhe school. Bundles are to he brought to the Fire Sations before two o'clock on Thursday afternoon, in order that cver seen in any city on the occa- sion of the visit of the Italian prince lust year, and now for the visit of | ford notables attended or announced their sympathy with the movement. | whose office| A late seventeenth Awful Pains and Misery Re- improvement, h told I would have to have an opera- tion. 1do not believe in operations and 1 had read so much about Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound that 1 told my husband I would try it be- fore I gaveup. I soon began to feel that it was doing me good. The awful misery began to leave me, also the the Mary, Duchess of York - the presidency of Pri women's section has organized many functions including a “National Baby Week.” The march of women into | spheres hitherto exclusively held by men is indicated by the intention to | nd cooking, while German women a ed in it. The consequence is that, | league 1s making strenuous efforts | - street, took place Wednesday norn- {¢ho clothing may be haled and ship- to do him honor. :o e !Im;i:h school teachera| 8PIC cooking of the English wom- g at 10 o'clock at the rectory of |ped on that same day. Bucnos Aires, famed for it3 ex- | (o its aims. Recently the league en-| °™ I would be glad to know what ije church of St. John the Evangel- Sweaters, dresses, warm under travagance in illumination and | tertained the delcgates of the Na.|'t 18 ist. Rev. Thomas J. Laden offi- |ciothing, old shoes and stockings ‘coration to cclebrate carnival and | tional Unlon of Teachers at an Ox-| But there were come women here and any other garment in which aational holidays, every year out-|ford breakfast, given, it is worth | Who agreed with the celebrated sur- Margaret Griffin of Water- |iare 1s still some wear are especi- dolng what was done’the year be-|'noting, in the hall of Christ church, | B¢On. Iady Nott-Bower sald: “A sister of the groom, was ajly desired. ore. It staged, perhaps, the most|which in times past was noted as| YETY Jarge proportion of English yyatron of honor and Carl R. John- Many garments are made over by wonderous display of illumination | 5 heavy-drinking college. Many Ox- | Women are frightfully hored With son. hrother of the bride, boat man. the older girls in the orphanages Following the ceremony Mr. and [fop the yse of the thousands of chil- Mrs. Fitzgerald left on a motor trip | jren, Boys who are learning cobb- French, Italian and always interest- The vice-chancellor, through the New England states. | |ing take old shoes and make wear- the scion of English royally, it is|is somewhat equivalent to that of | In this country. cooking is looked | {pon their rturn (hey will reside on able pairs out of them. New feet are preparing to break the record again. | the American university president, [ upon as a rather irksome duty. Linwood str Rt G ) b P s ST Millions of multicolored electric | pointed out that drinking has de-| While in Francc and Italy it is re- Wi st i izht globes will be used. They Will| creased enormously in the univer- | garded as a fine art.” WILL ATTEND REUNION D HanE e M DaC e tribut e outl the Government house, the|sity during the past 20 years. He| C. Herman Senn, of the Food as- Judge William ¢. Hungerford and |tha refygees in the camps of Mace- Capitol, all public edifices and hun- | gajd that in his undergraduate days| sociation, asserts that one of the Judge W. Klett will attend |donja, many of whom spent last dreds of office bulldings and insti-| (he usual entertainment was the | failings of the middle-class housc- the reunion of the 30 year out class winter in flimsy tents or barracks tutions, The Avenida de Ma wine party, whercas today such par-| wives of England 1s that they areiat the Yale Law school Monday in | without fire or warm clothing. Which is Buenos Aires’ Broadway, | ties were held only on speeial oc- | in the habit of buying the best and New Haven, TI ey were mempers | Iire stations where clothing may i1l be a gleaming bower of electric | casions, as very few students regu- | most expensive cuts of meat, as iS o the ¢ ARI5 At HOIAW | bealar a s e tol e ands and arches, placed evéry|iarly keep wine in their rooms.|also the custom in the United school, attending with Fdwin 8.| Number 1, Commercial; Number block. The many parks and | There was, he said, no reason for s, while In France, Germany ‘Thomas, former local man who is's. Eim street; Number 3, North vlazas of the city will be planted | relaxing the prohibition mu\pmgninn:! Italy the women know how to now federal judge in this dis- mber 4, Curtls & Myrtle on this account. 1In this he was| make the least expensives picces trict. N BaP P S B st & R hodead probably correct, for strict temper-| into nourishing and tempting dishes. e g Number 6. Kensington ance has not yet in Oxford acquired| Lady Trustram Bve, one of the RED MEN TO MEET. |2 Tohse who have no tags | | the full status of a’virtue. The col-| leaders In the movement to teach| A meeting of Mattabeselt tribe, . |gre asked to bring the clothing just leges all sell beer, ale and Wines| young women the art of cooking. 0. R. M., will be he lay even- | the same. Bundles should not be to their students on long and easy | cald recently: “The trouble fs that ' ing in Judd's hall. Ofiicers for the |y A pealin aer credits and provide these drinks in|at the present time we have too | next term will be nominated and AN GPERATIUN helr halls, and geveral operate their | fow trained cooks. Owing to the | degree work carried out. On Sun- | own breweries. servant problem, many persons are | e 21, tl nual me But at that there has been great | now doing cooking who have really | exerei e held with Indianola ad no Instruction in it. In the Lon-! council, me s of both so 5 . inkham’” century chronicler, &peaking of| gon City council we have been con- | meeting g few cemetery hevedbyLydlaE'P RMS | ;o] college Which 1s now Known | gidering how many thousand per- Lol e Vegetable ComPO\md as the intellectual leader of OXord, | gong g year we will be o train | The United States exports 30,000, Sl fsald, “ihere Is over agalnst Balllol] ag cooks, That there is a icmandy 000 dozen eggs a year. a horrid, dingy, scandalous alec- AT e et = i t0,—<" ou ! for their services has n thown 1 ] i ]w‘“t‘:\:\r?nhe]gi. ne]hfs’flfipfifi‘e'. vor S SLt Lonimony by the number of housewives who 3 SUN. — MON. L —— weeks 1 suffered | tinkers. Here the Balliol men | already have applied for cur young | e with awful pains | tinually do lie, and by perpetual| oo oo g eee from inflamma. | bibbing add art to their matural| T L BEECE ew r' a'n tion and I was in | stupidity to make themselves Per-| .yt 4o sorced fn the English mid- su«'hmlser%thdnll fect sols, dleclass homes, and the average had to bend dou 5 e housewife has no idea what is u Helolps: reliet. Women Will Have Busy meant by vitamins and other food " coul not y & T y o8 M h ¢ honsckeeping SEE § >t . W, SENSA- touched or jarred, Summer at Wembley | alucs. Much of the housckeening SEE SOMETHING NEW, SENSA i s 0 money is spent in buying what is TIONAL, COLOSSATL. had awful pain all London, June 12 (®—Women are believed to be good food, Lut what 2 over my abdomen | coing to have more to do with this | Pelieved 10 be Eoad food. but what VIBBERTS' FIELD andcouldnottouch | ycar's Wembiey Exhibition [T LAt L e i ol my feet to the |iney qid last year. Queen Mary ‘ X vas im- : il ihe|up bone and muscle. Menus are floor. "It Wasim- 'y pay many more visit during the e s o T possible for me to stréwzll\ttfinkug‘ 8"“’ summer, if her engagements per- | MON¢ ~d ; the pains never ccased. I took treat- |, ;.- < ments for some time and finally was | "0 G dency of the and Hamlin STAGE DANCING TAUGHT (on fine horses to ride before and | erseas for the use of the 40,000 | a neighbor who has no children in | in the White House Thomas Jefferson received a 1,600-pound cheese. LYCEUM “Playthings of Desire” With ESTELLE TAYLOR (Jack Dempsey's Wife) Story Based on the Famous New York Stiliman Divorce Case Added Attraction Sunday Only “THE STRANGE RIDER”—with Yakima Canutt 13, 1025 SOGIETY DIVORCE SHOWN AT LYCELM “‘Play(hings of Desire” Based on Famous Scandal Case Thrills, emotions and suspense are promised in “Playthings of De- | stre,”” the which opena tomorrow night at the Lyceum naw production | to continue through next Wednes- | day. The story, adapted from a | tovel by J. Wesley Putnam, tells of | a sensational divorce, with a so- ciety woman, ler financler-husband, and a Prench-Indian guide as the | princlpal characters, The life of | Broadway, of Long lsiand society and of a rich man's hunting lodge in the north woods are said to be | faithfully pictured. The cast in- cludes Lstelle Taylor (Jack Demp- | scy's wiel) Dagmar Godowsky, 1d- | mund Breese, Mahlon Hamiiton, | Mary Thurman, Walter Miller and | Lawford Davidson. | On tomorrow night's bill also will | be the usual selected comed! nd | news recl and another feature, he | Strange Rider” in which Yakima | Canutt, the world's champion cow-| boy, plays the leading role. It is a story of western cattle rustlers. kEna | Gregory, diminutive blonde beauty, | is the leading lady. | For the last half of next week Lwo | | more big attractions have been | booked — “Greater than Marriage" {and “The Crackerjack.” | Hines over big as a screen com- | edian. When Hines went to Florida to flim some of the scenes at Miami he was simply flooded with socla) | Invitatio and those who seen his picture admit that he carn- ed them, | | | than Marriage” is a Alm that will| | appeal to all, having the elements| | of popular interest that attract at- | tention. It gives Intimate pictures| of the lives of famous stars and is enacted by a cast including Lou | Tellegan, Majorie Daw, and Dag mar Godowsky. Tyronne Power | also has a big role in this picture. | | | STAGE AND SCREEN Mae Marsh in “Tide of Passion” is one of the new pictures which the | Lyceum has booked. Another com- ing soon is “The Parasite,” starring {Owen Moore and Madge Bellamy, | Alleen Pripgle in “Wildfire,” the fa- | mons stage success, also is to be pre- sented at this theater. clle Taylor, who now is Mrs, Willlam Harrison Dempsey, wife of "h»: well known heavyweight cham- pion, has the featured role in the Lyceum production “Playthings of | Destre.” ~ This fs a drama written around a theme which parallels a !recent society scandal and divorce lin which an Indian gulde was prom- [inently mentioned. | Johnny Hines is a movie comedian | "popular with local fans and in “The | Crackerjack,” at the Lyceum Thur: |day, he is at his best. He breczes through a comic opera revolution in |South America and in the end puts his favorite brand of pickles on the throne, as it were, “Eppy” the new |Capitol the organist at the er, who came here from the Central theater in New York, has made a great difference in the musical programs at the Capit His playing is proving highly pleas- ing and his interspercing of popular numbers with his other sclections proves popular. Tomorrow night starts the local showing of “The Old Home Town, with Thomas Meighan in the lead- ing role, at the Capitol. The Morton Jewell Company, In audeville Mosaics,” will be one of Monday's vaudeville features and another wili be Carl McCullough, a Broadway musical comedy star, now on the variety stage. The last of next week the Capitol will show Richard Talmadge in “Laughing at Danger” and the first ser| the Treasure.” daz th episode in “Sunken Perz will present a offering as of numbers, new Ari ling gymna vaudeville one e n “Happineas,” Laurette Taylor On his first New Year's day TUES. — WED. Hamilton v tite and | hold a conference of women en- 2 ::fkm}::n; T,?‘:Q“fi“'fiié this | gincers {| by Professional Instructor, e e e NS AW ) medicine was the Best. thing Fever | i majorty or women. however, | | formerly associated with Daily 2 &8P B o did, 1 feel like it has saved my life | bl bo cngaged principally in the | Shubert and Hammerstein | | WORLD' LARGES LADIES' MATINEE I e ™ haa-aved Mo r0m & |1o1d iralve, tme mteesion o true || Productions. For appoint- | {STREET PARADE 11A%] N This Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady To Best dreaded operation and 1 am stil 1 food, ouil monstrating the || ment call Newington Valley Seat taking it.”’ - Mre. ETHEL THURSTO! latest household labor saving appil- || 282-13. Fitcts va Sale Show Day at Crow- O 394 North Pine St., Lims, Obio. | unces : | elr's Drug store, 83 W. Main st. 0LD HOME WEEK ‘ Seeing, Too | ¥ilm fans in general and admirers of Thomas Melghan in particular lighted to know that the popular Paramount etar will mak; be ¢ Tone of his all-too-tew screen ap- pearances ally when his latest production d Home We be- 1 run at the Capitol nigh s I8 a bangup story, from the pen of George Ade, famed American author and hu- morist, brimming over with swift- moving action, Dreezy humor and wholesome romance, Tom Geraghty made the film adaptation and Vie tor Heerman wielded the mega- phone. Lila Lee is featured in the lead- ing feminine role and the notable supporting cast includes such sterl- ing favorites Larry Wheat, Charles Dow Clark, Max Figman and Charles Sellon, Paradoxical as it may sound, *0ld Home Week"” 1y the tale of a successful failure. Meighan has the part of Tom Clark, a small- town youth, who tr his luck in the big city, fails, and returns to his home town. Amusing complica- tions ensue when the local folks erroneously informed that Tom is a wealthy oil man. The plot takes are “The Crackerjack” sends Johnny|an unexpected turn when a couple | of sharpers try to engineer a fake ofl deal and swindle the townspeo- ple. In trying to beat the crooks, Tom is himsclf exposed, but h ish. One of the noteworthy features Victor Hugo Helperin's “Greater| of the photoplay is an old-fashion-| wall. ed Old Home Week celebration. The Keith vaudeville bill for the Special summer wo; on request. AT THE GAPITOL 1 Will Be Very Well Worth first half of the week will contain five headline acts, Topplng the pro- gram is the Morton Jewell Co, of four excellent entertalners who will offer “A Vaudeville Mosalc,” a fast variety offering that will more than please, Other acts Include the Tex- ans In “Rope-Ology;"” Stanton and Adams in “Off for London;” Carl McCullough, the popular musical comedy star in “Bits of Travesty" and Reed and Ray in “The Bull Fighter.” For Sunday night only Willlam Falrbanks will be offered in “Down by the Rio Grande.” The | shows are continuous dally with music at all times. On Thursday | Pathe's new serial “Sunken Bflver” will begin and will be shown each week, 101 RANCH COMING Circus paste brushes are slapping | against Dbillboards, dead walls and fences today, but they're beating a new tune — the rousing, soul stir- ring song of cowboys and Indians, plainsmen and frontiersmen, for | Miller Brothers' 101 Ranch Real Wild West and Great Far East comes to Vibberts ficld Thursday, June and the Dbig sho No. 1 | advertising car, Clyde Willard in command, with thirty billposters, lithographers and bannermen on | board. is here today to bill the greatest of all wild west shows, past or present, and the second largest circus on earth, Yes, Miller | the famous 101 Brothers, who own Ranch at Marland, | Oklahoma, which contains nearly {160,000 acres, have once more as- | sembled the great 101 show, adding | to it a great far easl. |Schneider and Goldberg / Sue for $1,000 Deposit Samuel Schneider and Charles Goldberg of this city have sued for the return of a $1,000 deposit pald | or the O'Keefe and McCarthy build- have | fights through to a triumphant fin-|ing at 530-540 Main street, Middle- | town, claiming the owners refused | to epecify the thickness of the north The building was attached | yesterday and the action is return- lable 1n superior court. FUR STORAGE STORE YOUR FLRS NOW AT OUR LOW RATE, INSURED A INST FIRE, T HEFT AND MOTHS. HUDSON FUR SHOP FRANKLIN SQUARE Our Bristol Branch—Center Block, Enjoy a Refreshing Back KEITH VAL MORTON JEW “A Vaudevill THE TEXANS “Rope*ology CARL McCULLOUGH “Bright Bits of Travesty™ | SUNDAY Continuous Shows CAPITOL Typhoon Cooling System in Operation DAY NIGHT — MON. — TU other :\'masl\ing Photoplay Hit! If you want to get the thrill that comes once in & lifetime, be on the sidelines when Tommy comes marching home Wm. Fairbanks in “Down By the Rio Grande” TEL. 770 Tel, 24, Show in Comfort! Again in An- DEVILLE ELL & e Mosaic” CO. STANTON & ADAMS REED AND RAY “The Bull Fighter” ONLY “EPPY” AT THE ORGAN