New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 3, 1925, Page 5

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v N “ABRAHAM LINCOLN" AT CAPITOL “Abraham Lincoln,” the picture | Jhich lias been the sensation ot the | govie world, {s announced this week | ls a First National picture at the Papllul today, Tuesday and Wed- | lesday. “Abraham Lincoln” was more | kan two years in the making, and | ¥ times as many as 2,500 people | lppear in the cast. It deals with | Pl be life of Lincoln from his birth, brough his boyhood, the presiden- V and the strife of the Civil War, jepicts the surrender of Lee and | hows life in Washington after the | Yar and finally his assassination. George Rillings, considered to he perfect likeness to tha famous na- onal hero, plays the title role, and | buth Clifford is scen as Anne | e butledge. | The Kelth vaudeville bill features | we great acts headed by Billie | baker and Co. in “Variety." Others belude Trella and Co. in a wonder. | bl novelty offering; Frank Richard- | bn, “The Joy Boy of Song;” Rick- | d and Grey in “Hush Money;" | d Levan and Doris in a song and | lance act. There are continuous | ows daily : PN Pascist Party Winner In Palmero Elections | Palermo. Siclly, Aug. 3 (P—The | Yasclst party has won the munici- lal elections here in which national Iolitical interest has centered re- kntly. The Fiscists appear to have bon 50 seats in the municipal as- embly fo their opponents’ 30, | An attack on the headquarters of | he opposition by a group of Neapol- | bans who entered the city last night harked the election contest. Police lunded up the assailants and sent them out of the city after one Nea- )olitan had been injured. Other r'mms of Fasciste from Cremona, lorence and Naples who attempted | b enter Palermo were turned back by police. CAPITOL Today—Tues.—Wed. From the Life of America’s 'Greatest Man Comes Its Greatest Motion Picture. Big Reels of Intertainment \', KEITH VAU Billie Baker Co. Frank Richardson Others—Continuous Shows JEVILLE ) LYCEUM | NOW PLAYING TWO BIG PICTERES BEAUTY AND THE | BAD NAN A PETER B. KYNL STORY ALSO LOVE AND GLORY | With MADGE RELLAMY TADIES MATINEF Thix Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady to Best Seats. HARTFORD ONE WEDK STARTING TONGHT EVENING K:15, Mat. Tues, Wed. T and St T PLAYERS AL WOOD'S FLTINGE THEATER PRODUCTION ““The Woman on the Jury” A distinetive Melodrama with Miss Olfyer at her best Reserve Seats Early. B Lt Unless otherwise indicated, theatrical notices and reviews ko this column ar written by the press agencies for the respect’'e amusement company. - € 7 O e 28 T |er foresaw that th [ver, has assumed th Ithe trade unions, but the leaders are | \washington, replying fo Dr. Cornish, | | punction. x x x The future coursc i L Rl has hit Far Rockaway and Rock-| ] WsHWAGTE €00 re petty b away beach, on the southern shore N e ey i of Long Island, and sent ocean front | Ofictals AbWsid (18 BUIN Roe e B\ rm:“wl o ri\“)‘u‘“l"h‘xl:::i e former lungarian H\h-l'l*~r ‘ o \ foot two months ago to $ G 1t these was fo A\ vania Thousands are scrar ¥ o e ranes” \1 Hchanees: to invéat, Onelirealystatsy S hile WnIMESY CRERE S0 e g office has been open, night and day, | VM2 5 e R while none closes hefor m. The | Lhe IR atists, There s no POLI'S PALACE | |118th medical regiment. €. N. G | coltecting compa estates. GHARGES PEOPLE b)Y LILTT1L S Vet | \ | = Institute Hears Rumania At-} i tacked-Reply Made Willlamstown, Mass., Aug. 3 (@ | Charges that minorities to Transyl By Britsh Sclentist vania are oppressed by Rumanian LOVE AND GLORY AT LYCEUM |Sovernment officials were made by | Rupert Jullan, who made “Merry |1lev. Louis Go Round,” has scored again in |dent of the Am “Love and Glor now showing at |socia in an the Lyceum in connection with a [the in Cornish, vice presi an Unitarian As- address today at tute of politics round table cently made y ic by Dr. double feature bill that also has on European problems. Dr. Cornish i 3y Cynaly M 5 ish physicians, Dr. Gye told Peter B. Kyne's “Beauty and the |was chairman of the Anglo-Ameri- | (&0 PAVEERER e BR0 100 Bad Man.” “Love and Glory" s a commission which visited Gathl % i = drama of war and romance with a | L in 10 11 = pleturesque setting In a quaint little rule of v afficlals Svas - higher authoritics RndlNarten: eroell in- | “Any compl EFrenchi village, the principal ch acters being woven around thos volved in the Franco-Prussian war. |prongi I e o T TRy The program for the last halt of |ovils were those of a military ocen was hopeless Evicted People Live, | stepanusnter: ofi Captain ) Misse neock, Dona | xey P the week brings Mary Philbin In |pation. The minority organizations Resinol cleared away [ eairai Bl Gsbmany, Aug. 0@y Irien of the Unlied clates Madioal cronlle andtts MR e ueho) today in a four The Galety Girl” and Monte Blue ;. mitted freedom of n- pimples in a week \ [ eldemuhl, Germany, AUB. 8 | eorpy was shot and 1ed on the | '™ “ Iy ! Ra 185 story building in Madison street, the H and Irene Rich in "Defying Destiny.” | biv: many minority schools and in-| | ¢ [ —Minister of Interior Severing ar-| i, O T Ligttenant oot BIEE U8 Coates of | edford section of Brooklyn, partly The latest news reels and a select- | iy utions of higher learning ha : | rived liere late last night for an in | Thompson, with whom she was rid- Walnut street Leslie and | wrecked AL 5 ed comedy are on every bill and .oy closed their equipment Texington, M spection of the camp which is taking | 1,0 card her home fn an automo. | LEFRert are t igh Ver i thee Ak there is “The Great Circus Mystery” | o 0% The endowments of | had been suffe care of several thousand Germans | e SUACE 0 RS T A SHEEES Imont and ¢ e oy 3 ] serial the last half of every week. | .5019 and churches have heen | pimples on n vears who have flocked across the Polish | iy frort MeKinley, where he sur. |\ Flld Preston of West Main lice are investigating on the = S spropriated, almost to their [ 1 believe, had tried everything v: | frontier into Germany the last few | o\ qored o the military authoriies. |* ; iaspryitl > explosion may have 0 LABORITES REVOLT ruin, e Rumanian officials are | (lvv_:"lhc( un for them ays, sent out of Poland because | jor iC € BE HUIATY AIOMUSS: | Are. Corneliua H o ¢ orbin | Vexalted trom labor (eoublen. Mase (Ignoring the righta gunrantec Jinous s w‘! v voted tn Mm; M:;-v:fl:;n\' u;}numu for the shaoting, Miss BUT- |Bluitte of Now JSheEn liss Allee ‘In Gincel, 01\,,‘r of the bullding, he minorities under the ‘Irianou . 920 plebiscite to fix the status of [ op 1 e k ™ |Blu 1 ives there with he! i |the minoriti ler 1l f | e ! jgtife lelgh having taken part in an ama- | The Misses Mary Doyle and Helen | ojoun e I hex (ather, who I8 & 01d School British Trade Unionists | '"2!Y come of your Resi Ul {teur show at the Army and Navy|Glaser are apending their vucations | s inr o Tiacturer in & shop tn e VA ; | “The Tutheran, Presbyterian, | t i The minister declared today that|club a few S SOCH Manhattan. The police believed the Ointment and Regarded As Fossilized By New |Roman Catholie and Unitarian It “,‘; he found his worst apprehensions | Thompson's abjections ton |churches throushout the world :m\f'l Its. After over the refugees confirmed, and| Miss Burleigh formerly lived fn| Mr, and Mis. Thomas Croshy and losi Leaders. their co-religionists in | T P IRERCE R 30 SN &R e era i L P e S b et I R Tonden L Ang sty Trar istly and - in accor-| use, the pimples disappeared co cide on relief measures. [son Is a tormer resident of Far|day morning for New Tork, where hirteen ists of the old school, wh fonas Nt G e o ( pletely, leaving the skin clear & I on hall, which is oppressively | Rocka Long Tsland. He grad- il R garded as fossilized by the new i erinteioXt Rkl RS had thought my case v hot and where the alr is vile, 500 fuated from West Point in 1924 Croshy. I 1t leadars hsuanias AN 78 Cool¥ netre-|lionstofialIimsosiptics Lo v o, you can readil children and grown-ups of both| hen Thompson appeared for Kalamazn ok tary of the Miners' Iederation, are [PYOVC! R L eH ”'". o ¥ : rjoyed at this cur sexes are huddled together promis- | trial on May 4, defense counsel was | Niagara Falls, sniling shaking thelr heads over the latest | Mecting LR e el oAl o seire ]‘J\Vl'] 111,:,".?;(";- cuousiy, with thin layers of straw | granted a continuance untll depost- | Erle from Buffalo 1o which fell, demonstration of the power achieved |Ship and In ! i i Y ster as heds. Tn other halls conditions |tions from the United States regard- | (‘roshy, r. Is a ur product.” (8 x, 8 Bloomfield St, extent that interferes chure by the unions in connection with the threatened strike of coal miners last the schools and G Dr NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1975. The expropriation in Tran sylvania was more radical hecuu!s‘lnuu medical journals in which he [onc-fourth are children, fertile land Is more scarce and the|had read many articles dealing with [ Severing commented that it v ! proportion of the population is larg- | cancer but he had seen nothing in | that BE'NG []PPRI:SSE[] er than in the old kingdom of Ru- them which in any way related to | them | manta.” y German's Claim To Priority In Can- cer Germ Icolation Not Believed |Datch, asserts that the report of his o London, Aug. 3 (P—When shown i announcement from Berlin that | | Professor I'rank Meysser, chief sur- {geon of a big hospital there, claimed | priority in the cancer discoverles re- | Keys Willla Gye and Dr. J. E. Barnard, the Eng- Thoughtixi—s case gned) Fred J. been a pretty close student of Ger. Of the 6,000 refugees In the camp could be recelved. The defenda an s vital |of court for | the defense admitted the killing, but | ald that It was not nurseries be Nis and Dr. Barnard's work. Dr. | Gye sald he had never heard of Dr. Moysser, and that he thought there | must be some confusion. | | Ot course, he added, “it he has done what he 1s stated to have done | X take oft my hat to him.” | Dr. Meysser, according to one dis- TRIALISRESUNED 1 first degree murder Personals On Trial For Misses Helen Straker man and Detty Applegre turned to tk city Saturday r after a two week cation in Munder of Young |own cancer investigations, as sub. ‘Woman Friend, [mitted to the London board of health [by an English doctor, formed the >—At the re- basis of the researches of Drs. Gye |sumption today of the court-martial Barnard, |of Licutenant J. 8 Some of the Berlin dispatches glve | an physicians name as Dr r and refer to him as it he well kn Manila, Aug. 3 Hampshire Thompson on the charge of murdering Miss | Audrey Burleigh of Memphis, Tenn, last April, the medical board which has observed 1 ompson since the rl's death declared Thompson sane — | fled they belleved Thompson was in normal control of hi. time of the slaying Tooking Over Cantonments Where - action at the | German Minister of Interfor s hours previous, over at v\\: Hinman Homestead, Burl ire almost as bad, mental | inz the officer's condltion | Hartford Typograph Cornish declav | hool and higher fnstitution ajd | from the state has diminished, the | week. George Nicoll Barnes, who served as lahor member of the house of : ndowments have been alienated and | commons for Glasgow from 1906 to |cndowments have been a R 192 4 who for many yenrs hasithe . peopls IMBIGVELS R Co 0 taken an active part in coopera- [plight is deplorable. These i 1 should perpetuate | tive movement, told the Daily Mail tions ¢ that when years ago he helped or- |a high culture. To weaken them is ganize the unskilled workers he nev- | 1o impoverish the province. Further, ¢ one day 1) rian reiorm in divid “take the community by the throat “In view of what happened last week," he declared, “the community | | must In some way resort itself and (| | become the top dog. The red ele- [deninl of the use of any ! ment, although very small in num- |except Rumanian in the courts, | direction. Makes Reply o i represented only to a small exter vicl, n member of the among the positions of authority legation At i a the great estales discriminates | rinst the minoritics.” | Cornish mentioned other al one of which was the abuses, Janguoge Andre Poi faff of the Rumanian heing dragged along by it. said the treatment of tfie minorities “Among the signatorles of last iy Transylvania conld not be com- week's order forbidding the pared wiih the treatment of the port of coal in the event of a strile, in the old Hungary. | were men who knew the goal fo Rumanians in | which they were heading and who but fout T would see blood spilled without ¢ Rumanians “while 8,600,000 via had three or four normal . the far | of events cannot be foreeast; one fans in can only think the country is march- ing to industrial chaos.” BIG REALTY BOOM Property of Hung: have e naller number eater Itnmania n more aducational institutions than they \ad while they e masters of [ransylvania,* Te said. “rhe Rumanians left them intact | «ith the exception of the one or {wo which had to be closed hecause of the irredentist spirit which pre-| teachers. In fact. | Latest “Get-Rich-Quick” is Located At Par Rockaway On ' vailed among { ¢ the Hungarians have now five or Long Island. six hundred more elementary They have over a sufficient PP schools than hefore. thirty high schools, number of Normal sc New York, Aug. 3 (A—A real cs tate boom, which operators claim outclasses Florida's palmicst days, ools, theologi- institutions, ete. jam at one point was At ke Jeacefiil Hungarian ey e ; vecord that o 1 terday that squads o combly wonld have been dispers-| to keep traffic movin ; ruth is that the Hun- b markets have sprung up by | - = their religious services the score. ‘Transactions are closed ,' irrdentist proj 2t o more memoranda than '° R | & with more men ’ ATs Dapposial those written on seraps of wrapping | S FOREC TS 1 been paper or newspaper margins. Coi- |20 ° ietannea fidence men have been quick to avail | B i b et B datior ek ihe themselves of the opportunity, Or o Al Bullile rian reported losing 81 00 "W xpropriation was a general mvas :.k{a ro 4‘1 estate GO . which prevented the spread of sult all hona fide brokers arc wear LA ism is not tr ing hadges, ons or riht itutions suffered on William #2ibert, a lumber ler e ey ] A to have made 375,000 . Phid i et | Summer || | 7’! NEW COLLEGE COURSE Colds N M. I T. Plans to Tnstitute Specinl cause f‘fé sues vor s s on- | il @adlache ‘ cers of U, S ’ | When vou cool : } off suddenlyand when you sleep in a draft, you get a Slight Cold, causing cadache, Neu- ar in or Sore 1 Muscles, To Stop the Headache and Work off the Cold first ¢ The course signed specifically to cover gineering problems as navy officers are called out iraduates of the 1 at West Point ¢ academy at Annapolis v mitted on their cre Academy or navy offic either of the who a and of Captain Howard A. Lanpher 115th medical regiment, C. N. G. Be Careful, Madam' Palmolive complexions do not come from other sorts of “olive oil” soaps WE have led millions of women to expect fine complexions from olive and palm oils, as used in Palmolive Soap. They have gained added beauty and fresh, clear skins. But some credit those results to olive and palm oils alone. And any “olive and palm” soap may claim to be a soap like Palmolive. They are mistaken. Olive and palm oils have been used for ages. Cleopatra used them— Roman beauties used them. Castile soap—the real castile—attained its fame on olive oil alone. But olive and palm oils in those forms never brought great results. Palmolive Soap has brought new beauty to millions. It has thus become the leading toilet soap of the world. It is made in five countries to supply the world demand. And one is France—the home of fine cosmetics. Just because Palmolive, based on 60 years of soap study, gives to these oils a new effect on the skin. It has multiplied beautiful complexions. Now many times as many women keep their youth and charm. There are soaps at 25 cents and over, which approach Palmolive in results. We know of two. But Palmolive sells at 10 cents—no more than ordinary soaps. Enormous production brings you this modest cost. Now countless “olive and palm” soaps are offered for like purpose. Some have artificial colors, some are over-fatted. They will cleanse, if you want mere cleansers. But don’t expect such soaps to bring Palmolive results to the skin. That is impossible. Note the unnatural “too green” color of Palmolive imitators. What does that suggest? Men don't paint nature to improve it. Olive and palm oils——nothing else——give Palmolive its delicate, natural color. Ofive and palm oils——no other fats whatsoever—are used in Palmolive. No “super-fatting,” no “super-anything”—the only secret to Palmolive is its blending. And that is judged one of the world’s priceless beauty secrets. Wash, launder, cleanse with any soap you wish—but when beauty is at stake, fake care. Use Palmolive, a soap you know is safe to use. Palmolive is nature’s formula to “Keep That Schoolgirl Complexion.” Soap from Trees The only oils in Palmolive ‘Soap are the soothing beauty oils from the olive tree, the African palm and the coconut palm—and no other fats whatsoever: That is why Palmolive Soap is the natural color that it is—for palm and olive oils, noth- ing else, give Palmolive its green color! The only secret to Palmolive is its ex- clusive blend-—and that is one of the world's priceless beauty secrets. Note carefully the name and wrapper. Palmolive is never sold unwrapped. / e S O NN al convention of the Interna- and Herr |pleaded not gullty at the opening|tional Typographical union, which His counsel stated that |convenes in Kalamazoo on Aug. 10, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Fitzpatrick premeditated | of Prospect street have left | therefore could not be consid- [ vacation at Block Island, R. I Misses Madeline Clough, Grace E, wton and ationing at Pleasant View, R, 1. Mrs, Willlam H, McKay has re- ey v T e S e T | turned home from Providence, R, I, | o she has been visiting friends, Lucy | Miss Ruby M, Lynch of Norwalk, he guest of her sister, Mrs. E. J. ht | J. Clerkin of 21 Winthrop street, New | Willlam Donnelly Maln street and Police Commissioner Iliomas Jackson of street have 8- Al South o returned from Portland, e Ore, where they attended the ane b ks' convention, fi & S NEN YORK BONB PLOT From Their Homes bomb was directed against | They were away at the time of the were among those driven from the building. Some of the tenants were jarred from their beds by the force of the explosion, I'he homb was placed in the vesti- hule on the first floor, the ceiling of Windows were broken, ate from the la hole was torn in the floor and the al union to the | front door was wrecked, A for a Newton are of South Burritt them. ]

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