New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 19, 1925, Page 3

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v \ LI ol ~ Unless otherwise indic written by the pres theatrical mo t senclos for the P s SRR R RRR SRR L A A TR ARSI AN IR AR AN A DOUBLE FEATURE=LYCEUM An athletic scientlst, a girl, millionaire and the solving of oternal triangle problem are the high lights in “*Blue Blood" star- ring George \Walsh now being seen a the at the Lyceum on the same pro« gram that . features ‘Kiss Me Again,” a drama with all the in- trigue of emotional encounter -plus the tremendous romantic lure .of PaMg. Starred in this plcture are Clara Bow and Marie Prevost and Monte Blue, For the last half of the week the program will feature Larry Semon in “The Wizard of 0z, famous a few years ago as one of the world's leading comic operas, The last two days of the month, with a Saturday matinee, the Riehard Mansfield Players, Inc., will | present the stage success “The Goose Hang: High." COMMANDMENTS" AT CAPITOL Cecil B. DeMille’s piotoplay mas- terplece opened a seven day run‘at the Capitol last evening to the Jargest Sunday night crowd that| ever turned out to welcome a film production. Hundreds were turned away who could not gain admission to the theater but as the film is shown all this week there will be | room to accommodate all who will want to see this photoplay master- piece. It has come to us with more superlative advance notlces than any other picture which has ever been shown in New Britain, 0ddly enough this picture deserves most of these adjectives. Tt is great, stupendous, colorful, and moving. It has comedy, spectacle and drama. A perfect cast, a fine story, and insplred direction. What else could one ask for? The production takes a over two hours to show. It is divided into two parts, ancient and modern. In the former the pleture opens on the aclite slaves building the city of Rameses in Egypt. They are being cruelly treated by the Pharaoh, and things look dark until Moses emer- ges to lead them. He asks for their liberty, and when it is not granted ten piagues are visited upon Egypt. After Rameses' son is killed in the LYCEUM Continuous Show Dafly “TEN Now Playing Double- Feature Bill ERNEST LUBITSH PRODTUOTION “Kiss Me Again” with MARIE, PROVOST MONTE BLUE als GeorgemWalsh in “BLUE - BLOOD” Come and Hear Ben Irving and His Orchestra LADIES® MATI 'This Coupon and 10 Cents Will Admit Any Tady to Best Seat CHILDREN'S MATINEE 10c - Tt sl & {riage” in the wild ot South Ameri- little | ) S8 RN S b v lces and reviews in this column are respective amusement company. last of the plagues, Rameses orders the Hebrews to leave, They go with aching bodies and glad hearts over the desert sands. This part of the picture is done in natural colors and in its sweep is overwhelming. The follow scenes showing Moses receiving the commandments on the mount, the children of Israel wor- shipping the golden calf in a wild orgy, and finally the fade-out in | which Moses, wratful at seeing his | people's treachery, flings the tablets which he had reecived on the rocks, | smashing them into a thousand parts, The plcture will be shown 4 times | daily at 2:30-4:30- and 9:15. | There will he a speclal show for | &chool children each day at 4:30. An augmented orchestra with the | original music score is one of the features, 7:06, “HTS SUPREME MOMENT” AT PALACE Red.hot romance is the dominant katnote of “His Supreme Moment,” the new First National picture now playing at the Palace theater. A young mining engineer falls in love with a successful Broadway act- ress. They attempt the unusual ex- periment of a platonic “trial mar- ea, where the man’s mining interest ecall him. A mutiny of the native miners ends in a thrilling night at- tack which the girl repels, and in which she saves the man from death in the burning mine buildings. Despite their real love for one an- other, the trial marriage fails when another woman, who is also in love with the young engineer, arrives in South America and persuades them to abandon their venture, The vaundeville blll will offer four rood acts with the Guatamala Revue, Calm and Gale, Kinzo, and Myers and Amy. Thursday night will be “Pay Nite™ and £100.00 in cash will be distribu- ted to the first 600 people purchas- ing tickets to sce “Rugged Water™ Beginning Sunday night for three days only “The Pony Express’ will be offared. Piles Disappear No Cutting or Salves Needed External treatments seldom cure Plles. No do surgical operations. The cause is inside—bad circula- tion. The blood is stagnant, the veins flabby. The bowel walls are parts almost dead. To quickly and safely rid yourself of piles you must free the circula- tion— send a fresh current through stagnant pools. Internal treatment weak, the is the one safe method. Ointments and cutting won't do it. J. 8. Leonhardt, M.D., a special- ist, set at work some find a real internal remedy for pil He succeeded. He named his pre- seription HEM-ROID and fried it-in 1,000 cases before he was satisfied. Now HEM-ROID fs sold by drug- gists everywhere under guarantee. Tt is & harmless tablet, easy to take and can always be found at your druggist’s, who wil gladly refund tha purchase price to any dissatisfied “The .Most Wonderful Pict; ADOLPI JESSE /// CECILB.D Qic "THE Nita Naldi, Jul CAPITO Britain’—=S0 Said the Largest Crowd That Ever Attended This Theater Greatest Paramount Richard Dix, Theodore Roberts, Joy, Agnes Ayres, Robert Edeson, Charles De Roche, 4 Continuous Shows—2:30, 4:30, 7:05, 9:15 Children After School, 4.30, 20c customer. ALL THIS WEEK ure That Ever Came to New H ZUKOR L LASKY st e MILLE'S ture TEN Monte Blue, Leatrice ia Faye and 500 Others A\I;zn|éfil;&>6ltthest;a Original Music Score Effects OQur Regular Prices Matinees—20¢, 35c Evenings—35c¢, 50c BRIEF ITEMS FROM | and kindred subjects. ars ago to | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1925, PARK LANE IS SLIPPING, BRITISH ISLES News Gatherers Send in Their Bits London, Oct. 19 (A—The inquisi- tive British public who long have wondered with just what degree of amicability the conservative prime minister, Stanley Baldwin, and his| soclallst, Oliver, meet in the family | circle have learned with relief that | their political differences do not in- | terfere with the harmony prevailing | at No. 10 Downing street and the | premier's other residences. Although the father and son op- pose each other's polltical principles | on the platiorm, the premier's daughter has revealed to a group of | friends that the home conversation | of the two is limited to the weather | “They long ago ceased their at.| tempts to convert each other,” Miss Baldwin is quoted as having said, | “and I do not think politics hui been mentioned while both were in the house for years, 1 am sure that father must scow! a little when the newspapers play up Oliver's attacks on the conservative party, but this does not interfere with our family | relations. The rest of us are good | conservatives.” | The politically wayward Oliver, however, is a sore thorn in the side! of many veteran conservatives, who feel it an afront that the son of | their party leader should have en-| tered the ranks of the socialists and ehould be attacking the policies of | his parent. London's “little season” {s now in full swing, with the court back at Buckingham palace, and the soclety | folk who have been recuperating abroad during the summer have re- turned to the London round of galety | with renewed interest. In the day- | time they have found during their | shopping tours that another chunk of new buildings has been added to | the scheme to improve Regent street | and that their favorite Bond street, the shopping center of the city, has been repaved and {ts 6tores re- furnished and made more alluring than ever. The British motor show at Olympia is said this year to be one of the best in the 19 years history of that institution. Sightseeing is also part of the daytime program of returning society people, and there is plenty to do and see, The theatrical season is a flour- ishing one, and the playhouse man- | agers have profited by putting on several old favorites, which are proving greater attractions than | some of the medocre new plays. The incomparable Pavlova always draws big audiences and is one of the present magnets, her admirers filling Covent Garden theater nightly. The “Chauve Souris” company fis Britlsh Empire Exhibition at Wem- bley 8 drawing better The Wembley Tattoo, a epectacular production in the Exhibition stadi- um, has proved a favorite with both | society folk and the bourgeois. and it is necessary to make reservations far in advance to obtain seats. King members of the royal family, saw this spectacle last week, and the king described it as “the most splen- did sight of its kind I have ever PALACE TONIGHT—TUES.—WED Blanche Sweet Ronald Colman “HIS SUPREME MOMENT” VAUDEVILLE Guatamala Revue Kinzo Myers and Amy Calm and Gale $§8 THURSDAY 8 8 8 PAYNITE $100 in Cash to the First 600 People Purchasing Tickets to see “Rugged Waters” FRESHMAN RADIO FREE See Our Lobby BEGINNING NEXT SUNDAY James Cruze's The Pony Express Watch for the Country Store | king, and the | ure, to all parts of also playing to packed houses, while the than ever, George and Queen Mary, with other | seen.” At this writing 1,400,000 spectators have witnessed this dis- play. ‘Women's clubs have made great strides in London. They have gone ahead not only in number of mem- bers enrolled, but also in the exten- sion of thelr properties, which it is claimed have made the boards of managers of some of the men's clubs cast envious glances. The feature for the moment in the changing world of London clubs is the inexhaustible démand for | bedrooms in women's clubs, and this demand is eald to be one of the rea- sons why women's clubs, when care- fully managed recently have been | doing much better than most of the | clubs for men, This l& a curious | turnover from the old days when the | mens clubs were crowded, but in re- | cent years some of tha best known | male organizations have suffered m decline in membership as one indi- vidual after another dropped him- self from the rolls because he | couldn’t “hit the ball,”" that is, foot | the bill, owing to reduced finances. The Ladies Athenaeum in Strat- | ford Place is the latest women's or- | ganization to have its premises ex- | tended entirely because of the in- creased demands of i{ts member- | ship. Princess Loulse, sister of the | Duchess of Argyle | have agreed to take part in the opening of a new wing of the elub | building October 20. Most of the west end men's clubs now are being run on a closer margin than at any period for many | vears, Exercise of care {n the finan- clal management is said to be strict- er than any of the old timers can remember. Mr. Lloyd George {s carrying his | campalgn for the liberals' new land | program, which advocates a system | of landholding on a cultivating ten- the country. | Speaking last week at Inverness, Scotland, the former prime minister made a scathing reference to large tracts of land in Scotland which in- | ctead of being tilled are being de- voted to one month's pleasure a for rich strangers, “These strangers,” he said, | “are | | drawn from breeds that neve wore | tartans and couldn’t stand kilts in | December without central heating.” | 1t is stated that Mr. Lloyd George | intends to spend 80,000 pounds sterling (about $400,000) in his land campaign to insure it the widest pos- | sible appeal. The new land policy while promulgated by the liberal | party’s land committee, still awalts the blessing of the Earl of Asquith | and Oxford, the former H. H. As- | quith, who still shares with Mr. | .loyd George the leadership of the | | party. | Tn preparation for the fox hunt- | ing season, for which socicty, with !a big 8., flacks to the country during | ! November, many packs of hounds | in the counties are now engaged in “cubbing” or in killing off the super- ! fluous young foxes, which clears the | field and glves the hounds a taste for the sterner work ahead. The Prince of Wale's hunting | horses have recently been golng through training at Melton-Mow- bray, where it is expected the prince will put in a considerable part of his time in hunting after the cere- | monies attendant on his return from | the South American tour are finish- Phew! “Well, George, 1 suppose you've come up to see the sights of New s, Auntie, call on you fi No More and 1 thought 1'd A new Frenck process powder that is not affected by perspiration—will not let an ugly shine come through; stays on until you take it off; and pure; makes the pores Invisible; |looks like beautiful natural skin; gives a soft velvety complexion. Get this new wonderful beauty powder callad Mello-Glo. Raphael's department store. PARSONS .rerom HARTFORD TONIGHT. TUES, WED. MAT. WED. BOOTHE, GLEASON & TRUEX ——TPresent—— TheSheepman By Charlotte B. Charpenning A Romantle Story of the Old West Staged by James Gleason Eves. 50c, $2.00. Wed. Mat. 50c, $1.50 Thar,, Fri, Sat. THE NESSRS SWUBERT) AMITHFOL MUSICALWIT JUNE D oh b et 8 cherus 7 Mat. Sat. Oct, 22-24 NEXT MONDAY AND ALL WEEK The Trresistibly Appenling American Operatic Comedy LAND OF ROMANCE STAR CAST—GREAT CHORUS Symphony Orchestra 100 — IN COMPANY — 100 MAIL ORDERS NOW. SEATS THUR WORLD’S Shiny Noses fine The Boston store, T Site of Many Palatial Homes in Lon- don To Be Profaned By Modern London, apartment buflding is to rise shortly am have had their palatial homes, Negotiations have been corcludeu under which the heirs of the late Lord Leverhulme will famous Grosverior House residence of the Duke of Westmin- | monthly basis, Thursday evening, is the musical ister, to a company which will erect | { STATIERIGRY PT ”'_"’“jd”{ ' title has | e figures are effective only after | version of the well loved “Charm on the premises an apartment build- g conferred by a previ- |1y stork has performed his chief | School.”” Tt comes to Hartford almost ing. house in 1924 with the intention of {urning its famous ballroom, with & capacity for more than a thousand | rersons, into an art gallery which would rival the Many mansions along Park Lane in recent years have been into clubs, but the avenue has not vet suffered | the indignity ment house raised in its Neretofore | sacred precinets, | Miss Helen Nelson Is and Miss Rocky Hill avenue, this eity, were married Saturday afternoon at the | home of the bride, Rev. J. E. Kling- | ‘:;f,f‘,:F::;:“:vgw‘nl:fldm;‘;‘m1».1521‘:' As Result the Prince of Wales Con- T[RED, aghy, listless feeling is a common sign of T e Bl tinued to Kleep Whilo At sluggish kidneys and excess uric acid. This subtle Miss Elsle Gustafson, sister of the S “ ™ body-poison causes many mysterious aches and bridegroom. They left on a wedding ucnos Afres ills. One fecls tired, is lame and stiff, obliged to get .'('3 m:v’l\ will lve in Hartford on| Buanos Aires, Oct 19 (P —TWhile | up at night and has other annoying kidney irregularities. helr return. AR el o Ilater i lcmata i | The back aches; there are headaches and dizy spells; L s e Pl e | one feel‘s nervous and depressed. Read Household Goods on tha | yoa oo o awalted the ar. | Don't risk serious sickness! Assist the kidneys to Ciassified page and refurnish your : | home at small expense, e e each purchase of six pictures | when the show was over, : regularly priced at $9.00 ) | i 1 The wise buyer acts as soon as he i 353 MAIN STREET | discovers an interesting itom. Read | TR the Classified Ads. " | Beneflclal ‘ ETE = = L oans i New Star S i | Warmth for Wi ' | armth for Winter | | Let us solve the problem of filling your coal ¢ bin and keeping your family comfortable i | | | | SIX PICTURES 8 FIGURES BABY'S GOST Stork's Burden Adds §8 Per Month MANY FRENCH TITLES ARE NOT REGISTERED' Gloria Swanson's Husband Not the APARTMENT T0 BE BUILT To Family Budget During Fiest [ Ths ShOsPIAE Jamen Gleason Earle Booth Ernest Truex staged and produeed James Qleasor and will open tonight at Parsons’s theater, Ir iz taie of the old West, & romanes with thrills aplenty, An efficlent eotapsny, well Two Years, Statisticlan Says Only One Who Has Failed to . y Berlin, Oct. statisticlan has found that to every 19 (P i i\l Bullding Housing Many Produce Proofs An- ingenious Oct, 19 (M—A modern Parls, Oct. 9. () — Gloria Swan- son’s husband, the Marquis De La [ family each baby costs §8 per month !n\vu. during the first two years of | on aristocratic Park Lane, where | ialalse, by no means is the Gl | 3 cast, {nterprets it, prominent amo 5 f d : b ity lite, ak 1 for generations only England’s peers | rench marquis whose title does| . o, " MAKINE his calculatio | whom are Dodson Mitohell. Thom and wealthy subjects of Great Brit | not—and legally cannot—appear on | * Statistician carcfuily worked ex |Findlay, Margarst Borough, Spencer v | | a what a baby necus in the way of clothes, extra attention, doctors' {o | ONsultations, food and the like, and | then pro-rated this amount over a | period of two years on an average Tracy, Paul Jucchia, Carleton Mecy, Emmet Shackelford, James Seeley, d Ma Walzman. | “June Da; whioh opens & three ' | his birth, marriage or death c cate. To ensure that a title may be 80 used the holder 1 required register in the chancery at the min- istry of fustice. He must produce tifi- dispore of lately the day engagment at Parsons's theater ous government and that he is the eldest {n line of the last family which held it, Needless to say a per- son 6o registering must pay a fee, Only two hundred and forty titles of marquls have been legally regis- tered, but there are many hundreds of persons using the title, some of them soclally prominent and some married to American women. An au- thorlty on the subfect of title asserts that it is impossible to verify the authenticity of those of many widely known families, and that their use, | although tolerated soclally, remains formally forbidden in public docu- ments, Lord Leverhulme bought the duty and his assistant, the doctor, as rendered his bill, together with that of the nurse. They also are directly from its New York run and with a cast that promises enjoyment for local theatergoers, natfonal gailery. turned studios, embassles and of having an apart. | David Gustafson’s Bride : David Gustafson of West Hartforl Helen Nelson of 277 PARTIES HELD 100 EARLY IN THE MORN Have You Too Much “Acid?” | rival of the Prince of Wales to at- | | tend a school festival arranged in | nis honor during his visit to Buenos | Aires, the heir to the British threne |slept profoundly in the magnificent private residence placed at his dis- | posal during his stay here. | Tired out by a ceaseless round of | official funcrions, the prince refused to leave his bed at the early hour |the school feast should have begun, | which nevertheless was carried out AND COLORING 4.00 in his absence, more active elimination by drinking plenty of water, eat- ing less heavy foods and using Doan’s Pills. Doan’s have helped thousands in similar cases. Ask your neighbor ! Announcement For This Month Only! Here is New Britain Proof: 6% Prospect St back was 1 everytime I stooped, sharp, dart- the small of my back and I could v spells were quite frequent and 1 began to feel all out of sorts ne box from Liggett's Drug Store A similar occurrence took place during a trip made by the roy visitor to a large ranch in the prov- ompletely cured me |ince of Buenos Aires, where a rodeo b 9 | and house-breaking eshibition had | 0 an s 1 | heen prepared in his honor. When the traln carrylng the prince arrived | J e g e 5 ? at the ral statfon near the | Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys b Will give a coloring also, en- || .0y in I morning the b 60c all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. tirely free of charge, with | yrince remained in hed, appearing during the hard winter months. We Lend UP TO $300 to Housekeepers Only lawful interest Helpful—friendly—fair Call, write or 'phone BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY !7n|\'r-t ‘s“!rln sni.h('or. l\t shington Openorosag Room 104 Phone 1-9-4-3, i Licensed by the Btate and Banded o the Pablie gy e T E e Foase <&/ - s i A ity o O Pl What She Paid For her gloriously clear teeth was this Just accept, please, this remarkable dental test. Note how “off-color” teeth go and delicate gums become firm when that dingy film is removed T”w- cloudy teeth, yellowish,| The enemy of testh and gums discolored teeth can be made vhiter and toneless gums firmed Gina Aplerme, prettiest of French movie actresses, has quit th screen for the legitimate stage, where she has surprised Paris by becoming one of the oustanding theatrical attractions. | Film is the great enemy of teeth {and gums; a chiet cause, aceord. | is ow a ac pte ct. g - ”, S .}m(a“o,(,i fl::c"ln: to world's dental authorities, 5 ke |of most tooth and gum troubles, widely urging this new method. It clings to teeth, gets into erev- |ices and stays. Germs by the | millions breed in it. They, with |tartar, are the common cause of | pyorrhea. It holds food in eon- bating a viscous film that covers|iact with teeth, inviting the aetd teeth. A stubborn, hard-fo-re-|(hat causes decay. ve film that old-type denti- do not fight successtully. You can have clean, pretty teeth wnd gums like coral it you will art today. This is omplished by com- Cruise Specialist of WHITE STAR — RED STAR PANAMA PACIFIC LINES Wl wisit this city October 21 vor personal discussion of World Cruise of the Belgenland From New York November 1§ From Los Angeles December 11 From San Francisco December 14 West Indies Cruises January 23 and February 27 Mediterranean Cruises January 7 and 16 February 25 and March 6 California~By Sea 15 days. Via Havens and Panama Canal. You can't have prottier, whiter teeth; you can't have firm, pretty RCFOSS YOUT | pyms unless you combat that teeth and you can feel this film 1. Under it are the clear, attractive | teeth you envy in others. Com-| Ask your druggist or mall the bat it nd your teeth become |coupon for Pepsodent. Don't ex- many shades whiter—more glis- |pect the same results from oM- This offers you a 10-day |time dentifrices. Bagin beautify. Mail the coupon |ing your teeth today. S e e e e e e FREE Mot 'Eg_psoai“@ mmmcourm.houuilm '& Send to Run your tongus Appointmentscan be made through tening test free Geo. A Quigley 308 Main Street New Britain, Conn. NPT w— v - REATEST TENOR noon, Nov. 1, 3:30 o/Clock. Ticket Sale Oct. 24 at C. L. Pierce & Co. Auspices of New Britain Musical Club. Capitol Theater, Sunday After- . 3

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