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I«""-‘l“ B o e i~ .!!!" [t TR | e '{unlen otherwise Indicated, theatrical no tie and reviews (n this colomn are fmitten by the pre ogenolos for the respective mmusement company. \\“\\\\\\\“m\“\xmmmmmm NORM SHEARER AT CAPITOL | “NO, NO, NANETITE" The bright scintillating atmo- TOMORROW sphere of wealthy New York forms| “No, No, Nanette,” that breczy, tho setting for some of the most |scintillating musical comedy hit of important _action of “A Slave of |New York, Chicago, Frisco, London i‘ashion,” the Metro-Goldwyn-May- [and Melbourne, will be seen at the cr pieture playing at the Capitol | Lyceum on Thursdgy evening and Meater Thursday, Iriday and Sat- |everything points to s sell-out, “Tea for Two” and “I Want to |be Happy” are but two of the song Dits of the show and each number has several encores. Some remark- v fine dancing spectalties are {n- cluded and the “garden of girls’ is a wonderful chorus girl feature, There will be no matineo of thiy show and but one evening per- formance, LYCEUM'S MOVIES Tonight the Lyceum she B S S S e The Kelth Albes vaudeville hill will have five at acts to ofter headed by the Kandy Krooks in a minfature musical comedy with a cast that includes comedians and a bevy of preity girls; another fea- ture will be the Mclody Revue, six | charming misses and a man who | cntertain royally with musie. Other ts are Harry Iee, the popular onologist, fn “The Manager;" the Smiletta Sisters in a unique novel- | vi and Cahill and Wills in a “Comedy Mixup.” Beginning Sunday for a run of four d the Capitol will “The Merry Widow,” the hig film [romance and action. uccess with Mae Murray as the | Tomorrow afternoon ths bill idow and John Gilbert as the nges, bringing Hoot Gibson in nee, ook Ranch” and “The Virgin.? ey {There will be no movies in ] DOUBLE FEATURY AT PALACE | cvening but on Friday and Satur. A double featuro Wil and an | %Y PrOgTARL WL b added attraction 8 on the pro- |'i€d out ram for today at the Palace the- ter. Fred Thomson, the only rival o Tom Mix, in “The Wild Bull's ait” and’ Viola Dana, the dainty tar of a hundred attractions, in Uhe Beauty Prize” are on the | and 1 sty receives 1sands e SeTieg A and his majesty recetved thousand traction tonight i added at-| 0" 00 eratulatory messages, nclud- Will be the coun- 14,2 one from Premier 3 Ly store. I The counfry store for tonight I bo featured by thesaward of sct of Rogers' A-1 silverware, A | - parlor chair and many other ul and valuable gifts will bo awarded fonight. There will be a continuous show for today, for lion,” one of the highest {photoplays, and on the gram Georgo Walgh in offer | Pluck,” a virile play of adventure, types of me pro- same RING EMANU Rome, Nov. 11 | Bmanuel ~ observed [birthday toda L 1S 56 (A)—King Victor his fifty-sixth Military reviews DIES AT 83 YEARS, Southington, Nov, 11 minzyw i years old, prom- VS Linent ineu man and former town offieial, died at his home on | Main street at 3 o'clock fternoon. Mr. Hemingway John anee was born LYCEUM The Palace Has The Pictures TODAY — THURSDAY Palace DOUBLE I'CATURE TRED THOMSON “WILD BULL’S LAIR” ~Companion Feature-— VIOLA DANA —INe— “THE BEAUTY PRIZE” CONTINUOUS SHOWS TODAY (mmnlmu: Show lmlh TONIGHT ONLY Double Ileaturo Bill “prusilla With A Million” with — Kenneth Harlan Als0 ——— Ge eorge Walsh IN— American Pluck Come and lear Ben Treving and His Orchestra Mary Carr Added Attraction TONIGHT COUNTRY STORE GA't— Set of Rogers’ A-1 Silverware, Many Other Gifts Awarded AND SAT. nill R Double Fe; HOOT (« —— in “SPOOK. BANCH? also VIRGIN® with ALICE LAKE Feature “TRE SUN.~MILTON SILLS, In CTHE RKNOCKOUT” KEITH ALBER VAUDEVILL | CAPITOL (R nday ()wh-—“ Mpentme Love '—( apps f'\mvh THURSDAY—FRIDAY— Tl'l{l):\\' Keith Albee VAUDEVILLE D —— “FHE KANDY KROO! A miniature musical comedy with Barnes, Jack Barton and a bevy of girls T CoNTINtOUS | ‘~'|r>\\\ endozas I Rilly \ SMILETTA HARRY LEE ‘ SINTERS mique Novelty” “ihe Manager” “A Comed ,—......_.__......_..‘.._.»_..__————_M e .0DY REVUE *\ Girlie Musical Rovu(‘ 2 e “A SLAVE OF FASHION” MERRY WIDOW” Norma Shearer, Lew Cody in Starting r‘ux:zlzn~“’]'lil§ NOV. 12—TOMORROW NIG! (/ HH.FRAZEES Ca fu 'S efi® O he-Warid rth and {sical THURSDAY, iT ONLY ATS \0\\ 0'\ .00 and 82.50. 2.00 and $1.5 SALE Qrchestra Baicony gallery 75¢c. Plus tax. the last time “Drusilia. With a Mil- | ‘American |acty Ito were held throughout the country, | sterday | NEW BRITAI MOVIE WORLD CHANGING FAST No Movg Is “Sawand Hammer” Hollywood, Nov. 11 (P—The “saw and hammer” screen artlst is fading from the picture. Actors may | still be found fn the Hollywood stu- | dios who in the carly days had to | bring overalls and carponter tools | with them when they reported for work in the pictures, but thelr num- ber rapldly is diminishing. Fllm executlves sometimes spealk with regret at thelr passing. IFor | these movie folk of the old €chool, who helped build the sets they a cd in and sometimes sacrificed sleep | § to protect the “props” from wind or rain, exhibited a loyalty and es- prit de corps hard to match on the modern mavie lot. Those were the days hefore 1910, | [when to be scen in a motion picture | was, to any sell-respecting actor, | something Itke being seen in jail. T'hose skilled in make-up did their| S American screen acting under assumed names |an? took special pains to disgulse thefr features so that no one coull y prove they had fallen to the film level, Eveén stage penters steered clear of the screen studios, fearing the wrath of the theater men, who had boycotted the movies as a men- |! to the legltimate Conse- quently, the actor forced by poverty| into accepting work in the films had to be willlng to help overcome the | shortage of carpenters. | There came a da, when acto no longer consente *“Jouble” as carpenters, Accord- ing to J. Stuart Bl one of the founders of the old Vitagraph com- pany, Maurice Costello was a lead- er in thiggrevolt st the saw and hammer. Beforc he consented to go to work for Vitagraph, Costello stip- uvlated that he would do no driving of nails and sawing of boards. “Do I look like a carpenter?” he said. His daring defiancc went unpun- ished, and the fact that he later became a star probably encour- aged ofher actors to scorn the car- |penter's kit The stars who supplanted Cos- {tello in popular favor, however, |were not confent with his mea victory, Today with the high-sal- |arled screen celebrity not only car- |ries no carpenter's kit — he comes a valet Yon the set trafled by a secretary and does his acting to the sobful sawing and hammering of an orchestra hired to provide him with an emotional atmos- ace v ometimes such a modern cele- [brity grows tempcramental on the lset. 1t is then that film exceutives |remember with regret the passing | and liammer |of the lof en acting. NEW ENGLANDS CONFERERCE READY \Advance Guard Awrives n Worcester Today™ | worcester, the two-day cnes of 1,200 do met lere to boos | produets docs not open row the advanca guard day. | Amonz | vesorvations werc s " vchool | until tomor- ! arrived to- the first to occupy their John £ Lawrence, | general chairman of 1 governors’ Camp- joint comi s Ch having and his 118 of th Actor Found Ir { represent Owen D, | the Lewi the eastern exchange of West Clare- | mont, N, I, \ Discuss Coal Rate From [r | sociation of fore the @ |riers wero aske from I ra Britain Is § N DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER tary board of trustees elected by the | The delegates to represent a united New | re-op Lngland Nearl This council will be composed of | delegates, 12 from each state, and through routes on who will be expected to meet an- [coal, semi-bituminous nually, and who may liave any trom points in number of special or informal gath- districts of West erings, Kentucky to Herbert Hoover, Atlantic and merce, commission has ordered a ning of the case for further g upon the following lssues: he establishmient of joint rates | bituminous coul, and | cker and Virginta points in - the New England [Kenova ind secretary of com- | Middle is expected to be one of the |states, principal speakers, Horace A. | ‘The establishment of joint rates 1 of Springficld will present the (and through routes on high vola- alms and problems of the farmer [tilo bituminous coal and col m and Louly K. Liggett of Boston, will |points In the Kanawha and Coal the commercfal interests, | River districts of West Virginia to | Every economic endeavor in New |points in the Middle Atlantic and England will be represented, Other |New Ingland states, nation known speakers will be | The establishment of Martin J. Insull of Chicago, who |and through routes on Nas charge of the Insull power hold- |coal, semi-bituminous coal, and Ings in Northern New England |coke from points in the Meyers- Young, chairman of tho |dale, Cumberland-Plogmont, and board of the General Electric com- | "afrmont districts of Pennsylvania, pany; Sumuel Ferguson, president of | Marvland, and West Virginla to | he Hartford Electric Light com- |points in the Mildle Atlantic and | pany; Arthur @. Staples, editor of | New In ton Journal of Lewiston | Maine, and Roy D. Hunter, chair- man of executive committee of joint rates bituminous | \BLAMFS HOTHER-IH-LAW FOR DOMESTIC TROUBLES | Husband the Believes e Wife Alone and to New England Ralph L. Gould of the amber nf Commerce and Jessn Atwater, traffic manager of the Hav poration. epresenting the Manufacturers' as- Connectient, are at- Could Live Amicably in Thele Own Home. Too much moth defense offered by |er supg Ihe conte the divoree a hearing in New York be- |his wife that ho had Interstate Commerce Com- |with intolerable cruelly, and claim- nisslon on the question of ship- ed the interfercnee of her ping coal from the West Virginia (wus at the reot of all the oal flelds to New England tie In the commission's order car- | to establish rates Pocahontas, Tug River nd Clineh Valley districts. This 4 been accomplished ™and the ates have been published, bee & cficctive October 15, 1925, The ate from fields terday claim of treated Ter ending mother | ir domes. troubles, | Mrs. Loretta Wells of nam ct, mother of Mrs, Becker, told Judge Marvin: “I was the hest friend he ever had, but he didn't know it. T often eir hands ind put them in each others to {make them make up. Then he says to New (I was the worst mother-in-law in | |the world." 129 Put- | the Ing life. She cla | his mpney and sha support 11, 1925 Mrs. Becker told of alleged beat- | In a factory and a few doll Ings glven her by her husband dur- |obtalus through music lessons. Becker sald he struck his wife the six years of their wedded ims he gambled away with a newspaper, but was obliged mim er occaslon, He declared $15 she happly once him on the carns G Your doctor was possible had he and his wife been allowed to live alone, but Mrs. Wells refuses to allow her daughter to make her own home, Allmony is asked as s also the custody of three children. Judge Waldo P. Marvin reserved decls | ston, on no family likes THIS breakfast, The “Ideal Breakfast Food” be- cause it is so rich in nourishe ment and yet so appetizing, In Heckers' Cream Farina is nothing but the very hearts of wheat. Pwly bits of vitality hidden by nacure in the center of cach grain—the part richest in nourishment and full ripencd flavor. A smooth, creamy breakfast dish that thewholefamily will cnjoy dayafeer day, H-O HORNEYS OA' H-0 QUICK COOKING OATS WECKERS CREAM BUCKWHFAT FLOR OLD HOMESTEAD PANCAX FLOUR. FOR MORE THAN SOYVEARS MAKERS OF QUALITY PRODUCTS Ao O T T T P T {IIT IS BT RSO MBI S UL WITH ONE SOAP THAN { charge of the business dets hnnu.m vl Dudley Harmor, { pub | | Commeree who has charg {local details of the confer | Worcester hotels will 1 capacity. | The main ef | na- | New Enz msel ence will b {tion of a [ which will he compesed |—————————— ‘ [ ARMISTICE | DANCE TONIGHT ARCADIA BAL LROOM Patrons . Ploor Managoer Musie by ARCADIA BOYS Chasles PARSONS\ TONIGHT AND ALL WEEK MATS. WED.-SAT VARL CARROLL presents A Vivid Play of Love in the Tropics WHITE CARGO with ORIGINAL N. V. CASV PRODUCTION AND ' PAT ROONEY 8MARIONBENT { Invite yonr family to see our family in ' “THE DAUGHTER OF ROSIE O'GRADY” with PAT ROONEY 3RD and world's Greatest Charleston Dancers, MAIL ORDERS NOW. | Fves. W0e.§250: Wed. Mat l Saturday Matinee 30c.-§2.00. PLUS 15%. 005150, Purity and safi:ty in are as good for clothes as for complexions I O you really believe that pure ) scap should be used only for toilet and bath, tasks must be done with harsher e soaps? and that humbler If harsh soaps hurt your hands, do they not also hurt y rthes, and the other things you cl If only for the sake of your hands, purity and safety are as important in the soap you use for household tas as they are in a soap for toilet and bath, Lotions and creams can soothe, but never prevent the cr i hours of cleaning and washing wit harsh soaps. Whereas, if you use Ivory for everything, you are as mer- ciful to your hands as if merely washed them in Ivory and lukewarm —which water so many times a da of course can do them no ir 90*. ¥ Pure ‘ 1953, by The Pregter & Gumbie On., Cinchenett And even the sturdiest and heav- iest household linens respond grate- ully to purity like I\ur} s—not only are they clean, but they never smell “sc "and they wear ever so much lor So though you may have thought Ivory too pure and too good to use household tasks, you nd it in the end such that, like many thorough economy women, you will probably never use wash the protection you n'mn.m]y give only to finer things What more could you ask of soap than Ivory can give for any pur}\nw’ Why each of the ifferent soa P for lozen soap-and- water tasks in your home, when Ivory can do them all so well? It Floats A conclusive safety test for garment soaps T is easy to determine whether or not a soap is gentle enough to be used for delicate garments, Simply ask yourself this ques- tion: «“Would I use this soap on my face?" In the case of Tvory and Ivory Flakesyouranswerisinstuntly “Yes," because you know that for forty-five years wo- men have protected lovely complexions by the use of Ivory Soap. Here is a fine, simple treatment for your complexion ‘V:\SH your face once or twice daily with warm water and Ivory Soap. Rinse in warm water and follow with adash of cold. Dry thor- oughly by patting with a soft If your skin needs it, rubin a little pure cold cream. Guest Ivory, the dainty new cake of Ivory made especially for face and hands, costs but towel, 4 Forms of Ivory Soap Laundry Ivory the big cake for general house- hold use Ivory tissue-thin flakes ready for instant rich suds Bath 1vory the medium-sized cake that floats in the bathtub Guest IVORY the dainty new cake of Ivary for face and hands — just fits the toilet soap holder