New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 10, 1926, Page 2

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$2.35 Shaving Set| for 98¢ $1.00 Valet Auto Razor Strop—FREE $1.00 DePree Shaving Brush 35¢. San Tox i ing Cream —LONDON=—= Social Season, Which Nears an End, IHas Been Remarkable Because of Unusual Popularity of Dancing. Tha Lendon social season, |now nearing its close, has been remarkable for the popularity of dancing and for the new {nnovations in dance floors and lghting cifects h the dance vogue F ¢ {ntroduced into most select private homes of Muyvfair. This Is fn part a result of the comy t the ‘ tashionabl t el which the in or st filled. glass dance floor and t! of | London Aprit 1 toun ¢ must mee o most popular iese have been laid In the ball any fashionable residences The 158 18 treated 0 11 will not be too slippe ights are placed under the glass and the |whole floor 15 laid on a thick white rubber o the desired resillency. Mrs Arthur J. Stanton of New York is ons of the Amicrican hostesses to Install such a floor. Another new effect i provided by installa. fons outside private ballroom windows from which lights of many colors may he used to flood the cing sp e. Miss Mary Brown, the novellst, has a steel floor in her ballroom which reflects light with the brilllance of a mirror. A pneumatic dance floor is belng laid at the Savoy hotel o give guests the experfence of “dancing on alr.” | Floors on sp! ew DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN ST. nge are passing out. What s sou now is a smooth, firmly laid floor |suitable to the slow n nents of the waltz and igo and climinating the “shimmy” ef- fect which has been in vogue, [P— ' Gentlemen, here | are 2 trouser suits || that top the list at $38 50 PRINCE WILL VISIT IRELAND A visit to Ireland in 1 is known to be on the rain of the Prince of Wales, Trish- men who met the prince in London at 8t, Pats Irick's Day celebrations have confirmed reports ito "1’5 effect, 4 been invited to Ulster for an ext year, but he is understood |to be anxious to extend his vielt to southern Ireland also, mainly for reasons of sport. While there Is believed to be no chance of his g an officlal visit to the Free State it is ldered possible an unofficlal journey there ¥ he arranged. The prince is personally o purpose of two || POPUIar in southern Ircland, but responsible the wear of | Quarters fecl the time has not arrived when v formal visit would &t e from embarrass- divulging the ; ut and even possible danger, man—these brass serve tl ithout you are saving nioney. LE. \f.l I IDEA \l RY OLD s Who have heen con velopmenty 18, they I every day t $40—with one pair of trousers, are most. unt rns you can Ty the honor of hav! leagua of 1 ing {dea of the g first concefved the ons have been aston- on of Profesior H. A. ed student of the eul- ry of ("hina, te such Is ver knew v mills of money could g0 50 § in style! HORSFALLS 93-99 Msylum Street and hist that Chin i { l attempt to eral of which were large Germany of today. A covenant {signed by representatives 1 view 1o putling an end to v tates held out nto existenee HARTFORD “I Pays to Buy Our Cold Storage Kind” for Turs e —) \ Gir New anatmn 8 not been vho wiil be there be- Prince of Wales. However, it s © BpiL- efficient FINF. W \ll H JEWLELRY convince yon. CLOCK AND REPAIRING TheWedding Ring Shap 110 MAIN STREET, —— e ' ELECTRIC TREATMENTS 19 oF plays cards, I\\II\(IIII»\III\!‘ nal note, ¢ t elf, most of th UPSTAIRS ] with lealers o G, Of rev NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURD. APRIL Tl IR [N ety International Theatrical Convention is to be Held in German Capital Early this Summe Ing trade, YWhen the song was at the height of vogue the banana business did very well, but the trade has been alipping of late and has almost r hed the doldrum stage, A. H. Btockley, director of the largest trop- feal fruit ghippers in England, s reports of enormous profits made here and in United States by the banena trade are entirely un- Ish a line of atats mb. s from Jamaica to Eng- e, but the government is orstood to oppose any such measures, BERL April 10-—An international theatrical n. with 14 natlons represcnted, in- lrx the United States, France, Great Brit- aln and Germany, will be lerlin in £t ¥ recent luncheon in honor of James K. hailed as the dean of Acmrican actors, glv by the A an Luncheon club of Berlin. The object of the convention will be to es- tablish permnanent machinery for cooperation between tric ons of all coun- tries. The mecting r the plan of Firmin Gemler, the noted producer of Paris, who proposss an international season e &, with international c would carry 1 them specially constriucted portable theaters, which M, Gomier says would he necessary to provide perfect acoustics in all places. Mr. Hackett, however, expreesed the bellef that the portabls theater would not be neces sa in the United States, w there are plenty of playhouses whose acoustics are the best that can be provided. STILL 1§ PAVORIT! The continuing devotion with which genera- tions of the German people have worshipped Queen Luiss, wife of King Frederich Wilhelm I of Prusela, 15 reflected In the numerous floral tributes banked high about her monu- ment in the Tlergarten in comwemoration of the 150th annlversary of her birth. Among the flowers and wreaths wers dozens ot poctic tributes painstakingly written in peneil on notepaper or cardboard. One vi has sunk throw off the “c v ond the has been proud head. d as the x and charming o gh history tells but little of or monument, iting only a w ifi\l RIAN FF \ll\'\l\ amporer's widow, tversary festival has r by mutual consent. In ditlon to a series of Wagner concerts two stegirled Wagner, the son, will be ar was the Liszt, Wi 1ome of Goe gner's father-in-lav the armistice, nan spelling of the a “K” and no * dollars to find histor ould b veral thousand o resords and found th city’s founders, tirn Baldw the 1led §t Kohle serent par! a contest to find ¢ of Derlin, has conducted woman with the longest was awarded 10 a blonde Greteh- 'DOINGS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS e AR e Madame Calve Protests Against Sys tem Which Permits Marian Talley to Appear in Leading Role So Soon. e Parls, April 10 —Madame Emma Calve, great singer, the hag broken the silence of her re tirement on the Riviera long enough to pro- test against the system which has permitted nineteen year old Marlan Talley to appear in o leading Metropolitan Opera House in New Yor “No singer should he subjected to such a tewt without at least ten years' preparatory worlk on other stages,” Madame Calve declar- “Singers must be moulded slowly and gently. Often such breaks into new atmos- pheres are rulnous, Those wlhio criticized Miss Tag v's periormance forget what a ctrain she was under. I laugh now, but the night I first sang at the Metropolitan—afier 11 years & ing In the capitals of Europe—I was frigl ed almost to death.” Too much publieit enough hard work arc genetation serted, at an early age the allments affecti of vocal stude “When I was a aking hour was spent in study,” s ‘o there seem Lo be 80 many verting {nfltences that it is a wonder singers To become a great singer one must first the voice, and then one must have the determi on to learn every triok in using if, Great singers are produced slowly. lut to a great singer that ard work Is the essence of | and not FIND NEW OCCUPATIONS er court ludies from many of the rutn o lands, vie 8 driven to seek an o sal refuge of the have found a new occupation. return a pec ration and commission on sales they attend nightly the more select of the Montmartre cabarets, ready to charm with their courtly graces and con- versation such visitors as desire to avall them- selves of their socl uni tor | % ! ment for entire g Thelr presence has distinetly ralsed the tone | of these and th cess of this new attraction. women claim to have been to dethroned queens. Several of thes ladies-In-waiting COUNTRY FLOCKS TO CITY The flow of population from the country dmnrv« of France to the cities continues, d @ efforts of the government to stem n shows a de~ areas except nt to large industrial centers, growing reglons ar particularly ot toward the citie Although the population of I'rance is slightly greater than before the war, the indu expansion favored by the sclated curren createg & constantly grow demand for labor, Ab80 ;l.‘w even a large part of the foreign eclally fraported through the or for work on land. are in Parl do not exc 1,000,000, . which ‘r\r a ]ww l’lvm.l iders ¢ v slender, M. Astruc speaks with authority, he: devoted all his enargy and much apital 1n providing Parls with a mpie of Music. The temple is still visible, t off the Champs Elysces, and for the first ’lme in its existence is full every night, but that is due to Its having become a vaudeville ter, ® arrives at his total by estimating there are 7 fat 7.000 frequenters of Sunday orches- tral concerts and 5,000 who attend matinees at the Opera and Opera Comique. . Astrue recalls that when he told Camille then the veteran conductor of t X cencerts, of his intention nis Temple of Music for Parl nerely said, “Are you sure tl for music in Paris? that expert re ls a love ’Lvn 8 C .:ln 'r‘\ns(uxn,u ion costume," ¢ be change a minute or two, ac- rding to the o sion, from a street suit into a fea or gardan party dress, tion of the Paria dre The “transformation” ensemble consiets of a cape, a skirt and a frock. The frock fs made ¢ crepe Bilitie in a dainty shade and s per- uifhble for dinner wear in the ol nkers. ¥ | skirt and cape are carried out in English ced, the skirt being buttoned over the dress, ¢ the blouke of which then shows and which alf covered by the tweed cape. starts out on ping tou appearingly soberly dressed in a tweed ensem a silk crepe blouse. As dinner time sver, she goes to meet : restaurant or hotel and simply kes off both her skirt and cape to appear rtly dressed in her light dinner froek. WELD REPLIES ONGOAL QUESTION nd to NATEREOPATH 10 So. Bigh St N Post Ofce S et | Makes Statement Embodying Letter Sent to Mayor BDIEINEIRLES T D.D.S D.D.s ONYGEN RUGS SIES | John-on, . GAS RIENTAL BULL TANE N Johnson and ALL MBING AND O SROLY ADHAN 15 Grand S Felo 1io-a — ANING | \\ HE T IN HT\R%H)EI.) DINE AT THE HONISS OYSTER HOUSE 22 STATE ST. Tnder Grant's nd &1 Store Also. Always 3 Fresh Supply Home L to Take stralnt of trade, wag deci the Nere has Bee cex of substitutes, e lack of e from purchasl he fact that most v fale supply t bern in a postt time and take market. the Ing by all de ork but by rdinance fn soft coal. bas pas: not 1 any and 1 ¢ » word P per ton 1 dation ™ sAMA redustion tor ot coal §2 wholesals t e An the without fou but the pubhlie, of substity him resence nor him drop because | abstaining SOCGER CHAMPIONSHIP Bethlehem Steel alers h ates, they fon to buy advantage FEleven and Ben Millers of St. Louis Meet in New York to Decide Title, woeather April 10 (P 1al soccer téams of power, the | Bethlehem Steel eleven of Bthlehem, Pa,, ar meéct here tomorrow for the national el hasing ecertain mr\{n"\‘n P finals of the cup tle play al- have produced interceting eoc- with never a “rout” in the 11 vs of their history. been onl sions victorles were scored by shit. outs. The Béthlehem team saw that three opponents went scoreless in the championships Bethlehem's record for the Amerl- can leagne s on shows a tremend. ous scoring power whils tha Ben Millers bring one of the greatest de- se6 In the country. Weld, * ‘Pros.’ opponent auring tne | Miss P;luskas to-Slng the pecent At Lithuanian Hall Miss Anva Petuskas of this city, S will make her initial appearance on the concert stage tomorrow after- to help noon at Lithuanian hall on Park relatlve 0 gtreet, when the Lithuanian Nation- Yial League of America, district of the Connecticut, will hold one of its scrlsg of musicales. With Miss Pe- tuskas will be John Bulskis of Bos- of ‘ton, and Mrs, Mary Strumskis of times that |Breoklyn, N. Y. The L. N. Varpas never |chorus, under the direction of Peter high vola- |Bruzas of this city, will alto eing not go = A T\ILQ AT AGE OF 100 Newark, N. Y., April 10 (P— Miss Lois Allerton, 100 years old, direct descendant of the Aljertons of eolo- nial note, it dead at her home hére is of s€d by abrolutely min- | ablishments as well as tha recelpts, | proprietorsare delighted with the suc- | 10, 1926, HAS MAPLE TREES OVER CENTURY 0L Gustavas Cowles Finds Sap Is Not Ruaning Freely (p nville, fowing avus Cowles, be is a poor sap i3 as in the past, for this he can not state 1 the lieves that the extending Into April When the frost ground warm, season Mareh spring Cowles in number, grows on of land fronting on Cook stre Jate and the the sap usually to at th is group of Farmington Hne of them ke trees con farm, on good quart quarts or lass §s the duce, down or in a ehed, a are more of ucting the days a pall; This clal to The Her Aprll from the sug mits that {t row of silent gentine handling th oup and does not tap them a about a dozen tree somel sap n ordinary kitchen stove using a Why Of Course, It's Sheep Manure. ) 10,~The sap p of euch tre the proper g hrand of seed. ar, Mr. ot running ay The reason Cowl . Wit has W ondml'm n seed is specially selected. long \rrl' le‘l coldy 18 responsible, is thawed from the soil beging to grow starts to flow, t sting from n April 10, but came lat may b like something. Mr only ts afrald 11 2 4 poor one, some 50 tract t and & costs $1.00. larg ~ . ere How ave you fixed for rolling -1 in handy. It sells for $15.00. 1 Mr. | share the cost with you. equip- ot e idea. We've sold a number on this too busy | plan. of his As 8 s are tapped h year thn adequate flow eing other dutles trees varles, but tree will fill a ten- 8, however, five L it can pro- Mr. C les bolis arge metal tray, It requires about 25 quarts of sup ta produce one quart aceounts for the high price of latter when it 1s pure. is produced on the Co pure and virtually transparent. {though thls year it would pro quart, n 81 2 t enough needs to take care of during |some left over to glve to his fri which the That which farm is Al- 1y makes [ust hi: of syrup, he the year, ARCH—PHONE 106 {He does not know of another plaes fin this to build | is the latest in- | her | Two pro- nd the Ben Millers of St. Louis, | There havo | two tles and on five occa- A Rer distr rotary el cal blade, | i | ectric } | developed with a s ed in the handle through w of gears rotat where maple sap is | razor has been all motor con use it eyiindri- E R. C. 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