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1- A Ualess otherwise Indleated, theatrical notioes and reviews (n this cofumn an ' written by the press mgencies fer the respective amusement company. u;(?“ Lyppet |'l!||_ i { : A N | e ) LR = “PARIS AT MIDNIGHT,” LYCEUM “Paris at Midnight,” a tale of exotic night life in the gay Franch capital with the noted author Bal- zac as the guide, is the Lyceum fea- | Charlie Chaplin has a new play ture being shown tonight. The story (fellow. He is Harry Langdon, is from the novel Pgre Goriot and |National comedy king. in the leading roles are Jetta Gou- ramp, Tramp, Tramp, dal, Lionel Barrymore, Mary Brian |first feature length comedy and Edmund Burns. The program |énboved a premiere at the likewise presents “The Little Giant," |theater last night, very definitely a picture of frenzied sales finance |tablishes the moon-faced and a clash of old and modern ideas. It is from the Saturday Evening |World. Post story “Once a Peddler” and [the work of the new comedian, you teatures Glenn Hunter and FEdna Murphy. of Mazie” and news events also are on the bill. For the last half of the week the Lyceum will feature one of the sea- son's greatest pictures which is be- ing brought here for a re-showing. Rush.” “TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP” Ha Lloyd. Langdon's comedy is all hi own. It is a sort of baby innocenc: coupled with an age old sadnes! series of funny events the result i explosive. The vaudeville bill for the firs It is Charlie Chaplin in “The Gold which Palace comic in the camp of the mighty of the screen However shrewdly yon view must admit that his gifts are as fine “The Amazing Adventures (as those possessed by Chaplin and s o When this attitude is involved in a s t half of this week is a big show in itself. Alexander Bros. and Evelyn {open up the bill with some very clever manipulations of golf balls land jugeling of various | Alice Lawler and Co. is very enter |taining in her rendition of {popular song hits. Eastman and Moore in their comedy skit “Bar gains” are very pleasing and Adam and Harris in thelr bit “salesman ship” take a good measure of ap PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told in “Bayer” Package ito the audience band consisting of score a tremendous hit |the show. It is only because tha the show must go on that the cur tain had to drop. Piles Go Quick Piles are caused by congestion o blood internal remedy can cause, That's why sal {ting fail. Dr twelve remove th and cut 'it relieves this congestion strengthens the affected parts. Hem Roid has given quick, safe and last Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on package or on tablets you are not articles. some d plause for the laughs that they bring Ted Clare and his people in closing | t f in the lower bowel. Only an Leonhardt’s Hem-Rold a harmless tablet, succeeds, because and gettihg the genuine Bayer Aspirin |ing relief to thousands of Pile proved safe by millions and pres- Suffcrers. It will do the same for cribed by physicians over twenty-five [You or money back. The Fair Dept. year for |Store and druggists everywhere sell Colds Headache |Hgm-Roid with this guarantee. Neuritis Lumbago | Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Each unbroken “Bayet” package contains proven directions. % Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggsts also sell bottles of 24 and 100, The New PALACE Home of Select Vaudeville Today's Program— Latest Kinogram News “RAISIN’ CAIN” A Juyenile Comedy VAUDEVIRLE Shown at 2:13, 6:00, 5:30 Alexander Bros. & Evelyn “All Balled Up” lice Lawler & Co. A Dainty Song Cyc Eastman & Moore rgain Adams & Harris “Salesmanship"” TED CLARE Late Star of “Artists & Models” and “Lada’s Lads” LYCEUM Now Playing TWO BIG PICTURES and Hls BAND JETTA GOUDAL, LIONEL 2—PEOPLE—12 BARRYMORE, MARY Feature Photoplay Shown 7:00, 9:30 BRIANE EDMUND BURNS — ADAPTED 8Y FRANCES MARION FROM BALZAC'S NOVEL*PERE GORIOT" Dinecreo By E.MASON HOPPER \ /A METROPOLITAN PICTURE LANGCDON : . —ALS TRAMP-TRAMP.TRAR GLEN HUNTER —in— Children 10c Scientists Have Discovered that pasteurization destroys the organisms that produce typhoid fever, diphtheria, septic - sore throat and dysentery, and render all other germs harmless. Pasteurization, as practiced in our plant, destroys utterly 99% of all the organisms found in milk. This means something to you who have children to protect! J.E.SEIBERT & SON Pasteurized MilR & Cream Make Sure M@Seiblzr%-" PHOME {720 NEW BRITAIN, COMN/| SUNMER OFFICES OF WHITE HOUSE Are Located in Little White Gotiage in Woods Paul Smith's, N. Y., Aug. 2 (P— A little white oottage in the midst of a pine forest on the weeded shores of lower St. Regis lake has become the seat of the executive department of the federal government. Flanked on the front and one side by a broad veranda and surrounded by pines and spruces, the building houses the business office of Presi- dent Coolidge, the telegraph and telephone wires that link Paul Smiths and White Pine eamp with Washington, and the White House attaches whose servi are gssential to the smooth functioning of the de- partment. Mr, Coolidge's oftice, where he | spends several hours each day, is on | the second floor overlooking the wa- ter. cated at his desk he goes over Ihis mall, reads the newspapers, |signs papers, dictates to his private stenographer, and talks with his secretary, Edward T. Clark. He also receives occasional visitors including persons who come to pay their re- spects or who have obtained ap- pointments to meet him after his work is dene. Driving from the camp to the of- in the White House limousine, | 1 | | mornings Mr, spends nearly three hours at his desk, returning to his vacation home Coolidge on many yin time for lunch. Two o'cloc in !the afternoon frequently finds him back -at work, to léave when the| day's duties have been p,.l"flrm“].‘ thus rounding out the routine he fol- | |lows in Washington. The daily pro- | |gram has become so smoothly ar- ranged. Coolidge Beeps Busy ! iWhite House officials say {were it not for the out-of-door su that | {roundings of the summer white | ‘house office, the president might {well be living in the capital. | On Sundays Mr. Coolidge also in | {accordance with his custom prefers | | Mrs. |to remain in seclusion. With Coolldge, he motors to the Presbyterian church at Saranac for morning service, and then slips back into camp for an afternoon and eve- ning of rest, broken, perhaps by a | ‘short ride. Yesterday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge, accompanied by Frank W. Stearns of Boston, the presidel 3 pereonal friend, motored to Paul | |Smith's hotel to say good-hye to iverett Sanders, secretary to the | bresident, who left last night for Boston to enter a Brookline hospital for observation and examination. I"or the past two weeks Mr, Sanders has been confined to his room and de- {cided to have .he advice ef special- lists on his aflment, which is said Inot to be serious. He was accom- panied on the train journey by Mrs. |Sanders, who Is to occupy the hotel suite of Mr. and Mrs .Stearns while | her husband is in the hospital. The President and Mrs, Coolidge ! were accompanied to church Sunday morning by Senator Cameron, re- publican, Arizona, who departed last evening after being a guest at the camp for two days. Program This Week 0 The chief executive's program for this week is understood to ‘be in- definite pending decision as to whether he will go to Plymouth, Vermont, on ~¥ednesday or Thurs- lday for & visit of several days amid the scenes of his boyhood. On Tues- lday Harvey S. Firestone, Jr. son of the Akron, Ohio, rubber manu- !facturer is to call for a discussion lof the possibilities of rubber produc- ltion in the Philippines. Mr. Fire- stone recently visited the islands. At 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon Coolidge will make a radio ad: |from White Pine Camp. the occaston being Coloraao’s celebration of her fiftieth anniversary as a state. The president's voice will be car- ried over long distance telephone wires to Denver, where it will be put on the air. CONFESSES MURDER OF SIX PERSONS But Seattle_Police Think Man May Be Crazy Seattle, Wash, Aug. 2 (A —Seattle police today are trying to determine whether Tom Smith, a middle aged man also known as Thomas John- son and Kelly, is &n arch-eriminal or merely a lunatic with a vivid 4m- agination. In a “cenfesfion” made Saturday night, Smith “confessed” 14 mur- ders and numerous ether crimes, in- cluding 100 robberies. A cheek on his storyAs under way today. The murders, 8mith said, were committed in San Francisco, Haz ten, B. C., Sioux City, Towa, Wichita, Kansas, Peoria, 111, Mankato, Minn,, ! Minneapolis and Kansas City. When police began te look upon his account as rather wild and ques- tioned him regarding his sanity, he admitted he escaped from an insane asylum in Misseuri but as he con- tinued ‘the story, authorities placed more ceredence in it | On the prisoner's glaim that he i killed Leonard Erndahl in Minne- iapolis last December, police of that city telegraphed last night that they were sending two detectives here in an effort to identify the self-styled slayer. i Advices descrediting Smith's 'claims already INave =been received from two points — Mankato and Hazelton.' Mankato telegraphed that a check of the records showed noth- ing to support the prisoner's asser- tion that he killed “a pgliceman and his partner there ' OLD COINS STOVEN Lendon, Aug., 2 (P—Twenty-four anclent Roman imperigl gold coins, said to be priceless as they are the only ones of their kind in existence, have heen steien froem the Victoria and Albert museum. The niissing Irmm helonged to the Sfiting bequest eollection and are fram 1700 to 2600 |is dead. | er, but NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 2 , 1926, Yonkers Burglars Miss Gems Valued at $40,000 Yonkerg, N. Y., Aug. 2 (M—Two buyrglars entered the home of Col. John Stillwell in a fashionable part of this city early yesterday and: es- caped with jewéls valued at $5,000, overlooking $40,000 worth of gems and other valuables in the rooms they searched. The robbers entered a second stosy window from a ladder, cut the tele- phone and electric light wires, cav- ered Colonel and Mrs. Stillwell with a gun ahd carried on a conversa- tion during the search. ISRAEL ZANGWILL, NOTED JEW, PASSES Was Playwright and Leader Among Zionists London, Aug, 2 (M-—Israel Zang- will, perhaps the greatest contef- poraneons commentator, on Jewish lite, playwright and man of letters, He was 62 years old. His literary reputation was won in 1882 by his novel “The Children of the Ghetts Mr. Zangwill was an ardent Zion- ist and founded the Internationgl Jawish territorial organization. He visited the United States in 1004, 1908 and 1923. During his latter visit he evoked much controversy over the political status of Zionigm, He said that any movement to make the Zionist question a political one was hopeless. During the World war he urged the formation of a Jewish foreign legion to' fight against the| Central Powers. Zangwill was born in Londen in 1864, His early school days were spent at Plymouth and Bristol. After graduation he became a teach- left that profession journalism. He founded and edited the Literary Journal Ariel and the Lendon Puck. Many years before the establish- Iment of a Jewish homeland in Ralestine ngwill had endeavored settlements abroad for suffering In Russia from the ersecution of the Czarist regime. In 1906 at the Zionlst congress held at Basle, Switserland, he urged ac- ceptance of the British proposal for a scttlement of the Jewish situation in British East Africa, A plan to Texes, was advocated by Z&ngwill, and he also suggested Mesopotamia as a homeland for the Jews. Zang- will was an early champlon of woman suffrage. for | settle Jewish families in GRI\(‘S!m\.‘ | HEI POVERTY CAUSES SUIGIDE PLANS Wie Succeeds But Husband|" Bungles Attempt Fla, Aug. 2 P—A cor- oner's jury today inquired into the chain of events which culminated Friday night with the death of the his Miami, rest of her husband, Baron Michael IBoyce-Gnrrfll(. formerly of the Rus- sian nobility. The baroness leaped to her death from the eighteenth floor of the | fashionable Everglades hotel. The baron, clasping a piece of heavy twine was found by police in a dense The baron today expressed disa pointment that his youthful wife had not died with him, as she had prom- lised. The couple met in a Russian mili- tary hospital where the baron was irecuperating from the amputation of & leg, lost in the war. They fell in love,fled ta America, and for several years the baroness appeared in musical entertainments in the | cast. “Friday morning my wife told me |the time had come go die,” the bar- on told police, “that she could not bru ligi: sai hal we the went out and s : ‘this Is the or you to smoke {ero: with n it 1 stayed late, last day on farth 1.m-1 play billiards and have {time, so you go ont. You catcl the | {last car back home. but be sure and buy a newspaper before you | come, we will spend ou himself extr: lies flocked good | boundary into Amerlcan cities to | d services yesterday -one nuns, priests and seu- nearest tree, but he could not climb. Boarding a biis, he rode 1o a tangled thicket a few miles north of Miami, where he remained throughout Sat- urday. Here he was found by police when trees 1o hang attracted attention of efforts to climb ts. WORLD CATHOLIC WATCHING MEXICO Baroness Royee-Garrett ana tne ar- | OOIIDUNICANtS Throw Support {o Harassed Worshippers New York, Aug. 2 Catholics have thrown their moral support to their church in its conflict with the | throughout ital tyranny. on is the guiding 1, of band of ding office by everal hundred C: in New York were crowc doors with worshippers some churches for a peaceful solution of | re offered in problem. Speci 1 a Patrick’s was announced th | expiaining the church point of view | larg veral thousand across th ent its arrived in New ¢ | Mexico on the steamer Regina Marla of them bound for together and prepare to Christiana, most | morning.” Spain. me of the The baron played billiards from kmw expected some |shortly after noon until late at night. | Mexico before He learned of his wife's death when |trouble |he bought a newspaper. | 'He puréhased a piece of twine land walked on his crutches to the | | READ HERALD CLAS EOR YOUR WANTS Hat corruption church attendance. Mexican Catho- | settlement of resi- some seasoni: ALL MEAT caavres| finest m HOT ROAST BEEF BAKED FISH SAUERKRAUT SPAGHETT table. L} READY TO USE (M—Roman the world | thicket north of Miami, where, he |Me¥ican government i said, he was about to hang himself. ryioes and pray@ryforuy A suicide pact of seven years ution were fl(hl’!“(l yes- | standing eptered into between the atholic churches all overj —4 1-2 ft e o e eaneat Ta ioton world in compliance with the | . singer, had lost a $5,000,000 heris | Wishes of the Pope. ' 3 ; ‘ tage in the uphoaval following tne| In Boston the Mexican sovern.| %Iadfi B}Fglle (-_lgld 1Sealccom)any lwar and trouble with bolshevii: in |Mment's new religious regulations| o the First Twelve Cus Russia, caused the couple to plan |Were branded by Willlam Cardinal| i) death. O'Connel, ranking Catholic_prelate | v in the United States, as “the most red of all re- motive, he conspirators and | olic churches | ded to the| and prayers | Protestant BUY NOW es were , and t pamphlets | [work or et any longer, and tnat | would be circulated later in the (] On High Grade Samples and Odds and Ends |we must die together as we had liv- k. 3 ¥ . ed together. lgaom her to luait until The government’s attitude was Beds’ Mattless.es and Sp_rmgs and Double D‘y Morning and we would go out to |published yesterday, including | Beds, Metal Cribs and Crib Mattresses, Feather |Goroanut Grove. get in a boat to- |charges by President Calles that the Pillow d Silk Fl Pillow k] gether. tie a rope around our me Catholics had been oppressive to | illows and Sl oss Pillows. Linoleum 40c tand die. When this was declded. !‘1;‘\!v-smnls in Mexico. 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