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Onless otherwise indicated, theatrica) notices and reviews in this column are writtep by the press agencies for the “WILD OATS LANE Marshal Neilan's Oats | Lane,” talen from George Broad- | hurst’s play, “The Gambling Chap- | " and produced with elahomw‘ effect, is one of the two big features | at the Lyceum. The other is Che Call of the Klondike,” with Gaston | Glass, Dorothy Bwan and Lightning | Girl, the last named being another | of screendom’s talented dog actors. | All youths are said to sow wild and they chose various ways. | Sometimes they are caught in the mesh of life and burled into the depths and it is a boy and girl who have met such a fate that appear in “Wild Oats Lane.” They are rep- resented by Robert Agnew and Viola | Dana, she taking the part of the | girl who never had a chance and he taking the weakling who is a vic- tir1 of circumstance. the story is the regeneration of the two and how it is accomplished b love and by the friendship of a de tective and a priest who sets an lain, mple for them rather than criti- | leing. “The Call of the Klondike gripping story of the gold regions of the far north, of terrific blizzard of men made wild by the thirst for gold and of a young girl who seem- ingly stands alone against fierceness of the arctic region. “The Amsuzing Adventures Mazie” also arc on the bill. LYCEUM| Now Playing 2 VERY GOOD PICTURES MARSHALL NEILANE of VIOLA DANA ! ROBERTAGNEW by MM LA v GLORGL RS 4 7Y based on GERALD BEAUMONTS STORY THE GANMBLING CHAZLAIN' —also— “THE CALL OF THE KLONDIK With Gaston Glass 5 Children 10¢ " THE NEW Homo of Select V: flu(h ville Today's Program— Continuous—1:30-10:30 LATEST KINOGRAM NEWS “BATTLE OF' NIANTIC” Featuring the 168th Regiment, Conn. National Liunrd | Bebe Daniels Well Liked In The theme of | ' is a| all the | Imnln ||!|| nll ll e respective amusement company. Miss Brewster's Millions A bird in the hand is worth five in the bush. That’s just what Polly Brewster found out. You see Polly (Bebe Daniels) was a poor little extra girl in Hollywood, struggling along from da to day, when all of a sudden, | like 2 heaven sent gift, she was i formed by a handsome young lawyer | that she was heiress to a million | dollars. Now while one ‘million dollars i more than most people ever acquire a whole life time if it is z\ywnl} water it doesn’t last very long. | o of course it soon dissappeared. Then she went to collect the five million and discovered that her | uncle too was broke. | Warner Baxter and Ford Sterling | appear opposite Miss Dan | As an added attraction for the program for the first half of the week “The Battle of Niantic” taken with 169th Reg. Conn. National | Guard as the cast is also shown. | Many New Britain boys appear in this picture, The vaudeville for the first three | days consists of five select acts. | Winnie and Dolly, Frisch and Sad- ler, The Giersdorf Sisters, Lazar and | Dale and Mildred Crewe and Girls. | “WANDERER" HAS GRIPPING SCE J Thousands of persons killed in | the blinking of an eyelash. One mo- ment taking part in a scene of pa- |gan revelry—the next fleeing the ‘ wrath of God. That is one of the powerful sit-| wualmnx which develops in | Wanderer,” beloved parable of the | tively which 1s booked for |ovieff, Radek, Sokolnikov and Laghe. | prodigal son, showing at the Palace theater | four days starting Sunday, A O PRIMARY INTEREST as Time for | 2. | dominant Wyoming Voters Apathetic for Voting Arrives—Iiven Candi- dates Are Hard to Find. enne, Wyo., Aug. 16 (P— biennial statewide pri- y election went down the home retch today with the opening of | the polls in one of the most apa- thetic primaries in the state's his- ss than 24 hours away singular lack of contests with absence of gen- attends the lloting | Tues vernor Ross, ic in- unopposed renomi- one ssional Che A corresponding eral schedul Nellie cumbent, is nation and seat is invol democr: con, st, either in the he November election. Congressman-at-La Charles E. Winter has no primary opposition, | and thus far no democratic candi- | date has appeared with the threat fo a contest in November. What little interest there ters about the race between Frank E. Lucas, secretary of state, and Frank C. Emerson, state enginee for the republican nomination ron governor to oppose Mrs. Ross. Em- n is the regular party candidate, endorsed by the state convention, while Lucas has gone on the ballot by petition W, C. . U. PLANS FIGHT | Leaders of White Iiibboners Meet- primary or ti cen- ing in Chicago to Make Out Their Fall Campaign. Avg. 16 (A —Plans for be waged prior to the | fall election were being considered |today by leaders of the Women's | Christian Temperance Union Mrs. Ella A. Boole, national W C. T. U. president, urged that the | eastern wets not be permitted to “make a catspaw out of the dry middle west.” “Defeat Brennan and wets in Illinois; ignore Williams in Hissouri trate on maintaining the Missouri bone dry law,” she said. “Eastern wets are trying to make a showing lin Tllinois and Missouri. Governor | Chicago, {the fight to | all other Hawes and and concen- { | | Al Smith of New York has his re- " Vaudeville Shown at 2:45, 6:00, 8:30 WINNIE and DOLLY “Daring Doings in Midair” FRISCH and SADLER “Song Writer and the Girl” GIERSDORF SISTERS & CO. “Female Syncopaters” LAZAR and DALE “The Bagonna Hunters” MILDRED CREWE & GIRLS “Song and Dance Reve Feature Photoplay Shown COMING STORY OF THE SON THE PRODIGAL “THE WANDERER” Stands Abreast of “The Ten Commandments’” “Ben Hur" cent campaign manager, George E. Brennan, running for the senate in Illinois on a liquor platform that re- {minds me of the Old Bowery days ew York. Senator Reed is alding and abetting the wets in his own state. Reed himself is so wet and talks so much about it the American people forget that Missouri went dry by 61,000 when it adopted its state mew dry law.” ‘Slaps Face and at Once Gets Challenge to Duel Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, Aug. 16 | —Roberto Farinacci, former sec- retary general of the fascist party |and for some time a stormy petrel |in fascist politics, today publicly | |slapped the face of the Marquis of | Bonaccorsi, who immediately chal- lenged him to a duel. The incident, which occurred in |the crowded lobby of a fashionable hotel, grew out of remarks by the uls which Farinaccl interpret- casting reflections upon his al actiy! | politi OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Thorough and Scientific Eye Examinations Glasses Fitted Correctly Henry F. Reddell Raphael Bldg., 99 West Main St. Phone 1185 for Appointments that is with- | bolshevik startied Georgian, been given such a vital position soviet national economy. ruling Russia appar, Specters of persons. shrewd | since Dzerzhinsky, preme economic council, than ever to destiny in his hand, apparently determined to place his own trusted | $300,000,000 e lieuténants in important positions in | 1 more YOUTH GIVEN POST HELD BY KAMENEFF Friend of Stalin fo Become Director Moscow, Aug. to he: rel; the recent the government. | joining of | Trotzky and Zinovieft, |lost him the sympathy of even his | | ‘ - Like Leon M. in power post as political bure form and more party is the sixth fall political axe within the “The |The other vitek. In the leader: {tion was consider; his outright repudiation of Trotky | ago and his subsequent opposition 13 month; the frie Alw. net.” McCORMACK Delmonte, Cal., McCormack, rise McLoughlin, net star of a 4 ated yesterday round of the annual Delmonte ship tournament urlingame and 8an Francisco. Naples, Italy, Vesuvius, whick ing the latter sumed activity, se of lava flowing Flames were and a steady here is no eruption O T S Y ST LA S G R R S TS XA a o D S A A Y S S T A RS AL N AT TG SE00 000 6‘1‘«\ VOCOE DO idol has fallen, Leon B.| Kameneff, commissar of trade, once member of the so-called triumvirate which rules Russia and one of the | | principals of the communist world, | has been replaced by a m M. Mikoian of Tiflis, a friend of M. Stalin, head of the communist party Even old time communists r that vely calculating Georgian, \\hu death of Felix E. chairman Trotzky, brother-in-law, Kamenef | sarded by trinaire communists The penalty he paid for daring to question the suprémacy of yhu:e nw was first the a member of t u, and commissar of labor and defense and now the forfeiture | commissary. ; Kameneff, whose | Rosenfeld, always has been regard- ed as one of the moderate and pro- ive elements of the regime; but his aspirations for re- Stalin and other doc- political beheaded were Trotzk eyes of Stalin immaculately groomed manner Kameneff had been called “the gentleman of Irish ade ago, doubles play VESUVIUS BRE Aug. visible rumbling danger of R I A T A P R JeW6 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1926. HANDWRITING THPORTANT the night. and Specimens of Hopkins' Found May Have Hearing on New Will |, LoPers found on |been employed and {tions to gather near San Francisco, Aug. 16 (P—The night. One man, Os | Examiner says that several speci-|apparently | mens of the handwriting of the late |from J. T. Degman, C: | Mark Hopkins, milliopaire railroad |tractor, identifying I | builder, have been found, and may |ducing him to one | have an important bearing upon the |Campo. The letter, | outcome of litigation now under way [one of seviral simil to divert his estate to 137 claimants, |carried by he majority of whom live in North [manders, read: Carolina. The specimens Fight Just Inaugurated. of Trade 16 (P—-Another re in the form of |report to you with notations written by Hopkins on the [borers to start con backs of some old letters written to jat once. 1 will be him by Leland Stanford in 1867 |days. { while the “Big Four” were negoti- | ating fo fase of the West- ern Pacific . They were| Degman, however, bad| roung by G Clark, librarian at [not wait the f | Stanford University, in a private |for he But those| c)lection placed in his care by Tim- near D ntly are no re-| oiny Hopk adopted son of the M. Stalin, a|pioneer. | ed if he mig Two weeks ago a will, porporting |go to a hotel, sayin to be in Hopkins' handwriting, was [many friends in filed for probate in superior court be glad to pu here. P« B. McCandless is the prin- |was told, however, al figure in the contest to gain a | in what as a aims that grandson of Martin Hopkins { alleged brother of Mar ers of ‘'administration for the e D n»lm; a redistribution. e youth, | (Signed) were . the young unknown, hortly after m of the su- has seemed hold Russia’s| is who is his was re- |t as a heretic. loss e pmm m the post of of the real name is bolshevik democra have in the cost him big com- to Stalin” last year. figures figura- Zin- victim |ment of justi charge of the ope {who had been work: for nearly a month. led by an act which well-dressed and and suave in | one ico the soviet cabi- . in second in the tennis champion by Tom Riseoll of Mervyn Griffin aid he eles for of Developed at World's Foremost Scienti Industriat Research Institute. Will not stain. Pleasant odor. Harmless to humans and animals. ferred against him a ed. in Los Angeles. Th granted Expedition Carefu |carefully organize |experienced militar J further evident by ti lot Ascencion Sant-aA | ranza. | rthe El POS Gride Another supposed | (Continued from First Page) |Sepulveda, is suppos the prime movers i the general round-up of the rebel |tion, is still at Jail Too Small Charges of The San Diego county jail, un-|ing in an armed ex prepared for such an emergency, |a government friend ibout one-third of those arrested |States neutrality nd an appeal was sent to the ma- | ferred against the rine base to provide a barracks with | rectos. The remainder were sent to Fort Rosecrans. The leaders of the expedition were housed in the coun- Kameneff's posi-| tions were left on the trucks in the bly weakened by court yard of the jall. Enrique Estrada,who gave him- engineer, was known to the federal al Estrada, one of | f the cD La Huerta | time secretary of war in Mex- 1l commander of the Vera district. He carried $456 in — bers of his staff captured at the SLIMINATED same time had sums that lu-uugmi Aug. 16 UP—John | the total to more than | neral Estrac ef of sta the international | General Estrada’s chief o . were elim. | was General Aurelio Sepulveda, a e seeems | tamous officer of the Mexican army, two years. He that Jie was a general in the Mexican army and booked at While no airplanes were found in : A the expedition's equipment, Faustino KS FORTH. Gargia, 30, arrested with Fstrada, s in eruption dur- ably Estrada’s chief of air service. uly, has re- |He called himsélf a mgchanic when veral fresh streams he gave his history at the jail. Ben- | all last night [dor, laborer; 'arlos Alcantar, truck as heard. |driver; Jose Manzanares, a mechan- a serlous [ic from Texas, and Miguel Valer mitted to telegraph t That the {served as a captain | expedition, forces was made |the dey was unable to accommodate only States, a violat guards for the rest of the insur- and other ty jail, while the captured muni- eIf only the modest title of civil revolution several years ago, and at on his person and other mem- | tanor and M| Another Officer Arrested had been a resident of | the county jail with that title, 16 (P—Mt designated as an aviator, prob- down its sides. |jamin Roque, salesman; Lucas Ama- |zuela, laborer, all Los Angeles, | 1“9!’6 the others captured with E |trada and before the main body of [and others captured by the govern- |insurrectos was rounded up later in |ment agents, makes the case ammq ring-leaders Documents ¢ |Mexicans indicated that a sergeant had a 8. vhich was only licutenants or sub-com- “The bearer, Ospicio w days he mentioned, ured with the zura and was brou have to wait until cha He then asked that expediti and was led by Ana, President V. who with F large ment of justice leaders. ding and participat- | pris {according to A. A. Hopkins, t ized the captured | they had |f given instruc- | Dulzura last picio Sanchez | letter ulver City con- im and intro- M. Wilson of ar documents anchez, will Mexican la- struction work there in a few SMAN.” apparently did othérs t into nidnight. ht get bail and g that*he had | n Diego, who t up bail. He that he would s were pre- nd his bail fix- per- o his attorne le request was ully Planned | on had been | men was made he identification who had in the forces of enustiano Ca leader of the | trada and ed to be one of the insurrec- according to pedition against Iy to the United United will be pre depart- nt, who was in ations here and ing on the e Correspondence | You Earn It— Who Gets It? FE owes a man something more than a rented roof over his head and a flock of bills at the end of the month. In fact, your own earnings, however received, owe you more. A simple financial plan applied to your present earnings would pay you big returns in happiness and security. Ask for our booklet “Daily Dividends and How to Get Them.” It was writ- ten for ambitious people. \ OPEN i THE SATURDAY IMMERCIA 'EVENINGS TRUSTCU 7-9—D. S. T. NEWERTAIN G, DOLOLILPLUNIINLL P20 DL L0 VOUEECOITPHOE S BRI ROI BB BB B T A ST the ners today, | in the he said. prove cha of whom |charged with violation of the gration laws, ile Borah vesterday 18th amendr meeting Ministe: what this w DOLOVOOUPOCHCLOPOLEVOLLDOCHEO O, CHrea0n HITS RUM REFERENDUM Plan toxicating. possession of Parker, Estrada, United strong, pkins | o It to against the rank and | insurrectos many of | probably will he merely |0 immi- authorities indicated. It win might a to go In Scoffs at New York State's but th is In- to Determine What dum | M “most original ' for in the tor Wil- mass sponsore Bo gotiati S to determine liquor and ir 48 different is ing ay we could have tandards and kinds of k the to th out what they discussing erendum, question is not \endment principle o ico City, eign office liquor in the ates,” the senator said. “A few days ago 1 submitted an answer to a letter written by Clem- enceau and from a New did not go to France what question 1 re e telegram York man asking me to find wanted. On of the referendum 1 people of New Yark United States to find | want. the French New Senator Borah that of wet or opponents of the 1Sth | re adopting the old lification. | ‘ or York rei- | said thw NEW TREATY Aug. 16 (P—The | 1ounces that nego- | way with Hol- | aty of amity and | presant soothing, under healthis which expires in Qct It is said thut th rnment ex- to undertake n other European Great Brit aties 1o replace gove long with uding ne Keep Your -MlmI; g that could i Don't 'be discouraged g by that facial “eruption Whether it’s just stubborn pimples a case of eczema that hu'p 1ous treatments, you can rrl\ on Resinol to set it right. ointment, “corthing injure the tend :rest does clearaway meh-mnd nd help to mal . Sold by all druggists. 4 Kitchen Cool You will find that the A &P has a selection of tempting foods for coolmg Where Economy Rules NAMCO—Fancy Japanese floaling pack—a very low price! Crab Meat We Our Own Tea ve sold this tea for 66 years—iry it at this low price! Healthful cleanliness—the cleanser of a thousand uses! O1d Dutcla CLEANSER A very special price on this old standard milk! Van Camp’s ik Untouched by human hands until you unwrap it! Palmolive soar The famous A & P extracts—full strength and guaranteed! ALL FLAVORS Extracts [ Knox Gelatine Lava Soap Red Circle Coffee PKG Q¢ 6c | Jelly Powder Country Club Sodas ASST, FLAVORS BOTILE GINGER ALE ‘/:DOZIoe or your dollar — Kelvinator Let’s get down to factsabout this question of Kelvinator prices You Anowthatwhen you buy a Kelvinator you get some- thing better. But 4o you know that you get it for /ess money, and get something bigger as well? Dollar for dollar, Kelvinator gives you greater food capac- ity—more ice cube capacity —more downright quality and beauty combined, than anyothersystem youcan buy. Model for model you will find Kelvinator prices actu- ally éelow others. Thisbeing the case—and itis —why be satisfied with any othersystem dut Kelvinator? It costs less at the start; much less in the long run, and there’s an attractive house- hold budget purchase plan forthose who desire to use it. ) SPRING & BUCKLEY # ELECTRIC CO 79 Church Street Telephone 2240 TALL CANS 20z BOTTLE R & R Chicken meals. Foods that are easily prepared — at pleasingly low prices. S, i % " i caNS 25‘ 25° v 1\ & 25 LARGE’ TIN PKG Q¢ 15 43¢ | Mayonnaise Encore 497 23¢ I 4c SMALL sc Grandmother’s Bread Ihmdrods of thousands of these loaves are s0id in New England every week — because it is better bread Doughnuts LARGE LOAF The A & P News, published weckly, contains many recipes and helpful household hints. Ask the store manager for your copy o, AXTLANTIC & [PACIFIC = Spring & Buckley Electrio Co. 79 Churéh 8t I want to know all aboes Kelvinator.