New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 8, 1926, Page 9

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tten by the press sgencles for the respective ammsement company. AT THE LYCEUM “The Black Phantom,” a remark- sbly trained black German police dog en route to Hollywood to rival Rin Tin Tin and other famous dogs of the movies, will be seen for the | last time at teh Lyceum tonight. This dog goes through a serles of unusual ‘cats on the stage, testifying to the training réceived preparatory to his | movie debut. His is an added at- iraction. The two movie features are “The Last Alarm,” a sure enough | thriller featuring Wanda Hawley, | a0d Theodore Von Eltz and Jimmy Au- . and “Broken Hearts of Holly- woed with a cast including Patsy | Ruth Miller, Marie Dresser, Douglas | Fairbanks Jr. and Stuart Holmes. | “Broken Hearts of Hollywood” is B . combination of a motion picture | C2Pitol are going to romance, a murder tragedy and a | strong mothcr-love theme. It shows | a cross section of movie life with |(~ thrills, its comedy, its romance and, above all, its tragedy and disappoint- ments. The news reels and a <pecial round out the bill. performances. “The Son of will be shown at one-thi seven and nine-thirty. bill that is also on four, | vaudeville | program will be shown three times s, usual. Raymond Griffin in will be the feature of the week. There are also five acts of se vaudeville on planned to make the last this week one of the best DECORATIONS CAPITOL be a rev is concerned. of a theater's finishing touch is |ing done by Vincent Maraglotti, nr the foremost in his line in ‘ummr\ fortunate in securing the service this famous decorator and his effs |ive shades and soft blending se the most fastidious taste, he color scheme and lay-out comedy RECORD BREAKING CROWDS Of the many great attractions that the New Britain theaters have ! presented, and there were y number of ther, there has r been one yet that could be called 1 close second to Rudolph Valen- tino’s last and greatest production, ‘The Son of the Shelk.”” 1In the|arch which will be a work of ar past three days over twelve thou- wel as the upper side walls wk sand people have been accommo- twom ural paintings will adorn dated at the New Palace and cvery part of the theater. one of them agrees that “The Son of the Sheik” will take its place | the theater will be Theater Guild in New considered America’s preftiest th ter, and is of early of the eighteenth century. of decorators are working with Maraglotti now on the procen: nev e '»."_’/" nlees etherwise indicated, theatrical no tices and reviews in this column are The “Wet Paint” | half the program. It is record week of the Palace theater vaudevill | shows of the year has becn book- | ed for the last half of the week. The decorations at the renovated tion to the eye as far as decorating This important phase The management was most is a reproduction of his noted work in York, Italian design | A score With the completion of this w almost ready ey | DUOTLEGGERS GET | WATER AND BREAD, Tekamah, Neb., Mayor Protest Treatment as Cruel Tekamah, Neb, Sept. 8 (P—A loaf of rye bread and a tin cup of water made up the first rations of- fered to Roy Carson, 35 years old, Bertha farmer, placed on an ab- breviated jall diet as part of his punishment for violating liquor Maws. Thomas Nelson, under a similar sentence, which calls for 60 days in jail, the first and last 20 on bread and water, en- {ters the jail today. lect | oo fe 3 Nelson last night seeking some one to take charge of his 240 Acre farm and 270 sheep. His three | minor children expect to live with a marrfed daughter while he 15 in |jail. Because each of the men | served five days on bread and water lin April, 1925, prior to an unsuc- cessful appeal to the state supreme court, their first stretch of the diet will be only 15 days. Carson said he was not hungry twhen Sherift Smith provided him with his eve- be- [ning meal. He was arrvested late one | yesterday and spent his first thres this | hours' in jail reading. Physicians Protest Deespite a report to Dr. Tssiah Lukens, pioneer physician and Teka- mah mayor, that both Nelson and Carson are under weight and might suffer harm ®om their meagre diet, and that such a diet was “murder- ous and cruel,” County Attorney | Rhodes sald no physical examination | would be given the men by the' county physician untfl they unmistakable symptoms of illness. While Carson was looking over s habit for the next two months Max Saltman, 16, who has six days to go before beginning another ten- day stretch on bread and water, was enjoying the regular jail menu taken from Sheriff Smith's table. In the the rty, the 50, Craig farmer, was the ela- | s of oot- will hea- Mr. iuml t as here this | ork to develop | perior activity of this natural, veg- ‘rlzblc form of iodine has been con- \|l\c|l|21y demonstrated Dr. Turren- tine added. Goitre Treatment ‘ "\m\ple goitre has been shown to pear promptly under this treat- mom the enlargement of the glands has subsided. In toxic goitre, meta- bolism has been restored to normal and where the heart and nerves have become involved, these symp- toms have disappeared ven advanced form thalmic goitre of many y ing have been ameliorated. When the utmost is made ot soil| resources a population of 200,000,- 000 will be maintained without dif- ficulty iff the United States, Jacob | G. Lipman, director of Rutgers col- experimental station, New| Brunswick, N. J., told the givision of industrial and engeering chemis of exop- ‘s stand- lege try. |until Sediment In Streams | | diment carried ‘by the streams 'of the United States to the average one inch in 760 yea said, which each year amounts to o 0,000 cuble 783,000,000 tons of 10,0 yards of surface soil. “The actual effects of erosion and | havoc that it has spread,” serted Prof. Lipman, “are seen over | many millions of acres of land sur- | face once the site of splendid for- ests or of cultivated fields, but now | gullied and eroded Into a state of| L uselessness.” | Crops removed from the land carry away with them the material they take up from the soil, said | Prof. Lipman, who dcclared that 0,000,000 bushels of wheat, con- tain about 120,000 tons of nitrogen, cquivalent to 600,000 tons of sul- phate of ammon WARBLE FROM ITALY FOR VALENTINO TOMB | the Another Memorial May Be Fither & L |4 | Free Hospital Ward Or | Monument. Hollywood, Cal., Sept. § (#—The body of Rudolph Valentino, placed | in a marble lined crypt in the shad- beauty as- |y {apacialy |wor {coast lillust imarried actor, |{tomorrow, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1926. |SLIMNESS AND DARK COMPLEXIONS FEATURE ATLANTIC CITY BEAUTIES Miss America Will ot Be Selected Until Friday— American Indian Girl Is One of Those Entered. Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. § (P— Slimness characterizes the 73 beau- ties hiere for the sixth annual pageant to select Miss America for {1926, despite the recent edict of a 'Brondway impresario that The successor to Fa Miss America will not day after tomorrow, but Miss Huntington, West Virginia, already 1s been chosen as having the sweet- voice, while Miss New Orleans the iustiest. Rotarians picked at a luncheon yesterday. only is the 1926 slender, but it is dark. for brunettes predominate. Several of beauties have copper locks, and Lanphier as be selected Not style |a few are paler blondes. The girls arrived on vesterday where they the “beauty from Philadel- assembled, and introduced to the in several entertain- Judging by 15 artists and itors bhegan last night at a dinner before a ball, An America. Indian Miss Jessie Jim, who is America the Sceond, danc ball in Indian dress, and her approval of the festivities in an Indian tongue. She does not speak phia, ments. princ, Princess d at the De Wolife Ilopper, the many times will be king neptune and usher In the bathing revue that leads up to the climatic festlvities of Friday night, when Miss America of 1926, is named. NEWINGTON NEWS Stanley Woods, son of Mrs. 3 B. Woods of Main street, has re- beauty | jwould be more robust henceforward. of | expressed | | | winner of the most events, was won by William A. Willard. There were about 150 present at the afternoon session, which was particularly de- voted to a literary program led by | | Mildred Francis of Glastonbury chairman of the literary committee. | Arlan P. Francis of this town was | elected president of the association |and John W. Francis of Southington vice-president. The other officers are the same as last year: Miss An- nette Francis of Durham, secretary; Mrs. Daisy Francis Hall of Durham, treasurer; Mildred Francls of Glas- rman of the literary Mrs. Minnott A. Scran- ton of Southington, historian: Mrs. Charles I'rancis of Danielson, chair- | man of the reception committee. Alden Woodruff and William ump have returned after gpending | the summer at a military camp on Lum Island, New York. Mrs. J. Albert Brock Park, Long Islan days with Mrs. F of Floral ra B. Woods. | Herbert Welch, Harold and Victor Norgrove of and several of Mr. Welch friends from Hartford hawe returned after spending several days at the Welch cottage at Sound Grove. Rhodes, this town | The annual meeting of the W, . |H |T. U. will be held at the of Mrs. Merrill on Thursday at 2:30, Officers for the ensuing year will be elected. home The schools in town will Sept. 14 at 9 o'clock, D. §. T. teachers will meet with W. H. Mandr: 13th to complete arrangements for the work of the year. | Parents and guardians of children who will enter school as beginners are requested to he sure to have with them legal evidence of the age of the child. Unless this evidence is produced, the child will not be al- lowed to enroll. A birth certificate, a church record, or a statement from the town clerk where the child was born will satisfy the requirement. open The , Is sepnding a few | Supervisor ! y the morning of the | Britain State Normal school, will |succeed Miss Corey and Miss Mar- |garet Conway of Waterbury, a grad- uate of the Willimantic State Nor- |mal school, will succeed Miss Lamb, |At the Center school, there will be no changes in the first five grades. In grade six, Miss Alice Nelson, a |graduate of the New Britain State Normal school, will take Mrs. Bevin's rooms. The greatest num- |ber of changes are to be found in the teaching staff of the Junior High school. The new principal, Charles Bowes, of Worcester, Mass., is a |graduate of the Massachusetts State |College at Amherst and a teacher of |several year's experience, He will be assisted by Miss Virginia Cosbey, a graduate of Smith College, Miss |Gertrude Myers, a graduate of the | Willimantic State Normal school, and Mrs. Mary Bowhall, |of the Pottsaam school, New York The music supervisor has not been Iselected as yet. Mrs. K. Y. Boutelle of Hartford will continue as school {nurse, devoting two days a week to |the schools of Newington in addition {to two days at the schools in Bloom- field and one day at the schools in Rocky Hill. Miss Olive G. Williams |will continue her work as assistant supervisor. State Normal Several essential re made irs have been during the summer so that {when schools re-open will be ready for the teachers. children and 1 Mrs. Ernest Shelton is ill at wrtford Hospital. the and Mrs. Shay of Bridgeport, days with Mr | Barrows | ton, few and son, Clin- are spending a and Mrs. C, S. A republican caucus for the elec- tion of town officers will be held at the grange hall Monday, Sept. 13. Store Is Robbed in ’\e\\' Haven by Bold Burglars Sept. 8 (P)—A hold- armed with a revolver, en- Shoe Store on Chapel street, w Haven, up man, tered the Hanover | Church street, near last night, backed a clerk into a rear | room and ped with $138. The s a graduate | everything | GHICKEN MARKETS T0 BE INSPECTED General Survey fo Be Made by Board of Health —_— 1 The chicken market situation in this city will be investigated thor- oughly by a committee from the board of health and the findings of this group will be reported to the main body at a special meeting next Tuesday afternoon, it was decided at a regular meeting yesterday afternoon. The committee consists of Dr. E. T. Fromen, Dr. John Donnelly and Dr. Richard W. Pullen, superinten- dent of health. Several complaints ‘x4:1r:llng chicken markets have { been registered and there are sever al applications for such establishe ments now in the hands of the board. Due to the fact that the | situation needs careful study the committee was appointed. There is an application for a mar« | ket on Beaver street, the proprietor desiring to move from Lafayette street. In addition there are two applications for such establishments on Lafayette street and one on Franklin street. The proprietor of | the present Lafayette street place, | who desires to change the location of his shop, was present at yesters day's meeting and he told the board of his plans. s Dr. Pullen stated that the chick« en markets have always been a source of great difficulty and that he, for one, was at a total loss as to what to do. He said that there are many people who want - live chickens and that the markets are source of liviihood for their own< ers, At the same time many com« plaints are registered regarding them as to lack of sanitation. After considerable discussion it as voted that permits be granted with the stipulation that they might be revoked at any time, Later this motion was withdrawn and it was 2mong the immortal works of other | open and will be one of the prettiest great artists of the world. One |in New England well known dramatic critic summed | BB p his review with the following: “Like a great creation of a novelist or a great painting by an artist it is presented for its remantic per- tection, artistic achievement, the SEoyalagig accompllshnen; 1"q Y| musical play “Rdse-Marie” will S ! | ment. . New Palace for the last times to- day. The picture will be shown four | Georgeowkncss and D times in order to accommodate the COStume and snappy 7 remaining thousands who have|OnlY a few of the commendable been unable to attend the previous| things about this pink checked | Canadian miss Rose-Marie™ is anfe 04 hut all I can do is ablde by [ entertainment that contains most | po% L &0 A i, “1 have everything the ayerage theater pa-|,."jogire whatever to profit by the tron likes to have included In his| 7% “EEE ST DL Cherie Smith | theatrical fare: Sparkling comedy, | I SREF 2.8 (LRETERG, S oding fine dramatic action, exceptionally {12 P4 13 €€ artistic dancing and an abundance |60 PRCSREEL by of glorious song numbers; not one. | FGRC Gl TG but a continuity of flowing melo- 1. jy0q menu, sald he was loval to dies provided by the two famous 5 him and would sce that his orders composers Rudolf Friml and Her- | 00 nforced. Te said hers was bert othart. NEWSPAPERMEN IN DUEL; four days he has been given regular food, he believes he has added sev- oral pounds to his weight. Sheriff Disapproves Many law violators have similar sentences but the cas | Carson and Nelson attracted national wide attention becaues of their fight to the higher courts. The task of providing only bread and water to {prisoners as ordered by County Judge Chatt, now at Rochester, [ Minn,, where Mrs. Chatt is 1ll, is \n irksome one to Sheriff Smith, he! aid today “I prefer to give daring holdup, in the heart of the business scction, took place while escores of pedestrians passing the store were unaware of what was go- ing on behind the door. The man, voted to place on file the four appli= cations now on hand until the com+ mittee has a chance to investigate the situation. ——————y ows pof Holywood cemetery —yeste | day, will rest in a p mauso- | Vermont |leum here, Alberto Guglielmi, broth- | Flavel Ellio cd of the dead actor said today. |E. A. Blliot The Valentino mausolcum will be [spending a week in town before re- built of the finest marble imported [suming his studies at Dartmouth from Italy, the actor's native land. feoliege, where he is a junior. Mr. | A bronze tablet will bear both the | Elliott has been a councillor at a ncestral name *“Rodolfo mmnrmn boys' camp at Fairlee, Vt. Vaneltino,” and the name by which| The sixth annual reunion of the | he was known to millions. descendants of Robert Francis (1620-1712), who settled in Weth- turned from a month's vacation in Only children who are six year: {age or over or who will be six y old hy January 1, 1927, will be mitted during the first two weeks the school term. Vaccination is not |compulsory hut parents are urged to |nave their children vaccinated. | Several of last year's teachers are |returning to their positions. There will be 1o new teachers in the Junction school r at the North East school, the only change being in the ersfield in 1645, was held Monday at special room. Miss Esther John- Grange hall. The Francis cup, 'son, of South Manchester, formerly which is awarded each year to the a practice teacher in the New ate PARSONS', HARTFORD For three night and a Saturday matinee, rting fomorrow evening at Parsons’ thea- ter, that dazzling and satisfying son of Mr. and Mrs. as returned and is served performances | s described as Deing young in years and wearing a light suit and a light hat, entered the store about a half hour before clos- ing time and asked for a pair of | shoes. The clerk, Joseph Curley, was | the only person in the store at the | time and as he turned to get the | shoes he was commanded to “stick | ‘em up.” All Colored Shoes Cleaned to look like new by the Reglazing Method N. Y. Shoe Repairing Shop 445 West Main Street of | Two plans on are under consider Joseph Scheneck, motion | producer who launched the | udolph Valentlno memorial asso- ciation, for a memorial. One called | [ for the ercction of a statue in the I neart of the motion picture capital personifying youth and romance. The other provides for the endoy ment of a children’s hospital ward A campaign for funds will be start- ed at once. | Pola Negri who announced she | was engaged to Valentino and who | ompanied the actor's body here from New York, plans to return to | her work today. She said she would complete the picture on which she is working and then go away for a originality choruses by ure Telephone 2343 John Marra the men solid D —_— G Fox & Co.Inc. i HARTFORD ‘ TO CALL US WITHOUT TOLL CHARGE CALL 3500 . THE NEW PALACE Home of Select Vaudeville f)nly 4 ‘lore ghm\in'K Teft RUDOLPH VALENTINO || des, W 's pre- jndg! of |over the judge's sentence hieh has been in years.” In Carson's ge for first meal , he wa SEAWEED 10DINE complete rest. Her physician said | | BLOOD FLOWS. WOMEN BAINT e ot Wik, 72 ot e’ e i | | —ine— | y suggested by doctors. Sherift Smithy 05 FECE 0 \1"1"\\ d ‘ | , “The SON » R I N e et | ea ow. o Couple of Ttalian J alists Quarrel | DYead desired 2 f brother has given her the | > Coupleiofiliatian dou > Q prisoner has caten an entire loaf at | \picc oot oe o star Of the SHEIK” Over Fascist—Fight Near one meal. | Spanish gentleman ‘.m that in April she will make a pi image to her Nice. o will be shown for the | chatean near l"‘nli, \\nexc she will | | ~ JART YOUTHFUL FROCKS | last times today at Nice, France, Se, ¢ hang it. | it Nice, France, Sept. 8, (#) — Two 1 : o LBOIEEU0-AT:0019,80 Ttalian journalists fought a mine | Valentino's favorite dog “Kaba \ | ‘,“_""I‘}“_‘"” [ round rapier ducl at sunrise today | will be taken to Italy by Guglielmi. | . Bids M s | before a group of twenty local| = e — N e or Schoo ollege—DBusiness In three days 12,768 people i i | hills behind Nice have seen “The Son of the || "m "4 alists, who quarreled over | Shelk” at the New PALACE ||, fascist question, were Leonarao | Sid 10 Ai 10 Reducing High! = lete Camphglioni, editor of the Italian Has Gone Into Vaudeville | New York, Sept. § (@)—Miss! Clarabelle Barrett, Rochelle school feacher with musical aspira- Really vouthful Dresses depicting fifteen differend styles in the Fall w Complete New Progri | SAT. | m THURS., FRI, page in the Nice paper “La France” Blood Pl‘essm'e e o lestor ; " apaly . 3 | . S _ | tions, who came within two miles of | v ks 5 You haven't laughed yet, and Giuseppe Porta, & reporter em- lons o e roimllenat ogue—four are illustrated. until you've seen ploved by “Il Pensa Libra Latina™ a gone into vaudeville. She hopes to [aceistipaneroublispe L ARTIE 0, Philadelphia, Sept. 8 (P—Todine make enough money to prepare her | 8| Porta was wounded In the arm from seaweceds as a preventive of rfor the concert stage. The amount i |and was carried to the home of a ing to call his honor satisfied. before the American Chemlical so-| Miss Barrett will make her first The duel resulted from a personal | o™ onton tion | appearance in Portchester tomor- written attack which Porta made | “fe 5T W Cryrrentne, of the bu-| row night and thereafter she will ap- | upon Camphlionl. Four local ..y "of sofls, U. 8. department of pear for four weeks in independent { | French reporter$. none of whom had |, ocyjture, speaking betore the di-| theaters in the metropoltian district. | ever scen a duel, arranged the af-| oo of (lie chemistry of medicinal | Her act will be & song with piano | fair, which the seconds carried out |, oqucts, gald studies in the govern- | accompaniment, followed by a 10- | with the assistance of a duelling |,,q;¢ Japoratories show that the ex-| minute talk of her experiences in the | primer, 1 |cess weight of advancing years may | channel. | | Three women fainted at the sight |¢id TN, O RTINS T e { B . of the blood streaming from Por-|, jve tnyrold gland, indicating an | |ta's arm, and this caused more eX- |y, qaquate supply of iodine in the| THE PILGRIM MOTHER ' a man | citement than the duel itself. human system. | A statue to the Pilgrim Mother | § marry the Feeling between the f““‘"‘”]“g)” The activity of iodine naturally was recently unveiled at Plymouth g first girl anti-fascists has been running high | o oning in scaweed was shown to| Rock, Mass. Through her we honor he meets? in Nice for some time, and it 8| "0 hundred times greater|every plonecr woman who endured Raymond sets feared the duel will only serve t0 |/, .," (nat of the fodines frequently | privation and hardships that a na- out to do so— jriunea=ehtheRb e est used in the treatment and preven- | tion might live. Shoulder to shoul- and wow! = tion of goitre, he said der with her husband she built a Tall ones— i ¢ activity, he explained, Was home in the wilderness and reared i A e & 2 e thin ones— meant the power of the iodine ta her sturdy sons and daughters. She fat ones— —PARSONS— ||increase or restore the normal func- | cooked and sewed. She spun and lean ones— HARTFORD tioning of the thyroid gland. The' wove for her growing family. When short ones— : . abnormal functioning of that gland they were ill, she brewed potent He meets ‘em all 3 NIGRTS BEG. THURS., SEPT. 9th || 00,108 in golter, he said. | remedies from roots and herbs— | in “WET PAINT” . TEB. B1G SRS UEIGAL HID B RE “In clinical tests in which thyroid such roots and herbs as are now | and that's why = PRODUCIDRDNETHR) VORLD) disturbances—goltre in its various| used in Lydia E. Pinkham's Veget- “WET PAINT” fs the longest Arthur Harerpes Mol | forms—have heen treated, the su- | able Compound.—adyt. | laugh on record with ROSE-MARIE Company of 1007 Symphony Orchestra Warning—Better arrange for your seats todny. You will not be able to get fhem at the last minute. NIGHTS—$1.15 to AT—30c. to ACTS SELECT VAUDEVILLE OPENING THE SEASON LYCEU WITH A BANG! 2 BIG FEATURES And ‘We Mean Big “WARNER BROS. BROKEN % HEARTS o 6:00, 8:20 Reserved || shown at 2:45, Boxes and Lozes Evenings I THEATER resent 902 as illustrated 910 as illustrated 916 as illustrated 919 as illustrated | y0-pi dress of % 5 ? i DE‘CORATIONS 5 | Two-piece frock fashioned ;I;:)o(itglli}ccet\\-ill. Eol]ar A one-piece frock of Astun‘nmg twp—plege model H',” n:‘rv‘;‘-‘i‘lv':::vx‘mI;‘)\\”’fi‘x::’:;1|'|::,:\‘l::|:.o)1: of fine twill in solid colors and cuffs of checked Stljped twill. In or- of striped twill with silk ; We were fortunate in securing the : of brown, green, wine and gingham. In brown, chid, green, brown, crepe collar cuffs and ! HAvlde o) NEenn ot on el ! navy. Vestee of silk crepe green, orchid, red and * red and navy. A very front. In brown, navy, Y I:'j:p‘:‘r‘alu.l" FomRRn A You Will Hear About This on the Street de chine. navy. smart model. wine and green. ALSO— “THE LAST ALARM” Some Picture—Some Cast —AND— THE BLACK PHANTOM IN PERSON Don’t Miss Seeing This Almost Human Dog Children 10c The, effective shades and soft blend- | | ' ing of colors will please the most j fastidious taste. Watch For the Opening S Sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 36, 38 G. Fox & Co., Inc.—Third Floor.

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