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NEW BRITAIN ONCE ROAD SHOW MECCA band of Back in the 90's Stars of Stage Appeared at Lyceum New Britain has witness «ing of many a day gitimate” stage troupe within its confin ories of o Hartford in t for the hottest sex f. - days was t} t actors strod which buxom ¢ in merged from Taj Mahal spots In the season would not he ept. Nusswin Lyceum Opens ber 2 the season of featurin J. Keog! Boniface. mpton, an old favorite here, 1 & welcome on Herald rev t it looked ful as one cou e second attraction was D livan's third appearance the ne night company of 32 spei great choir of t nothing of the in the for years t «d effectlve sce the same Perley's come the east suc Bell, known peop! Marie-Cahill, an long with n cos ng for a week dard Dighy of the Alamo, week orse Payton troup the most popular Motlon Pictures! fmportant event was the ing of Lyman H. Howe's hig s motion plctur An lities of novel featu a Der ftating. Colorc: svere thrown o Keliogg tmit: man Thomps 014 Homestead v bn its third visit to Bfildreqd Holland ¥ower Behind the Bther npovelly came @ pict “Passion Play;” this n ark good old o Flam- adults “sis Hopkins,” » was the next the Lyceum l"" \ILV‘("' boxed several rounds s hey at a p h was too fast to cause suspicion h McGovern was Joo , the famous announcer; overn, who Britain, it here ht. < now y important The Little Minister," ith Fran- s Stevens play aude Adams’ nmortal p 8 much enjoy- motion rac res of e o3 of views deal- ng about the same me at the Casino. John Drew Popular her proved no throng which tn ss John Drew in Second in Command.” With greatest of the great appeared daughter, Loufss Drew, and shew, Lionel Barrymore. An- followed the one-part immortals Jefferson, over that r of him, J othe part n in Winkle.” od a perfect otigh it puttis fan played to but without icks for the card tricks Oleott sing id Trish ason glos All of ti ind nnoce s suggestive lin iticism from the rev Perhaps many a bl 1 welcome the returr of those days for one r¢ vould give him a new s a play for 7 and not pay any Although the ved lo- autonomy upon the 0,0 irkhizes elder imit- bus- regu of their al supertors irely in horse- o5 constitut K#vichiz, who ar [ Veterans Is lasuvl hy Officers rder reads, officor of | DENTIST New postage stam last 12 months number ging the world's tofal "'\:hl‘ varicties, ¢ he ¢ .* “|X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN: EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, APRIL 23, . {CouR scHooLs | | AMERICAN FOREST - WEEK STARTS SUN, President Coolidge Urdes Ob- servation by All for protecti mber re spon national rext ous : White House. It a this year will observe the Miss LEE BRYANT Nathan Hale School to part n for the pro- | cher of of school, city in T tuation and right High Attlaboro, (e ) Br: n grad ss I Central Hig took a post g lie forestry L0GAL F[![K KNL!WN T0 AIR AUDIENCES New Britain Enterlame.“s Popu- lar Belore the Microphone 1gs in private Slamation, il have e of 1dla or semi-i land that bly grow timber ‘he problem of tion. at blessings the use for intensive forest cul- country. Our tries would jculture would a stronz ally, or farm produce { of this land would bring to o1 New Britaln stands w have radio cities that to list of towns contributed ta The length and includes nt the of cc 11 typ world. list is s of »d out that spec ached to observe on throuzh 1 last sum- tha of bringing people of the nation v for adequate protec- tion of the forests. Cooperation hetween the fede government and the states under the Clarke-McNary Act has just got to full swing as well, he said, and ates and the territories of Ja- 1 Porto Rico no songs and all the rest. is represented, zither pla exeept, New PBr has had no zit and of to th ain her pl ' program. with N Wennerberg Chorns, tenor; Mrs. Mary offeri Theron W. Horton, sop contralto; Mor Tuttle, tenor, ph C. | STARRING AGAN s Ho Former Amevican Leaguer Hits 481 Jor First Seven Games time & York, those artists presented the program | eve om that tous line (P —To the wio are ks on the add- April 23 1 out to W Grace DBaum Scott League rineficld st Stanton Ashley, wational 1 481 for t individual pac ven gam for about ir-old star, now Jaltimore Oriolos, 13 one he ten players hitting at a clip £.400 or better. Close hehind Scott Morrow of Syracuse with an aver- of 462, hitters Cohen, Toronto, 24; Whit- y church h choir > in team defen- an offen- > other i » n ronto 1s se (ond 981. to making the batting o is ticd with two honors in home-run ed out three eir- uring the first week of a total hung up also by Anny Cohen of Tuffalo and Fred i Otis Carter and Constable F Matthew e 1 pro with thir to and including 1 eight unde o victories aplece; atterficld and Wilts Miller of ster, up in of Roche 'rean wen FOR BEST RESULTS tain went offired LEARN TO DANCE! EMERSON STUDIO MAIN ST, Tt TEL. 613 chont e || BALLROOM fined program station didn't re he ts were con of 1artford. TAGE Lo e Auto Painting Expert Work Low Prices Spraying or_Varnishing 8Q. FILLING STATION F. Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. E. R, Ir. 7y or- 3 ¥ week, a mem- | S1LD CLASSITIED ADS | NOW YOU ASK ONE ‘ Tou can find all of the answers for today in the Bible. Or, if t to look there, they e also printed on another page in this paper. 1. Give chapter and verse for quotation, ember now ator in the days of thy Why did the elders of Ysrael muel to appoint a king Why was Naboth, yard kesper, put to 4. Give chapter this quotation “The walked in darkness they th shado the vine- people that have seen a t dwell In the of death, upon hath the light shined.” 5. How did Joseph and Mary happen to be in Bethlchem at the time of Josus' birth? 6. Who anncinted Jesus® at the supper in Bethany? | 7. After the resurrection, whom did Chris quest! | s, Wha was chosen to replace Judas among the disciples? How did Paul escape the Jews in Damascus after his con- version? DOPE DEMPSEY 10 feet MEET GENE AGAIN ‘Former Champion Must Show the Goods Before Match is Made Caulifiower ears closest to the ground have picked up the distinct impression that the next battle for the world's heavyweight champlon- h again will find Jack Dempsey ving to pierce the spell of Gen inney's fistic philosophy. haking a significant finger, the “insider profess to see, in Tex d's preliminary maneuvers, a an to bring Jack and Gene together gain on the theory that they will aw the biggest “gate” of any pos- Rickard has made no secret of his ve such a match but he lly as insistent that first much show whether he 1 1to a return bout by meet- |ing one or more of the survivors of Demp ntitl the heavyweight elimination murvm-‘ ment. Dove-talling with Rickard's pur- poses, in all probability, is Demp- latest statement from his train- ing camp retreat—to the effect th expeets to be ready to fight iround July. Tke probabllly is that {f Dempsey definitely decides to comg back he will have only one obstacl® to hurdle in order to gain a return title fight. This obstacle may be Jim Maloney, Jack Sharkey or Paulino Uzcudun, the Spaniard. With Jack Delaney apparently out of the heavyweight victure, by ct of the w York boxing board, the prospect now is that the winner of the Sharkey-Ma- loney scrap May 19, will mect Pau- }ino to decide an opponent for Demp- sey around July 4. Ray Kromer has reached the nitching peak at a time when most hurlers are on the down grade, The California Comet” just turned 31, d the National league’s twirlers Inst and has gotten off to a fiving tart this season with three sensa- tional victories in a row swashbuckling Pirate crew. Kremer seemed doomed to end his pitching days in the minors, spend- ing seven of his best playing years with Oakland in the Pacific Coast league until the Pirates corralled him in 1924, Starting his fourth season ith Pittsburgh his record shows 58 major league triumphs and lonly about .700. He has gotten better with age, topping the league's moundsmen last season with 20 victories and 6 de- ts—yet a dozen years ago his health wasn't good enough for him to a trial with the New York Glants, He was called in from the Pacific northwest in 1915 by John McGraw, but sent back to the same territory | when illness cost him his chance for a tryout. Now, it seems, the Cali- fornian will be a big factor in the drive of the Pirates to beat the Giants or any other pennant conten- der to the top. ! Bobby Jones, ORIENTAL RUGS Complete line of Perslan “and Chinese Makes, all sizes, Also Repairing and Cleaning. Fxcel- lent service and perfect satis- faction guaranteed. We Call for and Deliver. S. V. Sevadjian 162 Glen St. Tel. 1190. STORAGE % HUDSON FUR SHOP 13 FRANKLIN SQUARE. for the 24 defeats for a percentage of‘ the player-writer, | 1927, Lwit) Bave plen pany. Not only rivals as Chick Oui of illustrious com- ave such of his golf Evans and Francis turned their typewriters to Jou lism, but amateur tennis ranks number “Big Bill" Tilden and Heleu Wills as the player-writers. Then there are the profossmrnl uhleuc stars who have adopted the listic side-line, among them abe Ruth, Walter Hagen, Ty Cobb, ddie Collins, Gene Tunney, Jack mpsey and Vincent Richard. .1 Eddie Roush isn't alarmed at all over his failure to get his batting adjusted so far in his new eld role with the New York Giants. “I recall one season with Cincin- nati,”* says Eddie, “when connect safely in the first ten But I caught my stride later the league in battin LITTLE THEATER FOR YOUNGSTERS | Paris Begins New Entertainment Policy Paris, April 23 (®—Children in Paris have their own theater, with | plays written especially for chil- fdren. M. Plerre Humble, a child- less Frenchman, with an adopted family youngsters, brought 1t about. T children’s playhou heater of the Little | has largely replaced movies, jville shows and grown-up theater for tha small folk of Paris, M. Humble conceived the fdea of the childre: theater in 1819, He Vo up a career as a. dramatic critic 1ke the theater a reality. To theater, playing on & ternoons at the Femina theater and on Thursdays at t Madeleine is called theater, i one of the institutions of | | Paris and as famous in fts way as| |the opera. Behind the footlights of their s clal stages they find their own heroes. The favorites of their story books and nursery art are there, Two \merican funny paper characters | have become a part of the reper- toire. One is Perry Winkle, the ,comic strip terror, who has hecome Picot on the I‘rench little stage. Winnie the bread-winner Luzy in France. Another piece the French children love is “The Marvelous Adventures of the Baron de C " by the fam- jous Cami. It is a tale of a journey into the land of make-belicve made on the back of a mechanical cow. Short plays, vaudeville, comedy, music and moving pictures make up the matinee programs of the chil- dren's theater. Most of the picces | are arranged by M. Humble, and| some of them he writes himself, A New Type of Financi: confidential. $ 80 You $100 You $140 You $160 You $200 You Pay On $300 You Pay Plus lawful interest onl Pay Pay Pay Pay 1 failed to | World and | 1 calied | l.!* ction endures b Twenty Months To Pay If 1 AWAIT OPENING OF MURDER HEARING Snyder Trial Set Down for } Opening Monday | | New York, court phase April 23 (A—The first of the Synder murder trial has been completed and on Monday morr will listen 1o opening statements of counql m preparation for which they must da not Mrs, Ruth Snyder and her cor- 1 v Judd re guilty was completed night after five spent in exa smen, hom we med before | requisite dozen were found. The trial {opened last Monday | Yesterday 146 talesmen paraded | tkrough the box and six were select- cd, that number being n e cause of excuse of the original ju | number three by consent of all side The jury foreman is Will | Young, a 38-year-old hote |agent. Of the others one is a lan pe gardener, one a florist, one re- d, one a department store e eer, o oyment m: ger, one the tary ¢f a manu wcturing plant, one a printer, one nic, on siructor in a trade are clerks. The oldest man Ballweg, days secrc among them is Her- 68-ye atly older than My cused and his title baby” passed 1o Charles juror number six, who is | {der is not relat- | yder, the victim in he was the ex “Jury )J\f\lrr hers. jointly zinc art editor, on, chloroform and wire, t we:k of the |sat throu t so much as a 1 without showin authorities h of Snyder, and ater repudiated, after the which they three yoars, there | Las be L m their court | htest trace of n them. feet apart Fave never ~h other. n milker is the champion of England, having defeated the men in a ANNOUNCING al Service For People in Temporary Need of LOANS Money in 24 Hours—Reasonable Terms MUTUAL SYSTEM loans are made for helpful and constructive purposes, past due bills, home improvements, properiy repai taxes, interest on mortgages, premiums on insurance, for supplies of coal or wood, for education and count- less other legitimate expenditures. such as sickness, to pay All transactions Needed Monthly $ 5.00 Monthly $ 7.00 Monthly $ 8.00 Monthly $10.00 Monthly . §15.00 Monthly You' mav pay your loan in $ 4.00 full any time before it is due and pay only for the ac- tual time you have the money. duces the cost. Every payment re- NO INDORSERS OR CO-MAKERS REQUIRED TELEPH ONE 4950 The Mutual System 81 West Main Street ROOM 112-113—PROF OPEN 9 A, M. TO 5 P. M- SIONAL BUILDING ~SATURDAY TO 1 96 WEST 563 Main St. Telephone Statues delivered to Rt:)yal Portable See the new Royal Portable Standard Keyboard, two color ribbon and all other features. Price $60.00. New Britain Typewriter Exchange MAIN ST. M. J. KENNEY & CO. (Opp. St. Mary’s Church) 314 and 36 Connecticut’s Most Complete Religious Store Medals, Pictures, Statues, Beads, Crucifixes, Little Flower Novelties any part of the city. P FUNERAL PARLOR Tel. 314 Night Service 36 of the murder of | a7 390 of | the | an eleétrical | hool and two | :r-old father of Leen mar- | they said they had | contest at a recent dairy | I;hm\' in London. STATIONS GIVE 'AWAY TICKETS T0 THEATRES Hartford Gasoline and Oil " Distributors Give Bonus to Each Customer Satur« day and Sunday of One Free Admission Ticket to New State Theater in Hartford, 50,000 Tickets to Be Given Away Today and Sunday. Buy A Quart Of Oil Or 5 Gallons of Gas special arrangement with the of the State Theater, ager D. T. Smith of tha FILLING STATIONS, ¢ Hartford, distributors in ceticut of - Sinclair products, sed yesterday afternoon 650,« ckets of admission to the ‘]Llr(fox’\l vaudevill house to be “ Saturday and omers of the \ \\hl E l‘l ling Stations. s were distributed to lling Stations last their All customers of YA fons today or Sunday who purchased one quart of tha ry high grade Opaline Motor Oil, five llons of Sinclair gasolina ve one ti |or 0 single admission ts were bought at a special 1lling § ‘Iw fi InE venture ot the ageressive policy Filling Stations v legitimate means to YANKEE Stations to ths all motorists. empl the nsing YANK eve bring the mind or Mo Britaln ara E management of this offer. Motor to Hartord tonight or Sun- buy a quart of oil or five gal- lons of zasoline at any YA Filling Station and get a ! ticket' of admission to the "heater, good Sunday night, singla Stats Mon- TODAY or SUNDAY Admission Ticket to State Theater in Hartford! GOOD SUNDAYS, MONDAXS, THURSDAYS With each pur- chase of one quart of Opaline Motor Oil or Five Gallons Sinclair Gasoline. TODAY or SUNDAY et At All YANKEE FILUNG:STATIONS in Hartford Look for the SINCLAIR SIGN! YANKEE FILLING R e