New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 18, 1927, Page 17

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

'mfi h 5_.' t= o 2o .;4 Duless otherwiss tndicated, theatrical notices and reviews fn thia column are written by the press agencles for the respective amusement company. RASA S SSRNSSLNSERRRARSAN AL AL AAAASA S LSRR VST LSRR SRN AN AT THE STRAND This afternoon saw the opening ! of the Strand Kiddie Revue at the | Strand theater which is being pre- sented as a special feature in addi- tion to the regular vaudeville and photoplays. The Strand Kiddie Re- vue is made up of about 75 New Britain youngsters who have been | in training under the expert hand of Jack Sanson, producer of the unique production. The Kiddie Re- vue will be shown at each perform- | ance today, Friday and Saturda Other vaudeville acts on the pro. gram include the European sensa- tions, Les Kemys; Oliver and Cran- gel, aristocrats of variety, and Mack and Stanton. photoplay for the “Dearie,” starring Irene Rich. Norma Shearer, in her greatest picture, “After Midnight,” will be gin a four-days' engagement at the Strand next Sunday evening. “After Midnigh! owing to its magnitude, will be presented on Sunday with an augmented orchestri and on Monday with vaudeville, SACCO NOT WORRIED AS FATAL DAY NEARS ued from First Page) American press with the same re- Evan |day in the |Great Deception” and “Love Mak:s | lightful | four days the big | tion of Colored Cooks and Waiters | state director of the Conne | full complement of AT THE CAPITOL Two excellent photoplays are of- fered at the Capitol today and Fri- presentation of “The 'Em Wild." Ben Lyon and Aileen Pringle are featured in “The Great Deception.” a thrilling tale of the secret serv and with the action taking p on land, on sea, and in the air. Th. aeroplane scenes prove very realis tic and cause many thrills. “Love Makes 'Em Wild” is a de comedy with an all-star cast featured. It is a tale of a ‘worm" that turned, a story of a | young clerk in an office who wa: he laugh of the until | issed by a girl Beginning Saturd then— ¥y matinee for attraction will | in his newest an< “Mockery | {offer Lon Chanc greatest photopla Charles B. White, head waiter at the Burritt hotel. will represent the state of Connecticut ‘at the annual convention of the National Associa at Harrisburg, Pa., for 10 da ginning next Monday. Mr. Whi cticut sociation, | which a Paris fur WOMEN ONLY! Tondon. Aug. 1S. (A) — Women have establish record In air travel. On one trip from Paris a | machine landed at Croyden with a ,but their natural colors. i together to i of the ermine &¥W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1927. FURS ARE TINTED INUNUSUAL HUES| This Is One of Latest Parisian Styles Paris, Aug. 18. P—Furriers seem determined to present furs in any Even the lowly animals, ordinarily | uncamouflaged and inexpensive, have been so treated for the winter season that their pelts have an un- tamiliar look and prices are aston- ishing. Moleskin, one of the compa Iy inexpensive furs in F ictim of camouflage this tesigners at one house dye skins the beige tints of min work the skins in light and ‘dark | tripes so that the effect is much like that of mink, and the price Never afraid to paint the lily, | ian furriers offer tinted real ermine for fall. Long coats and short jackets of tinted ermine are being shown in one of the most cxclusive fur houses One of the prettiest versions of tinted ermine is soft beige color, th ic of summer ermine re- produced in the expensive winter variety. Some of these coats are worked .in horizontal stripes and are lined with satin stripes sewed imitate the coloring Metal stitching is seen on many linings of the best furs this season Blue and purple tints are found in a2 new kind of gr squirrel dealer claims has been especially bred for his house. Even in a season of trick ! furs the fur differs from a dyed | skin in that gray hairs are inter- B d evenly throughout the pelt. The houss sponsoring the new fur Soup For a Century —NEA Service, could be made from this mammoth sea tortoise. New York Bureau Soup for a hundred years and no mock turtle either, probably After a long | struggle, it was harpooned and landed in the Great South Bay | “We, the 'WOMEN TAKING AN IMPORTANT PART More and More Prominent in| World Affairs Geneva, Aug P of all lands are giving increasing public recognition fo the role wo. men are playing 1 international affairs. | Even the Leagu official tribute to | women in its work onstrated at the ann here of the Internatio of Women, attended hy from 40 National Councils includ that of the United A committee of Nations council was appoin | attend the dinner held at th | ing of the women's conventi { Headed by Sir Austen Chamber- | tain, secretary of sta affairs of Great Br | gation included M. of France; M. Benes, foreizn mi ister of Czechoslovakia; M. Zaleski, | foreign minister of Poland: M. Vil | legas of Chill, and M. Urrntia Colombia. The Marchioness of Aberde {and Temair. of England. Presids {of the International Council, - { comed the male guests phasized the help that women could give to 5 telling how women pioneer workers who drew up the constitution of the International Council of Women in 1888 had in many points anticipat- | @1 the covenant of the League of Nations. Tady Aberdeen declared thar all activities of the council have been on international cooperation, keynote of the tesmen of Nuations pays cooperation of his was dem- Paul Boncour | vased which s also the League of Nations mothers of the world. and arouse enthusiasm for the ob- jects and work of the League in their respective lands. Some of the American women members of the International Coun- cil of women are Mrs. Walter Mac- Nab Miller, an official of the Gen- eral Federation of Women's Clubs. | Mrs. Miller was a delcgate to the convention in plac . Eliza- beth Thalberg of V ! Dr. Thalberg. pr: | Medical Women's tion, is convener | heaith con\mnno | tional ~ Council of Women. Miss { Blarian P. Whitney of Vassar Col- lege, who attended the meeting, is jeonvener of the education com- of the Interna- |English Fliers Tuning Up for \tlantlc Flight Aug. 18 (P)—Col. d 1»~|u Hamilton, arrived here at ternoon from Ostend in Jupiter monoplane in ire to attempt a trans- Holland at forced to msterdam but wers Ostend of f 1 to leave Croydon this oon for Rristol re the en- be given its final tuni proceeding to Dublin the point of the transoccanic because fliers hope to get with- ext seven days, with Ottawa, as th goal tway "LASSIFIED ADS 17 Writes Negro Stories From Memory of Child Montgomery, Ala, Aug. 18. P— Croonings of an old negro “mam- " and the quaint life of “cullud registered to vividly in the | mind of Mrs. Louise Bowden Pop: | in childhood that today she is one | of the best known writers of negro | glalect in the South. When only 12 years old, Mrs, | Pope put her impressions of negre life on the plantation of her father, at Columbia, Ala., into her fiust | story “Rasin’ Chillun.” Because of | the child’s mastery of the dialect it created widespread attention. Her story “Speret Gold” has just won the Municipal prize for original work, offered by Montgomery clubs. HELD FOR LOWELL POLICE Julius Sapinska, aged 46, of 66 John street, was arrested at the Vulean Tron Works this forenoon by Detective Sergeant George C. r on charge of non sup- warrant for the Lowell, jes, A Lowell officer to that city for MONOXIDE GAS FATAL artford, Aug. 18 (A — Philip Rosentield, 3 vegetable peddler Magnolia street, died this being removed from Francis hospita result of arbon monoxid 1t is believed the garaw he was work- morning while to St door blew shut while ing on his car. passenge leeply concerned in the ntenance of life who are as protection and m; as in its creation,” said Lady Aber- deen, *“are beginning to our vi- off Bay Shore, Long Island, by Captain W. D. Hatch, Miami, | swordfisherman, shown here with Mrs. A. Ruhfel, one of T1,-foot shell and 2-ton weight one of whom was a women, ; calls it blue squirrel. L pilot and mechanic wer | Fla., men on board those who were with him. Its view of the case as was released | every by it recently in Argentina. A meet- | The ing sponsored by the committee will | cnly BEGINNING TODAY be held in a Boston hall tonight, it was announced. Three attempts to hold meetings on Boston Common in recent weeks have been broken up by the police. The demand for immediate re- lease of the review was made in latter to Secretary of State Kellog “The Sacco- zetti case,” the com- 'munication read, “far from not he- ing a matter of federal concern, | has, in truth, heen dealt with off cially by the federal government for at least two vears past. It is now apparently such a vital issue to the federal government that a branch of that government formally under- takes the extraordinary task of in- forming the public of one foreign | nation what the state of Massachu- setts has done in the case of two citizens of another nation. “We cannot rcconcile this action | with the repeated statements of the | president of the United States, the | attorney general, and your own de- partment that tb ceo-Vanzetti | case is solely a Massachusetts affair and of no concern whatever to the | federal government.” Deferse counsel, under the eralship of Arthur D. Hill, were pr paring to sirike another blow freedom of the men through apvl cation for a writ of certiorari by the | Tnited States supreme court should the several actions now under ad- visement by the Massachusetts su- preme court be thrown out by that | rody. An earlier attempt to obtain | a wrlt of habeas corpus from United | States justices failed but ccunsel | were hopeful of bringing the whole case before the court for review, O'NEIL 0UT OF HOSPITAL Man Who Jumped Out Third Story Window to Lscape Police Taken Into Custody Today. Henry O'Neil of TIS Arch streef who was seriously injured in a leap from a third story window at his ‘home on July 2 when Sergeant T Feeney was interviewing him e tive to having taken an automol without permission of the owner was released from New Britain Gen- eral hospital today. He was taken | 10 the police station and heid in default of $2.000 honds for a hear- ing in court tomorrow morning on charges of operating an antomobil while under influence of liquor overating an automobile while his | license was under suspension. a taking an antomobile without per mission of the owner, | "Neil, who had been convicted of the charge of operating an automo- Tle while under influcnce of liguor nly a short time prior to th escapade, was found to have suffercd a fracture of a hone in his back In the opinion of the hospital au- Thorities it will be some time beforc T fully recovers. Open Dlflcussmn on Highway \ppmpuatmm Hartford, Aug. 1S (P — An open | discussion hetween .\.mmu noof the towns in Hartford couniy and Highway Commissioner John A, Macdonald, concerning the amonnts which the seve towns will ap- propriate for rowds in the next two ars, in order to obtain funds of | fund, was Mac- ! i | | the $2,000,000 state aid Tield here this afternoon. Mr donald has sent ont blanks to towns throughout the state to ascertain how much each desired to use of | which must be | tions 0! the state aid money, matched by loc irying pereent A similar meeting s to in New Haven, August 22 m. in the county courthou one in Brideeport, at the Fairfiell | connty conrthonse, August 29 at the hour | propri sume trucks of 4 train from | A black cat rode the Union Paclic passcnger Utah, to O 1£0. DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch 353 Main St. i X-Ray Pyorrhea Treatments || lon th y. But County D¢ | piloted by | the journey | READ HERALD CLASS Detec_t;\;efiSays With Plane | | | ward cours | the belief of Professor | i pedal locomotion, the professor said. | tinued, “the lwhich hitherto ha {one for (& i wounld take 1 from Brad- Ordinarily it several jays for a man to tra { ford, Pa., to Harrishurg, to Alban; Y., and then buck to Bradfc stopping to interview fwo governors teetive Allison (below) in a plane Hurri Emery (top) cut down 1o a few Jack J. h..n.\ He ‘had to get the sienatu Gov Fi and Governor Smith on extradition papers. | | 1D ADS FOR BEST RESULTS PALACE WEDNESDAY 2—GREAT FEATURE BILL—2 CHARLIE MURRAY and CHESTER CONKLIN in McFadden s Flats The funni edy of the year! Co-Feature JOINNIE WALK SNARL OF T1A Be Sure o Com YOMORROW NIGHT Big Country Store Will be held. Iarge ice box, tea other prize An Enjoyuble Evening for HARTFORD ALL THIS WEEK Mat. Tues. Wed, Thurs., Evers Favening—K:15 POLI PLAYERS St MISS ANN W MR, VINCENT With FRANCES WILLIAMS n the SURE FIRE’ Br ROLPH MUKPHY ERICK and COLEMAN Sparkling Coneds M[]I]ERN DANCING FOUND PRIMITIVE Professor Thinks Steps Going to “Monkey” Times | (CP) are on a back- Deauville, France, Aug. 1§ —Modern dancers through the ages, in Raymond of ‘he Puris opera, and unless some- thing is done abou* it, distant pro- geny of dance-mad moderns will walk on all fours like a_chimpanzee. The Black Bottom is the most serious threat to current siyles of a matter of fact,” he con- Charleston, the Black Heebie Jeebics and the ro dances are un- civilization. They color of truth to Darwinian theory. There is son for this. The anatomy of a gro is not the same as ours. The of the knees, the modelling of the hips, the line of the foot make those dances all right for Negroes. “Iut, instead of the vertical line, been the normal white, dancers, it is now jore and more the curved, getting closer to the horizontal. Even when not dancing the habitues of these lances stand and walk that way. ‘rhey will end up hy walking all day vith feet turned in, their necks in iheir shoulders and arms swinging. ‘hey will finally walk on their nds and fee Mme. Monna Paiva, danseuse of opera, finds the modern dances | “absolutely hideons and unesthetic _the fantastic imagings of deliri- ous Negroes whose principal inspir- ation was whiskey without soda. i e & jottom, the rest of N vorthy of our Ny & som¢ - |LYCEUM I‘()ll.\\'—— R1.—SAT. 2—GREAT FEATURES—2 ‘The Heart Thief’ with JOSEPH N('"II DRERAUT and ru I'II “The Mldmght Watch” ry McAllister Roy Stewart, LADIES" MAT. This Coupon and 10¢ will admit a Jady to best seats, FRI. NIGHT 1N GOLD NIGHT! CAPITOL CONTINUOUS TODAY—FRIDAY 2—Fentures—2 “The Great Deception” A thrilling romance the nir! with Ben Lyon MLEEN PRINGLE “Love Makes ‘Em Wild” Allstar cast W. S Jeffs af the organ BEGINS SATURDAY LON CHANEY in his finest role in “MOCKERY" Rargain Prices 1:00 to 3:30 p. m. Watch for Merchants’ Gift Night | S —— make it the largest ever captured, according to curators of the sions heing realized e see a American Museum of Natural History in New York where it is | world in which our children's chil- to be made a permanent exhibit. tile's gigantic head, larger than a man's. Inset a close- -up of the rep- dren may grow up in peace and se- with facihities for their full moral and spirvitual devel- curity | physical, MISS DORAN 4 REAL ‘LINDY’ TO HER PUPILS girls, seemed to scent tragedy. n't teacher coming bLack at ?" she d Generall: happen by Mi Mildred was equally popular with ., several of them testi- ike her way of en y into the manner in which she | by their the whole-h sames commands speaking, the ifth grade were sticking th out today and the unfortunates who belong to other were out in the cold, distinetion of having been dence. All ried as to the gi were dred stayed while described the In this town Colonel Lindbergh that both are hea - that both 33 in the ;e richeat h hailed grades not owning the taught and that both ¢ : flourish. In fact, the ed to have about somethin Jerusalem will British confi- +have signed a Gu-y. children’s complete extremely wor- released by the Mrs. Holmes, in who: Mil- | work alon she was in Curo, teacher “quiet and unassuming ¢ girl in every respect.” today drawing parallels between tine | the League of Nations. -whole angeline that 5 peo- ted history in matchmaker made up their s appear- minds electrically who ] 162 Glen Street wr contract, | opment “A great International force has facilities now in most countries to ide of men. In hehalf of the women assembled as | she pledged support to the men of She urged information e women to spread were r and v point out and fan- > from Michi- : that Mildred was born in On- | tario and that Mrs, 0 from erious-minded youn OrientalRugs Complete line of Persian and ¢'hinese Malkes, all sizes. Also Repairing and Cleaning. Excel lent service and perfect satis- faction guaranteed. We Call for and Deliver. S. V. Sevadjian Tel. 1190 The Children of Your Neighborhood in a Gorgeously Staged Production THE STRAND KIDDIE REVUE Produced Under Direction of Jack Sanson ENTIRE LOCAL CAST 75— New Britain Youngsters — 75 Scenery By Lewis, New York Lighting Effects By Kleigh Bros. OTHER BIG ACTS ON THE STRAND “DEARIE” SCREEN With a Cast of Popular Favorites IXT NORMA SHEARER in ANNOUNCEMENT We Are Pleased to Announce the Appointment of A.M. PAONESSA As Dealer Foi “CHRYSLER” In New Bntain SUNDAY “AFTER MIDNIGHT” We know that the many friends of Mr. Paonessa will be pleased to know of his reentering the auto- mobile business in his Sales and Service Establishment at 170-238 Hartford Avenue. The John P. Nielson & Sons Co. 76 Maple Avenue Hartford, Conn. Distributors

Other pages from this issue: