New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1927, Page 11

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'f .n. I“Ll&l--!li 1A - \'J (4 N Unless otherwise indicated, theatrical written by press agencies for the »usoso»osuo»oo GOOD SHOW AT LYCEUM Today will he vour last chance to has seen main see what everybody that this bill called very good. The PTVECVIVETCIPPTIIPTPPERPVTPCPEECPRPPTPITTIFV V049 59648006580 5590000556550084280 0009 2 Dl ittt ke * » notices and reviews in this colum * respective amusement company s + | AT THE CAPITOL Beginning today for a threc day run the Capitol offers a double fe ture photoplay program that sho attraction offers Evelyn Brent in prove real entertaining. oth ‘Women's War The companion |ture attractions being photopl feature. is Monte Blue in “One|that will be well liked and having Round Hogan.” Thursday, Frida llent storigs. ind Saturday brings to you as good | The main feature will present of a bill seen here abouts in a long eginald De time, the main attraction is Clara action star, Bow in “Wine” for a night of joy “The Cheerful F tnconfined; come see the girl with moving story with a plot that keeps “IT" at her zippiest best. The com- one on the edge of th t, so di panion featurc is the big brother rerent and exciting is ion of “the third alarm—'Hook and The companion fr offers Ladder No. §" with a great cast of Marguerite De La Motts nald players, Keith in “Broadway Madue — e Tonight is pillow night the Parsons, Hartford Capitol when fancy silk pillows will “Wooden Kimono,” greatest of Le distributed to patror mystery thrillers, will be the at- traction at Parsons’ tomorrow Fri- day and Saturday night with a mat- inee Saturday. The play comes di- rect trom a long and successful New York engagement, with the entire criginal cast and production. It felt Le afing of prohibition, indirectly, when first staged in New York. There are a number of supposedly subterrancan explosions in the John Floyd piece, produced by firing both barrels of a shotgun into a barrel at a given distance. An old-fashion- od beer barrel is the only kind that will produce this effect. In pre-Vol- stoad days the theater property man could have found one of these barrels on any cvorner and possessed the same in return for a “compli- mentary ticket” given to white- spurned czar of the brass rail. It required a two-day search, $§ and cartage charges to procure the bar- rel now used in the production of “Wooden Kimono.” VETERAN SALESMAN LEADS WORLD TOUR L. L. Redick Takes Exchange Glub on Imaginary Journey “To learn the lang ’ is the principal duty for a salesman selling goods in a foreign country, accord- | ing to L. L. Redick of Newington a retired veteran of the Landers, Frary & Clark sales force who spoke at the Exchange club meeting at the Burritt hotel last evening. The speaker has travelled across the At- lantic and Pacific oceans about 18 times and_has covered more than 400,000 miles. He has visited 40 countries and speaks German, ¥rench, Spanish, Ttalian and Ru: sian. George Curtis introduced the speaker. The people of Europe must he approached in a different manner 1 the American people when a salesman is looking for an order, he said. While a breezy line of talk impresses the American business man, Kuropeans have-a great dis- like for this sort of greeting. A friendly disposition impresses Euro- pean people and goes a long way in getting an order. There are a few points that cvery salesman must learn to have in his sales talk if he wishes to close a deal. He must have patience, for the foreigners are very deliberate in their ways. His talk must have a true ring to it, that is, he must impress the buyer that he is positlve of what he i8 saying. Mo- | desty helps a lot when dealing with foreign buyers. They expect the American salesman to laud his country and its natural wonders to the sky. A little tact in speaking of (hese things impress the forcigner. “The main thing is to learn the language and customs of the people | of whatever country you do 'your business in” Mr. Redick said, “Lack | of education in speaking the lan- guage is a big drawback. The sales- man should language so that he can converse with some degree of snccess with his listeners. By learning the var- jous speeches and the general cus- toms of the countries he travels, a salesman is taking a big step for- ward, “The Australlans are pleasing to deal with. They like American cus- toms, musle, slang and, above all, they are well pleased witih Ameri- can goods.” A report was made at the meet- ing by the committee which had charge of the concert given by the U. 8 Marine Band at the Strand theater. The money cleared at the hencfit amounted to about $775 and will be turned over to the Child- ren's Home and the Polish Orphan- age. Recent surveys indicate that 25, 000,000 of the 42,000,000 men and women who are employed in the Tnited States, have defective ecye- sight, CAPITOL—CO! “BEN HUR” (GGreatest Sea Fight Ever Screened! PARSONS’ HAKTFORD Thurs, Fri., Sat.—Mut. Nov. 3 Greatest of Mystery Thrillers WOODEN KIMONA | Direct from Fulton Originnl Brondway Cast Prices—Eves 52.00; Bal. 52t rel Bal Sut. Theate 1 sl Mat. learn enough of each | FIRST DAY TAKES LIVES OF THREE ‘Hunting Season Opens Wim - Fatalities and Injuries Philadelphia, Nov. 2 (P—The first day of the open hunting season for rabbits and other small game ended in three deaths in Pennsylvania and | Delaware yesterday, Twenty persons, including a wom- an who is expected to dle, were in hospitals or under medical treatment for injuries as hundreds of hunters smr' d the second d: Another m ul dest dicensed b \nihw Xipp v of the said to be the nter in this state, 97, of sed and 4 shortly ,ng from U home Altoona, col- start- of rc fo! the woods, Of the three killed in Hu \1 nts, S. G. Dayton, of Media most prominent, Dayton r.nu. v of & number of clubs herr director of the Camden, N, J Safe Deposit and Trust co was the vietim of a pe Lcci- dent. The banker with rty friends had formed a duck blind at Bridgeville, Del.. when one barrel of | bis gun was accidentally discharged while he was loading it. The dis- charge hurled the gun the blind and the concussion fired the second barrel, the full load entering yton's bacl B, v worker, was killed on hunter into Carnahan's ital aceident occurred i1 ster county farmhouse where ry Movey, of Chester, was killed of Charles mill Carnahan, ander- n e grift whe fired his gu thir The I Je when a pump gun in th s of {a friend was discharged while the other man was examining it { Mrs. Lottie Spencer, 31, of Tidi- oute, who wus shot Ly @ woman companion while they were gunning near Warren is in a sevious condi- T exciten ugh th tion from loss of blood dent occurred in the it t Ci- a SEEK T0Y DISGUISE | I TOTS DEATH Boston Police Advance torist, Terror-Stricken, Endeay- ored to Conceal Child's Body Boston, Nov. 2 (UP)—Police to- day were working on the theory that six-year-old Dorothy Adams. im | of a mysterious Hallowe'en tragedy, had n struck by a motorist who, terror-stricken at the death of the child, had endcavored to conceal | her body. Two possible clues to the myst —a penny moustache and a colored paper hat—were still unfound. With v the moustache fixed in place and the paper hat cocked at a hrave angle, Dorothy had sallicd forth to battle ghosts and hobgoblins. Tate that night her lifeless body |was found in a Dorchester gutter, a mile from her Roxbury home. I Rel s changed its mone standard since the war. The stand- ard unit of coinage was changed from the franc to the by 2 ing a value of five francs. House of Photoplay Hits! TODAY, THURS,, FRI. 2 wextonns 2 ' REGINALD ' DENNY ; “The Cheerful . Fraud” | A Fast Moving Comedy Hit? apd | “Broadway | | Madness” Marguerite De La Motte Donald Keith Good Entertain PILLOW NIGHT TONIGH Silk Pillows Free to Patrons BEGINS SA RONALD COLMAN VILMA BANKY in “THE MAGIC FLAME" NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, Memonal Erected At Seicheprey Honors Soldlers of Connecticut Marks 102d of t vision could nithe tands th attle. It is in onument er Connecticnt pic ror 2 astingremin e town of the Am SET 1 Inga 5 to it 'Mtv 1 t known doughboys as AUTO ENGINE N~ % FATAL Three Killed, Boy Loses A in Kentucky Tragedy infured engine of here yesterday, explode 2 The explosion accurrcd, wit hares of said, just as P. C. Wells, @ pass way company stoc had raised the hood of t \ i 500 for it. nd William Lewis, 16, issued and 1 standing near, were t w's debtson wihi ments of the engir \ en paid since that ti vere instantly killed T r Ceovery vardriver s sh turn, she said stopped Spot Where the W, Page in History. THE one rh stalled in the Wells, whe he Yankee Di- rote Glorious | not Litt) which bloody there, squ [ At Seicheprey! ) Famots Lightweight Pases - e of the the form of a small i by the people of igh popular sub to commemorate| T of Selcheprey fought stone an which 1 18, resulted in t will be v losses for both sides in killed - to ! wounded but not an inch of valiant fizht ven. The German s to started shortly before 5 1 h and O norning and 1,500 of pick c army, shock monument 5 {aiser's Own' in positions laid A P cicheprey and oM to micres Wood. o i companies, C and D, which HEPREY re 1 two companies of the ate the service of 1 night before, ! attack. vican wiped out, s 0 the lines untis s o0 when none 1 ott. Major nd pson. hoth of each other's lin 1 the evening talion of the top in a lines of the all the grou ure printed in article was recet o W. Mre. Port 1 suffered wo of the EAPLOSION - Norfolk Is l)ebt I*n Nov. ) debt its Jast downto Cana the veral by M e was e to « FOR YOUR WAN READ HERALD CLASSIF! details in ha s wagon “mule o detachments and temiere Woods and re- leave. The artillery on sent death and destruc- es all day | when the 2nd swept | counter charge, | Prussians ind lost connection ved by ex- Stevens of Ber- | v, Le returned recently from a | i the town of Bea of the butilefields of France. s around the four s by a I'rench boy whose \mericar i he made while on Dead Man's Curve.” | tou mds about body ee; Last of Bonds Cancelled This ‘town one dat- . On that n voted to ticut West- k and to hus hegan h interest e lowever i savings of the 12D ADS TS THURSDAY PALACE—TODAY ONLY \n Entertainment of “Shiek BILLY CO-I'L; ATURI ILIAVAN in “GALLANT FOOL"” NIGHT, COUNTRY STORE NIGUT! DON'T M S I’l{l Thy Miniature Farce \ BER’II“III ,E\Ikii\"E)\\!. \:LI\"III'IIII-.\ 1LL — THIE TRAN ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW D and Flaming Youth Appeal CLARA BOW in “HULA” ISsS 1T STARTING TOMORROW The George Fitzmaurice Production! with MARY ASTO and INTING “JAZZICAL MOMEN GEO. SC‘ HRECK & C OVIrR or GILBERT ROLAND R 8 GlRlS MELODY” X o of Five NOVEMBER 2, 1927, 11 | | “He had to fight in the old saloons |men «s Young Corbett, Ji nrm ‘SP"]ER, KELLY |and resorts of the Barbary Coast to |Abe Attell, Joo Th ai ben‘alor Curtis Finds {§ain recognition and in those daysJack” Sharkwy, and th Jim Candidate” Life Active to come out of a fight one had to fight and to be clever. “It was therc he developed his fighting ability, and learned to use head as well as his fists “The Spider was crafty and he was game. He was only a little man unmaimed, ' Jef! Kelly earned his repu world's greatest second ng of 4 Washington, Nov. 2 (P—Senator ‘urtls of Kansas, is finding the lif residential candidate mighty n if he is conducting only campaign.” announced his candidacy ator Curtis has been HAS LAST FIGHT . for_he weighed barcly 130 [ has beer Away in Minnesota Hospifal | rovren” sie was so'vuse a0ie ana et e s e ke > thin that a boxing commission 1M FOLK WED aE e g an attempt | today would not have issued him a S wra, Cal., Nov P — i kNS SACHAERS 10st o San Franclsco, Nov, § (UP) — |permit to fight. But the & SRy i i s m good luck. ; “Spider” Kelly, the wiry, long-|looks belied the power that vriters. Senator Curtis armed little Irishman who stood "n\Mfi slender body usual number of pros- retired fro &0 and becan McGrath for his partn they groomed and against the mighty attack of Joc| Ke (Gians for 25 r fate out of the iast battle in th to f: and campaign r opportun- his govern- Together | ¢ ci 4 such city where he rose | ‘Spider’ died pital at Rochester, Minn., far from home. He be brought back to | an Francisec r burial beside the | [ ’s finest coffee blend el he world’s finest coffee blen bodies of his f and mother. frlends who had known him at the But “Spid real name was James Patrick wanted to die height of his ri Before I to undergo lalourarne ~(offee ou might as well have the best he his friends h. hear the final gong" here than in any other spot in the world o old timers today were re- cing about the fiery little®Irish- an whose vituperous tongue was | nearly as deadly as his flashing fists. | Those of them who had been at the ringside in New York when Kell stayed upright against Joe Gans through the 25 terrible reunds, he managed to do so only be he had Gans “guessing what it was all about." Many a time, those old frir said, after Kelly had foresaken the | ring to train and second fighters his lashing tongue spurred many an ap parently beaten man on to greate efforts and victory, “Spider learned to fght in the | streets and continued to fight be- | cause he loved to.” | McGrath, San Francisco box- | ing promoter and perhaps the clos- est friend of Kelly, told of the early struggles of his pal to gain entrance into the fighting ranks. “He was a great lad and how he loved to fight,” h. "Kelly and I were bo We play- ed together and we fought together. LYCEUM TODAY “Women's Wares”’ Also MONTE BLUFE in “One Round Hogan T THURS—FWL—SAT., “WINE"” Starring CLARA BOW Also ‘Hook & Ladder No. 9 T SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN Established 1862 Resources—$21,763,531.96 Deposits made on or before Thursday, November 3rd, will draw interest from November st. 5¢ INTEREST being paid Open Monday Evenings—7 to 8:30 178 Main Street 1 Thix coupon and 10c will admit o Wics’ Mat. Indy to mat. hest seats. Bape-Allen HARTFORD DIRECT WIRE. o Sale of About 300 Sample ‘Compoirettes” an Concert B.&P. W. Club WED. NOV. 9 3005 Y. M. T. A. & B. HALL Opp. St. Mary's Church 8:30 | Admission $1.00 : | 66 S . 9 | canties Jessica Dragonette H | o at 25% to The National Cavaliers " 50% Discount just a few of ed—to give you wings on these " garments, E mention below the items includ an idea of the great fashionable “three-in-one TONIGHT, L. BARTHL “’TH oN Others LONDONS; | Compoirettes The ideal foundation for today's slim frocks, giving plenty of support without restraint. It consists of a girdle, a step-in of georgette, and a brassiere of double georgette. They wash perfectly! Regular $18.00 and $£16.50 gar- ments at $6.95 Regular $15.00 garments at | $4.95 | Special in Bandeaux Scanties | A splendid three-in-one garment and Corse[[es —girdle, brassiere and step-in. Light in weight, vet sufficiently supporting. Come Afternoons now | Made of broche and elastic, dainty Popular Prices crepe de chine, and washable of 39¢ Corsettes, formerly $2.50, $1.95 l Corsettes, formerly $5.00, now i $2.95 | 20¢, 25¢, e —_ GRAHAM AND COURTNEY ‘CANARY COTTAGE ‘A Gilded Cage” AL H. WILSON “Fun a Ia Carte” course. Regular §§.50, $8.50 and $10.00 Regular $5.00 garments, $3.95 . now B [ ! l Bandeaux, formerly $1.00, | | | | |

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