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NEW SRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1927, niore ays a week in front and she could have she had Been able s at once, Maharanee of who has bought 11 of the Now as many as worke a s tice, list is alli Valli, Actress, I)le, in Hamstead, Eng. ndon, Nov. 4 (®—Valli Valli, who toured the es, died at tead last evening “fore her hushand, theatrical pro- civing a hur- By wWADE W (Motion Picture Feature Hollywood, Cal, Nov. 4. (P — For years it lhas heen conceded among motion picture directors that to let a dozen Indians gallop across the screen bent on m re was about as sure a way as any to tring the nickeldeon customers cheering to their fect. Yet Indians have sc to work in pictures As late as a year not half a dozen India 1 cason istered in Hollywood. Practically vs o W 11 the so-calied redskins wers lican laborers NER Editor) fow Russians 1 Hu Hollywood might it this plane. When two years ugo with f Yowlache, In- marveled that heing used in on Tudians. &tudios < that In Several State Bl'ld;es‘ Washed ‘\“a\ h\ Stmn‘ Hartford, Nov visited: the . had been i1l r months, Lindy Leaves New York m' Ilcld in chhlgan Sleeeis ot o Ans 2 e N etur » more v? Im.vgd'h;v. are intervals producers “;”:‘““f]: :&-:;)r! tures made whole seque P e of a picture on or near Indian Galtelags. flala. At reservation in order 1o get enough full-blooded Indians for b¥g scen ¥or Indian extras, however, it lalways easier to hire substitutes off the street and put them into Indian The paint and costumes. work | Many players carning list of order iy ) 4 R % i of [N IE ER TSN nees | tried to reer found phones and i 1o other address Tndians were next day only practically none ¥ had moy o the half plane was was deliver mphier, com- nuous pursuit group, over Norfolk-C lise She built up & Mean big money one solar clock: e numbers | by a ppar pe- —————*—m__—___ T TAK.ES FIRST FALL 6 9y as “Indiar en Mary Pickford | those who had no telephones. FILMS FAVOR HER I {kad her share of wearing dark Gradually the home of White-Bird |lanta, who came west to live with | paint and blankets |and Yowlac became joined with British and Colonial ti- Wing, R lamat o interests working in films she has averaged The beautiful o e late Chiet Dark lication of 01d Book peal From Death -Sentence | With Film Stars feefeialontisi Mountain, ter known to rs,” the Ame tziling of the most scathing scandal ' suspected bluebeard, was brouhgt name is “Chulla ning ox. r or two there may be clek to Queen Victoria's privy jected his appeal against the death Indian nehmen Greville, long dead, made it a| heart, Marie Beaulaguet. —nd the effect of its publication Justice Louis Barthou, charging | G 4 t uly 22, No one is spared in the version Uotaicondamnation Suly, which may recommend reference of rfo which then caused heated de- D case, Gaston plans to appeal to sown in a reference to the sons take about two months, England is all wrong. are. We agreed THE MAHARAN OI' COOCH e telephone opcrator. and fell in rogues, blackguards, He refers openly to mis s of The diary, which covers the by Doubleday Page. Tt i inasmuch as that it reflects haired, brown-eyed girl from At- sort of crieedl oo, her mother and sisters after four Melton Mowbray, England, Nov. | | Here and th real Indian | C€ntral casting bureau for Indians liywood, Cal, 1 .| vears on the stage with Fred Stone 4. (®—American millionaires have | | ).n!mH\ beeam nown to cast @ ater there was organized the the s the “lone- I New York. During the approxi- : | ors and was regularly used, | “War-Paint CI icl E ) C or ) ly two months Ruth has been 2 tled folk in opening the hunting 2 of Indians in fil 4 ; season here. orked in pictures for about 15 |and furnishes Ing : e e than six i i 2 i years, and Dove Eye Dark Cloud, | tras. camer: England Much Upset Over Pub- | comen nomes: Supreme Gourt Rejects His Ap- Noble Red Mau Taking Place A% | { Cloud, ed many Indian | be delivered on several st and the | 1 successtul directors in whose | ; lian blood, notably | W0od from various stat London, Nov. 4 (UP)—Enthusi- ; Paris, Nov. 4 (UP)—Gaston Guy- As comy ther “fore atic, and many claim maiictous re- ot millionaire stockbroker and | o No AR s e 1 Arowe Chickasaw | S10w to Hollywood, but n o the entire Victorian era in the within the shadow of the gufllotine ) dary of Charles Greville, former ioday when the supreme court re- Bui for W i 1y Indicns in § ganization of War-Paint Club, e are cowncil, has aroused fierce resent- sentence imposed on him for the ment in court circles. | murder of his telephone-girl sweet- e she came here cutom to note in his diary all bits | Guyot's lawyers immediately took of gossip he heard, from any course | his client's case direct to Ministe e b ) e i e e § . at several witnesses had revealed effect of fact. y rors in their testimony that led to ! h ; Barthou will have the appeal re-| Jimt published, &n fexiensionjofizes) viewed by a commission of revision marks published a couple of years : the case to a final court of appeal | ainclation. | or raject it entirely. In the latter A sample of Greville's style is resident Doumergue for a pardon. | n1d daughters of George 11T, Mayor The procedure was expected 10| Flg Bill Thompson's idea of why uyot In December 1925 met 20- “God! God!" comments Greville vear-old Marie Beaulaguet, wise lit- ‘What a set they 5 ! tiat the kingdom could not furnish BEHAR love with her vivacious beauty and sich a brood—so many and so bad: Greville himself does tbout blank spaces. royal men and lovers of royal wom- n, rlod between 1830 and 1860, be published in the United \ere that King George. among sthers, is angry over its publication rectly on his grandmother, Victoria. Queen Chicago University Finds Women Better Than Men Chicago, 4 (P—rom Chieca- %o University come pro- nouncement that women are het students, than men; from Nott} western University one that women are getting to N W. S said that 16, ed in one the pe 9.1 Payne, recor: “Pigures for cent year show of the men fail- While s more subjects, for women was only An article in the Daily Northw e, undergraduate puy “Woman is getting to be in college and out of i ticle points out that wonin man’s activities now. club, social and political. and that always in the way.” say a nuisanes " The ar- is in all church, Westerly Is Severe Sufferer in Storm Westerly R 1., Nov. 4 (P~ Breaking of ( n's Falls dam on the Assawaug rviver, far up in the woods beyond Clark's Falls, with an official rainfall of 8.37 inches during ! a flood upon this | ! the night brought city which has causcd damages es- timated in the hundreds of thou- sands of dollars. condition also and The flood water same into the along the course the Assawaug hou: bridges were swept of persons W their hom for safety. Pawcatnek river, this stream barns to 1 or ground COMMISSTONER NAMED Hartford, Nov. 4 (®—Arthur V. MeDowell of Middletown was today \ppointed by Governor Trumbull to be a Middlesex county commissioner to succeed the late Charles E. Bacon (R and | and | hunting horses, riding by falling. Amor-: (h" American are R. E. Strawbridge of phia, who is known in Leicester- shire as “Bob"” Strawbridge and Mrs. Strawbridge; R. H. Walsh, the w York banker, and Mrs. Walsh 1. Ambrose Clarke, l.ong Tsland millionaire farmer, and “Laddie" Sanford, polo star. NICHOLSON ASSALLS KNIGHTS OF K. K. . it With celehrated her first visitors Philadel- Author Links Dry League As Indianas “Super- Government.” Milwankee turing I brealing der I Wis, Nov. 4 (®—Pic- liana as suffering from a government nun- Meredith Nicholson, Hoosier told the Wisconsin State Teachers' vosterday that super-government of the Klan law-makers the its down o author, association 1 the intimidation o and government exeeut Anti-Saloon league h, inevituble result.” s by trought Ascerting that “only America,” Viewed the thy toward govern- ment,” and held that maintenance of loeal u of government (home ntial t0 the political Ame Nicholson rica can desiroy rule) is fabric. “Much of the poiitical apathy that is now so distirbing to observers of American conditiens and tendencies to the fukurc of the small units Lo cling to their contizued. “Hom» rule “lost from the be- The aban- and dutics ning of the is due politics rights” he battle cry ng of civilimtion local rights resulted in o w political fabric. ent of whol PEAR STEAMER LOST London, Nov. 4 (UP)—Tt fearcd today that the British steam- er Helmsman bad been Jost in the North with her crew of nine. The Helmsman was dae in the river Tees last Saturday-—when storms were sweeping the North Sea | and sank mary small ships. Tugs have sought the Helmsman for several cags, but hayve trace of her ———ETHEL—- Coneer Grzelts BEAUTIFUL “BEASTY s or v-fl;’ WAVES T BN EXPERIENCE = \ BioTowy BUGLE, — CALM AN IEROC ©1927 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. | mate her bobbed brown hair, Their association hecame an Inti-| one. After several the girl demanded that Guyot, a | veteran widower, marry her. He| refused. Marie threatened to ex-| pose their affair to Guyot's daugh- ter. | In mid-summer, 1926, a farmer near Paris was awakened by ' th glare of flames reflected on his bed- room wall from a burning haystack. Farmhands. responding to his| alarm, quenched the blaze. In th. ashes they found the charred body | of Marle. Guyot disappeared, but could not keep silence. First he wrote to th. police that he had a perfect alihi in case he was charged with murder- ing Marie. Then he sent an “anon- ymous” letter, supposed to he a| confession that a taxicab driver had killed the girl. Finally Guyot's' | father gave him up. He had been hiding at the father's home. Under cross-cxamination by police, Guyot said he had killed the girl in a fit of rage. Investigation 0f Guyots' led police to suspect that Marie's removal was not his first. His first wife died of a mysterious heart at- | tack. His second died of polsen, A preceding swectheart to Marle dis- appeared and never has been heard of. Police sald Guyot used his wealth | to ensnare young working girls Their investigations. they sald, led them to a small army of pretty | young women who had associated with him, career \German %eaplane Reported | Heinkel | the was | found no the i exhibited in England. Landing in Azores Islands New York, Nov. 4 ”'P\—‘Th"{‘ Western Union Telegraph office at | Horta, Azores Islands, cabled to the New York office that the German scaplane D-1220 arrived | there from Lisbon at 11:15 a. m. today, he The Junker seaplane D-1232 dy is at Horta, awaitlng favor- ab! weather for a flight to New foundland and New York—the route | Heinkel plane plans to follow. Tt was at Horta--now for the winter season transatlantic fligh* headquarters—that Miss Ruth Eld- er and George Haldeman. American were landed by the Dutceh tanker Barendrecht that picked them up at se: al- fiers, ap 200 feet long. sald to be larg in the world, has been MILLION AIRE Y DauGHTER 61ee |/ WP ALL TO By FIRST WOMAN” | today can re months, |, for reach all when they filled injand a “scon em ahown by a & 164 Mam Street Directly Opp. Strand With Furs Like These Remarkable at 9.50 All feminines who have been shopping around know how hard it is to find coats with such good furs lavishly used as they must be this season. SELECTED OUR OWN FURS THAT'S WHY!! Baby Seal—New and an Outstanding Vogue. Kit Fox—New-Dyed Brown Fox or Natural, Black, Brown and New Tans. Have large shawl and hug—the—shoulder types of collars and deep cuffs made of them—on Broadcloth and Suede Woolens—with many fashionable details. New Winter Millinery ALL HEAD SIZES LARGE AND SMALL Soleil Felts Velours Satings Velvets \Ietfl]]lh Brocades Satin-Metallic Combinations Faille Silk Youthful models that add charm and dignity to the owner. A selection so varied that words fail to describe the distinctive- ness of these wonderful hats. Most lovely hues and adorable trimmings. A host of newest shapes. FRENCH KID GLOVES Specially Priced at $1.98 A real fine, well made glove th narrow turn back cuff, In. ed also washable kids to sell at $2.95. Al the wanted shades. For Saturday Only PURE SILK HOSIERY $1.25 I1-tashioned, service weight, silk © » small hem at the top and all ihsolutely perfect. Every pair guar- intecd as to wear, or we will replace fre eof charge. The regular A Charming Little SATIN BANDEAU Special at 50c In white and flesh, beautifully made and trimmed with a tiny rosebud ornamentation. New Models in CREPE DE CHIN CHEMISE and STEP-INS we have in- a great many of numbers for METALLIC SLIPS $].98 price everywhere $2.98 w fail shades includ- wnd fl Only 100 on his price. HAND MADE GOWNS $7.00 Another lot of the same kind we Saturday. e were able to 100 more to sell at this know they will go actual value of these we The gowns is §1.69 quickly