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o v,-, ‘ apufull nil iy - I Ll By N T \ e \ L =i S = allmum n “ X 1R !ll\,fi skl p . | 'Ouless ‘otherwiee tndicated, thestrieal Setiess and reviews in this esisma are “written W) press agincies for the respective amussment eempeny. TOPHOCTIVTOIOTTOPITTEITCIPUCTOILRTIEILOVVVEOTIVT . ' _AT THE CAPTTOL Beginning today for the last half TRENE RICH AT LYCEUM Lyceum theater offers a wonderful < NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JAN of Quarter Century Ago Latimer Laundry Was Young Flappers When "¢t the week the program at theiprogram for today and temorrow Cepitol is offering double feature at- | conaisting of two of the finest pic- iractions. Both features afford great|tures om one bill. The main attrac ‘catertainment and both are worthy|tion offers Irene Rich jn “The 8il- of standing alone on individual ver Slave.” A glittering drama of iaerlt, 'hé main attraction from a popu- lurity standpoint is Rex Ingram's wroduction of “The Garden of Al- =h," that wonderful story of the 1hiora, of the Jramatic romance of young and courageous monk who ds to the calls of the outside 1d for one brief moment of pas- on. 2 Alice Terry and lIvan Pa!rofltch! ¢ the featuréd players and the cast ontging thousands of Arab tribes- iacn as background. Beginning Sunday night the big trattion will offer Dolores De Rio with Vietor McLaglen, the Char- maine and Capt. Flagg of “What Price Glory” in their new hit “The Loves of Carmen.” modern mother love. On the sam( program the co-feature stars Patsy Ruth Millep another woman star well worth mentioning. Friday night is “Amateur Nite.” PARSONS, HARTFORD How many persons are familiar with the origin ¢f S8amuel Clemens’ nom de plume, Mark Twain? His daughter, Clara Clemens, who will be seen at Parsona’ theater next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in a stage veraion of her father's “Joan of Arc,” recently revealed the pen name as she heard hey father tell it. The name eventuated while he was winning early fame as a young journalist on the Enterprise, a democratie newspaper in Carson City, Nev. His writings, copled and Employes of the Latimer Laundry ; Dermody. Nine years ago the laun- Co. of 33 Walnut street, will be. en- | dry.was bought by the present com- tertained next Saturday evening by | pany, the officers of which are: the owners of the company at a | President, Louis Kirschnis; treasurs banquet marking the 25th anniver- er, Morris Rubenstetn, secretary, sary of the concern’s existence, The | Milton Brombers. At its beginnirg event will take place at the plant, | the laundry catered only to the shirt with more than 30 employes present. | and collar trade but modern ma- Invitations to attend have been ac- | chinery and methods have been fn. cepted by men prominent in laundry | troduced and a general laundry | usi- circles in Hartford, Waterbury and | ness, covering all activities, is now other cities. During the dinner, en. | conducted. It is one of the oldest and THE PASSING PARADE quoted all along the Pacific coast, One of vaudeville's biggest spec- |Were unsigned; easily identified, yet {acles, “The Passing Parade” fea.(lacking a personmality. " tures the Strand program for the | Young Clements realized that to week-end starting today. This gor. jbuild a name it was incumbent upon geous extravaganza has a cast of him to fasten it to a distinct person- 22 molected stars including *Boeb" (#ity. Much as he thought over the Me < did he consider the McManus, Dick Knowles, the Broad, | Matter, never g way Four and the original 12 Sun- use of his own name; the nom de shine Girls, The act is presented wlume was the fashion of the time. with & wealth of scenic investiture [$j Wanted something briet, crisp, nite, unforgettable, but of the consumes a :an’e‘m:v:‘"“-;e:‘:‘; l:n dm(,::m ad. |many combinations he turned over vanee accounts it s really the ::'hll mind, none seemed convinc- nearest approach to a genuine . | State Laundry Owners Broadway production in miniature. Then, at last one day, he hit it— Other acts supplement the bill with the screen feature, Zane Grey's “Nevada.” CLARENGE DARROW MAKES | 600D PRONTSE OF §0 Appears Today Refore Vermont Su- preme Court To Argue For Life of Convicted Man Montpelier, Vt., Jan. 12 (UP)— Mark Twain, ant old river term, a lead-man’s call signifying two fath- oms, BOSTON SYMPHONY The attention of musical America is now concentrated upon Maurice Ravel, foremost of living French composers, who is making his first visit to this country, and whose mas- terly suite from the Ballett, “Daphnis et Chloe” will be produced by Serge Koumsevitzky at the com- ing Boston Symphony concert, in the Capitot theater, Hartford, Febru- 8. Ravel arrived in America last; Keeping a pledge made by his son | week, and was the guest of honor at nearly 36 years ago, Clarence Dar-'the Symphony concert in Carncgle row, noted criminal lawyer, appear- Hall on Baturday, when Koussevitz- ed before the Vermont supreme ky conducted several of his acores, court here today, in an effort to including this one. The composer, save John C. Winters, convicted of | who sat in & box, was given an ova- murder, from the electric chair, tion by the New York public. Ravel Darrow did not expect to address is to be the guest conductor of the the full bench of the court until this | Boston Symphony orchestra in Bos- afternoon but was in the courtroom |ton for the week of January 8, eon- tertainment will be provided dancing will follow. The Latimer laundry was estab- | lished a quarter century ago by Wil- liam J. Latimer, now owner of the American Laundry Co. of Waterbury and president of the Connecticut association. Affiliatcd with him was Ambrose | taundries in the state, if not in New | Englani. The picture above of Latimer { Laundry cmployes was taken about | 25 years ago when women jumped up on chairs at the appearance of a mouse and when ankles were something mysterious, hidden behind ;Ihc hem of a woman's garment. DEBATE ON SHITH 1S HEARD BY 4,000 Harvard Debaters, Opposed, Are. Yoted Down |1 Boston, Jan. 12 (A—An audience | of more than 4,000 persons which crowded Symphony hall to hear bate Gov. Alfred E. Smith's presi- | dential qualifications, rejected by a heavy majority Harvard's contention | that the New York exscutive lacked the national and international view- point and gave the decision to the team from University Heights, The debate marked the first re- sumption of forensic relations be- and was featured by a mutual agree- ment to eliminate any reference to the religious question. An interlude in more serioud ar- tween the two colleges in 30 ycars S { “One of the speakers for the af- | firmative has, to say the least, been { unkind in reference to our presi- | dent but that has no bearing in this | discussion. We do not hold nor do we believe that Mr. Coolidge fs qualified to be president any more than Mr. Harding was qualified.” But he thought several men of ational promjpence were, United ates Senators Borah, Walsh of Montana, Walsh of Massachusetts and Reed of Missouri, were among those he enumerated. Throughout the debate Harvard conceded Gov. Smith's cutive ibilitiés In the government of n, | New |1'ulco on Boston College and Harvard de- | York state but insisted he was t00 grounds at Shefiield last November. “provincial” to be president of the | United States, “Babe” Ruth or even “Bossy Mayor of Newburyport, asked Mr, ! scoll. ! | Boston Oollege, on the other hand, | anggrted that Mr. Smith had “by his l atesmanlike vision won even the | i dits of his political adversaries.” | | “His strength lies not in his works alone but in his ability to put their concept into decds,” was how Jo- It presidents were to be clected will be continued. for their popularity alone, why not whether the trial will take place at " Gillis, | when arguments were opened by Winters' regular counsel. Winters was convicted of the first degree murder of Miss Cecella R. Gullivan, formerly of Whitman, Mass, at Windsor. 8he was slain, on the sleeping porch of her home ' several months ago. Unless Winters is granted a new trial he will be sentenced to the electrie chalr, ‘The famous lawyer who saved Loeb and Leopold from the gallows entered the case as result of a promise made by his son nearly a quarter of a century ago. Young Darrow was involved in a runaway horse accident in which a vouthful cousin of Winters lost his life. At that time, the lawyer's son promised the dead boy's mother that his father would be at her service if she ever needed him. Remembering this pledge, the criminal lawyer came here to lead the eleventh-hour battle to save Winters from execution. In Australie, white ants have been known to attack and demolish alarge farm cart evernight, leaving only the metal parts uneaten, PALACE ~TODAY— CLANCY'’S KOSHER WEDDING with GEORGE SIDNEY Also “ALIAS THE DEACON” ~FRIDAY— REGINALD DENNY fa * “CHEERFUL FRAUD" Co-Feature BUFFALO BILL, Jr, tn “OBLIGIN' BUCKAROO” PARSONS' Hartford HARRIS THE SENSIONG NN T £ " ducting & program of his own music there. < . Koussevitzky's remarkable inter- pretation of the “Daphnis et Chloe” music has been one of the outstand- ing features of the symphonic sea- son. When he played it in Chicago and fn New York last autumn, au- dience and critics rose to the mag- nificent thrill and beauty of the per- formance. Rose From $4 a Week Job To President of Bank New York, Jan. 12 (P—Robert L. Clarkson, who has been elected to the presidency of the Chase Na- tional bank, the nation's second largest banking institution, started his career as a runner for a. brok- erage house at $4 a week. He is 36 years old and during the war en. listed in the navy as an ordinary seaman, later earning a commission as ensign at Annapolis. TODAY—FRI—SAT. 8 EXOCELLENT FEATURES § BEGINS SUNDAY DOLORES DEL RIO seph B, Doyle summed up the go crnor's attributes in opening Bos- ton College's case for the affirma- | tive, | Reside Doyle and Scanlon the | Boston College team included Wil- liam J. Killion while Frederick W. P. Lorenzen was the third man for the Crimson. Prof. Frank L. Simp- son of Boston University Law school | decided. Decision was by vote of the aud- ience, The tabulation has not yet been announced but Prof. Simpson gument came when David E. Scoll | of Evanston, I, first Harvard | speaker, referrcd to Gov. Smith's | “undignified” fondness for singing, dancing and visits to Coney Island. Neal T. Scanlon, second speaker | for Boston College, retorted: “It may | be that this human fondness for singing, dancing and even going to | Coney Island is undignified but at| least, nobody ever accused Gov. Smith of cantering about the halls | of Albany on & mechanical horse. A gale of laughter swept the audience and when Scanlon was able to resume he continued, *“nor did he ever play cowboy and Indian in the wilds of west of Buffalo. | [ | TH| The obvious reference to Presi- | TRAN D‘ | dent Coolidge seemed to have heen | i | E Always & Good Show forgotten until Francis X. Shea of | Harvard gained the floor. I| Now /Come and Revel | In This Big Show | ‘of Mirth and Melody! Vaudeville’s Biggest Spectacle THE PASSING PARADE 22—PEOPLE—22 9—BIG SCENES—9 with . “Boob” McManus Dick Knowles Broadway Four LYCEUM —TODAY and FRIDAY— $—GREAT PICTURES—3 IRENE RICH “The Silver §lave’ —FRIDAY NIGHT— Amateur Night Cash Prives Co-Feature PATSY RUTH MILLER in LADIES’ MATIN! any lady to matinee best seats. Amatours—Apply at Office, —_——— HOODOO DANCE MASQ!I{ERADE . S he:s Society ODD FELLOWS’ HALL Sat., Jan. 14 BOSTON SYMPHONY February 5th, Capitel Theater, Hartford KOUSSE“YITZKY Program :— “Euryanthe” Overture . “Daphnis Et Chloe” Suite . “Waldweben” frem Siegfried Wagner “7th Symphony” A Major ..... ... Beethoven Weber . Ravel ‘The 12 original Sunshine Girls starred in many Broadway productions, is one of the hits of “The Passing Parade” w}th a cast of 22 people, at the Strand Theater, starting Today. ; declared an early canvass had! shown Boston College far in the lead. Both sides were well ap- | several thousand | COOLIDGE STARTS ing was started, STANLEY IS INDICTED Pittsfield Grand Jury Brings. Man. | slaughter Finding Against Man Who Killed Peter Fulco, Pittsfield, Mass, Jan. 12 (UP)— Gilbert Stanley of Great Barrington, Yale graduate and former hockey ho has not penetrated since he en- star, was indicted for manslaughter (erod the White House. by a grand jury yesterday, in con:| Accompanied by Mrs. nection with the death of Peter the Berkshire schooi plauded and the | persons present showed no marked | division of sentiment until the vot- by His Wife Washington, Jan. 12 (# — With F ana as his destination, President Coolidge will leave Washington to- !morrow for a six-day trip which will take him into territory which Coolidge, |distinguished Americans, the presi- |dent will depart from Union station on a special train whose schedule |runs through Virginia, the Caro- linas, Georgia and the full length of Florida. this term, which will only last tWe | 1In Havana, Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge more wecks. ) |will be guests of President Machado Fulco was shot while with mlof Cuba in the national palace. young woman in an automobile president Coolidge will make the parked on the school grounds opening address Monday at the when he ignored Stanley’s command sixth pan-American congress to to leave the premise which delegates from virtually alt e _|of the republics of the western ORPHANS IN REBELLION !}cniconere will be present. Montevideo, Uruguay, Jan. 12 UP)| The {tinerary southward from —Children in an orphan asylum Washington includes an hour stop here rebelled yesterday and attacked |in Miami, Fla., late Saturday aft- rolice ment to quell the outbreak. /ernoon. From there the president Several officers were injured and will go directly to Key West where isarmed before the mutiny Was he will embark on the battleshiy suppressed. ,Texas for the six hour crossing to e {the Cuban capital. He leaves there LEFT BIG ESTATE carly Tucsday morning and on the Bangor, Me., Jan. 12 (UP —The |trip north will stop at Jacksonville, late Garrett Schenck, former pres- |Fla, probably in the late forenoon ident of the Great Northern Paper | Wednesday, company, left an estate estimated | The trip to Havana will oblige at $3,177,000, according to his will, | Mrs. Coolidge to spend four nights flled for probate here. {in succession on trains since she Stanley, who pleaded not guilty, is out under $20,000 bail, which It is uncertain |Secretary Kellogg and a party of | traveled last night to Northampton, Mass., to visit her mother, Mrs. | Lemira Barrett Goodhue, and ex- ’pec'-l to return to Washington to- 1mrm. | Officer Is Busy Man Havana, Cuba, Jan. 12 (P—The (haps the most worried s the offi- jcer in command of the two forts {from which the guns boom the, |salute in honor of various delegates |coming to the pan-American con- | ference. 1Ot those in charge of the wel- {come this officer has the most com- | plicated duty of all for he must {have his artillerymen fire the exact | number of shots befitting the rank {of the visitors. The longest salute 1s being re- served until Bunday for President tion attending the conference. Yesterday was a day of continu- ous cannonading as delegates from |Salvador, Hoduras, Colombia ana Venezuela arrived. The government is most anxious not only to offend any of its guests, but also not e leave anything undone to make them feel at home. President Coolidge and his staft will be escorted from the battleship Texas with ‘military and official ceremonies to the presidential pal- been ordered to halt Sunday at 1 p. m. for the rest of the day to prevent interference with the re- ception, Prospective Electors To Have Instruction | Americanization classes to pre- pare persons of Polish birth for ad- mission as electors will begin Fri- day night at the B8acred Heart Parochial school. Sessions will be {held on succeeding Friday nights. The man outside is not so comfortable 3 out of 5 Yellow cab drivers said: U have to just sit and take it—rain, snow, biting wind—hands gripped to the wheel until your arms and shoulders are numb! Not so good for the old driving muscles! That left arm and elbow! It catches every- thing! After a day in the rain or snow, it’s as wet as if you'd held it under a water tap. ‘You've got to watch yourself or the first thing you know you're laid up with an attack of theumatism. We asked the drivers of Yellow taxicabs in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and Newark, how they avoid the efiects of exposure to wet and cold. Three out of five said they use Sloan’s, When they are damp and chilled from hours of driving in snow or rain, they apply Sloan’s over their backs, arms, shoulders and legs— and they never have a bit of trouble with stiffness or pain in the muscles. In every trade hard workers praise this remarkable remedy In every trade where men and women work + hard with their muscles, or where they are ex- posed to dampness or to extremes of heat or cold, you hear praise of Sloan’s Liniment. A brakeman on the Chicago and North- western tells this story of the quick relief that Sloan’s gave to a sprain and a wrenched ligament: “I fell off the top of a box car on my left arm, spraining it and tearing the ligaments loose. I suffered considerable pain for about forty-eight hours. I got a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment. It relieved the pain right away. It is now fifty-three hours since I was hurt. I have 10 pain at all to spgak of. The swelling has nearly all gone down. I think it is the best liniment I have ever used. I suggest that any- body having a sprain get a bottle and apply it relieving pain. It stirs gives you quick, posi can get a bottle that Mail orders filled in order of receipt Frank A. Sedgwick, c-0 McCoy’s Music Store, Hartford Prices $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, Plus Tux SLOAN’S new blood to the place where the pain is— gist's—and many other stores besides—you | Coolidge as the only head of a na-| ace. All shipping in the harbor has| HICKMAN'S TRIAL WILL START ON JANUARY 28 Court Removes Only Obdtacle Which Would Have Delayed Action Los Angeles, Jan. 12 (UP)—-The last obstacle which might have de- layed the trial of Edward Hickman has been removed and the slayer of Marion Parker will go on trial hers January 25. Hickman lost & contention which might have delayed his trial ‘when Judge Robert Bcott denied & peti- tion, asking that the slayer be mpade a ward of the juvenlle courts.: Hickman was placed -under con- trol of the court last summer -when he was probationed after . 'being | found guilty on forgery charges. Late yesterday when Judge Scott was asked to again take Hickman under his control, the judge ascer- tained that Hickman was 19- years old and indicted “for kidnaping and murder.” “Under those circumstances | Scott said, “you are an unfit sub- Jject for the juvenile court and your petition which would make you @& | ward of the court is dismissed.” So long as Hickman was a ward of the juvenile court, he could not have been brought to trial in su- perior court. COLD DOWN IN MEXICO Mexico City, Jan. 12 (#—Abnor. mal weathed has brought death and suffering here. Nine persons huve been ‘found dead on the streets in | the last two days. Their deaths were | attributed to exposure. The ther | mometer dropped to 25 degrees, | which is seldom registered in Mexico City. READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS “We keep off rheumatism this way” One of the Yellow tasi drivers questioned. 3 out of 5 told us thet they wse Sloan’s to ward off the cffocts of exposure and strain upthe circulation—sends itive relief. At any drug- will last you a long time according to directions, and they will never be for 35 cents. Use Sloan’s Liniment l‘a - sorry.”” Harry M. Hall, Belle Plaine, Iowa. Sloan’s is sure—quick No one should ever bewithout Sloan’s Liniment in the house. It's the best first aid in casc of a sprain, a strain, a wrench or a bruise. It works by the surest, most scientific method known for Rheumatism Lame Muscles Sciatica Lumbago Nexralgia Sprains and Bruises Read what this decter says of Shean’s: *‘Posple whose work esposes them 1o strain or to domp ond cold ussally suffer from & good desl of musenler soremess. We find that Sieeu’s gives them quich, pesitive relief.”* Endorsed universally by those who do the world’s hard work Stiff Neck Colds and Congestions