New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1928, Page 5

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w«"f:b: |l!ln |I|||||I| t " N - e " fl ’ by o4 L:/ > Unless otherwise indicated. theatrical motices and reviews in this column sre written by press agencies for the “CHICAGO AFTER MIDNIGHT” Today and tomorrow are the only two days yet left tp see two of the greatest feature pictures ever before shown on one program. The main attraction offers “Chicago After Mid- night," starring Ralph Ince and great cast of sclected stars. The companion feature offers Reginald Denny in “On Your Toes” It is Reginald Denny's greatest and his best pleture. The 5th chapter of the “Collegians” is. also shown on the same bill. Tonight is “Candy Night.” Many high grade 5 pound boxes of candy will be given away to lucky patrons. FIND QUEEN WORE GOLDEN GARTERS Discovery of Ancient Ruler's Body Reported by Museum Philadelphia, Feb. 13 UP—Queen Shub-Ad, Sumerian ruler.of approx- imately 5,000 years ago, wore golden garters, golden earrings, a wig sur- mounted by a golden ornament re- scmbling a large Spanish comb, & heavily beaded cloak and carried her rouge in vanity cases of the period— cockleshells. Discovery of the queen's pody in a tomb near that of her King was announced yesterday in a report from Leonard Woolley, director of joint “expedition of the museum of the University et Pennsyivania and the British ‘' museum in Ur of the Chaldees, Mr. Woolley said the treasutes found. in the tomb were the richest ever unearthed in Ur. The tomb the queen was found abutting the = king's burial vault, which had been robbed of its treas- ures, and in the center was a burial pit containing the bodies of more than 50 men and women, the war- ders of the tomb. Sloping Ramp A sloping ramp led down into the pit, the report stated, and on the slope lay the bodizs of six soldiers | of the guard, their crushed skulls encased in copper helmets and their spears shouldered. They had been killed in their places to remain as sentinels of the dead. “The rest of the grave area was a shambles,” Mr. Woolley said, “for in the narrow space were strewn 50 bodles of those sacrificed to the spirit of the dead. Along one side were men, their daggers on their hips; against the foot of the tomb | lay the chief ladies of the harem, 11| of them wearing what must have | been full court regalia, consisting of vlaborate headdress of gold ribbon, wreaths of gold mulberry leaves hung from strings of lapis lazull and carnelian beals, silver pims with lapis heads and great gold eafrings. Silver Palm “Above the tair of each woman was a silver palm with long points ending in inlaid rosettes of gold, | shell and lapis and beside eagh lay | cockleshells containing face “paint and little alabaster ungent vases. “At the head and feet of the dead queen were. crouched the bodies of her attendants. Her headdress, worn | originally over a great wig, was @ | marvellous sight. Coil after coil of | gold ribbon surrounded the halr; above these and across the fore- hicad ran a frontlet of lapis and car- | rielian beads, from which - hung heavy rings of gold. Higher up was | a wreath of gold mulberry leaves. Then another wreath with large flowers whose petals were inlaid with lapis and white shell. | Wore Necklace | “The queen wore a tight fitting necklace and gold garters around her knees. Over the upper part of | the body was a cloak entirely cover- ed with beadwork in vertical rows and horizontal groups and fringed | with dangling gold rings. The cloak | was fastened to the right shoulder| with three gold and lapis pins, to| each of which was fastened a cylin- | der seal. On one of the scals was | inscribed the queen’s namge.” Those who burled Que#n Shub-Ad?| the report stated, following the| prior death of the king, could not | resist the temptation to break fnto | the tomb of her husband and rob it of ith great treasure. “The tomb had doogways crowned | by a true arch of baked brick,” the | report added. Heretofore the oldest | arch known was foudd over a drain dating back to the third millenjum 1i. C., and was discgvered in Nippur by the university's expedition. Exca- ' vation of the 'tombs in Ur now re- | veals that corbel vaulting, the true | arch and the dome all were umil|lr| to the Sumerian builder and were | carried out both in brick and stone | in the fourth millenium B. C. i 1t fs now possible to go by rail | from London to Pekin in 19 days. | TESTED BY TIME For” oyer seventy years Father John’s Medicine has checked colds and built health and strength. Doc- tors have always prescribed its wholesome elements. Safe for young and old, being free from alcohol ' and harmful drugs in any form. Tespective amusement company. CHARLIE CHAPLIN AT CAPITOL Last night's audience at the Cap- itol theater had come to see “The Circus.” Charlie Chaplin's “The Cir- cus.” And it was a circus they saw! It's here all week! After two years, Charlie Chaplin idol of masses and classes in every clime, has given his public a smash- {ing comedy in this new United Art {ists picture of his, *“The Circu: It's the greatest entertainment pi ture the greatest comedian in world has ever made—and that is strong language. Charlie Chaplin never disappoints. He is the one known quantity, the {unfailing clown, the constant north- |ern star of films. In this story of |eircus life, of which Charlie acci- dentally becomes a part, his genius for fun-making is again clothed in the trick derby, over-roomy shoes, funny little moustache and flexible cane. And audiences, who have |come to love this screen Charlie, roared louder than ever at the an- tics of thelr idol. The shows are continuous daily with a special showing for school |enilaren at 4:30 for 10 cents. {.\KATOLE FRIEDLAND - STRAND | _ Vaudeville's costliest act begins a three days' showing at the Strand theater today when the peerless An- atole Firedland and his famous Club {Anatole revue will appear in the 50 minute extravaganza supplemented by several other vaudeville acts and ithe screen feature, “Sailor's Wives” from the sensational novel by War- ner Fabian, author of “Flaming Youth” and “Summer Bachelors.” Anatole Friendland is one of the foremost names of the American vaudeville and musical comedy stage. Aside from his genius as an enter- tainer and producer, Friedland is one of the couniry's foremost musical |composers, having written some of (the greatest song successes during ithis decade, PRESENT PROGRAN OF 16TH GENTURY {Quartet Plays Impressive Con- cert at Trinity Church Four musical Latins who have made a specialty of delving into the the | Rockefeller Fgcu Squte 0il Committee (NEA Service, Washington Bureau) to her home on Frederick street by |this time. Vast quantities of food- an attack of the grippe. stuffs were furnished the allied and former enemy countries under his Mr. and Mrs. John L. Heckman |direction. In the Russian famine of of Elm Hill spent the week-end with fricnds in Waterbury, 1921 he headed a relief organization !mine laborer tn California, and later engaged to supervise 'm operations in West Australia. Upon returning from: Australia he was | married in 1899 to Miss Lou Henry, that fed more than 12,000,000 per- who had been a clasamate, and ime sons. | mediately left for Chi A daughter, Lael M: | ina as chief 13 acy Kelly was e n s This is the way John D. Rockefeller, Jr., looke d to the Senate Committee on Public Lands at i born recently to Mr. and Mrs.| | engineer for ‘the Chinese govern- Thomas Kelly of Indiana. Mrs. Kelly | _ Finally, President Coolidge chose (Continued From First Page) is the daughter of the late Rey. |HOOVer to organize reliet for the Herbert C. Macey of this town, who | Mississippi flood victims last spring. was pastor of the Newington Center | He made a personal tour through Congregational church for many |the stricken territory and planned years. . |the feeding and sheltering of thou- |sands of destitute and homeless. Arthur E. Johnson, son of Mr. and | Since 1921 Hoover has been sec- |Mrs. Otto H. Johnson of Maple Hill | retary of commerce, in the Hard- |avenue, has been made a member ling and Coolidge administrations, |of the honorary fraternity, KapPa | where he has emphasized expapsion Pl Alpha of the Bentley School of of the country’s foreign trade, Ascounting n‘“:mfl::::;" in Boston | climination of waste In_production Sentor High school in the June class and distribution, and establishment of 1927 |of simplified practices tn industry | 31 'and standardization of products to | T L = {protect manufacturer and con- sumer. | HOOVER COMES QUT ... g pove Hoover is a Quaker, and comes iof Quaker stock. Born in West| AS A [;ANI]'I]ATE]anch Iowa, a small Quaker set- | |tiement, he was left an orphan at| the age of seven. His father was a | blacksmith. He was reared by| |Quaker relatives on farms in lowa iand Oregon until he struck out for of the results of the contest now to |himself and earned his way through develop. |Stantord university, Calf. The people of Ohio know about| peceiing his B. A degree. | my republicanism.” he sald. “T have | o o/ TR0 O8O LS e . been there all my life, and all of my |activities have been there. I have had a part in helping every republi- | can. My pleasure and platferm are | well known. When the primary {s| over Mr. Hoover will know then| whether these self-appointed friends |of his who have dragged him into {this contest apparently against his/ own wishes have ' advised him cor- | rectly.” | | Aide to Ald | | Direction of Secretary Hoover's | campaign in Ohlo will fall to Walter 'F. Brown of Toledo, now unlnnnt] secretary of commerce. He has gone to the state to aid the Ohlo organ- | }ization in selecting the convention | | delegates whom the voters will be | | asked to elect. | Thus far there has been mo in-| | dication whether the secretary will | enter other impending primaries, al- | though his supporters here are con-| fident that this will be done. He ikewise is expected to reply soon to | Senator Borah's letter asking his| |views on the prohibition question. | ! Washington, Feb. 13 (UP)—Her- Ibert Clark Hoover is 53 years old. | One of the world's leading engi- | |neers, he is probably best known to {the public for his wirespread re- | |lief work. During the war he or- canized the commission for relief | in Belgium, and subsequently head- | agencies that played a major | reconstructing war-torn | |ea | in | ¥ood Administrator | When the United States entered |the conflict, Hoover was called upon {to administer America’s food sup- !plies. As food administrator he checked hoarding and profiteering | H URR_Y!@AP”O': | ment. | AUTOS IN COLLISION. | A slight accident happened fm front of 37 Arch street at 5:4§ |o'clock last evening when am auto. mobile driven by Samuel M. Bayer of 261 Linwood street crushed the left front fender and bumper of an ‘auwmobtle driven by Honorius Au- det of 170 Washington street. Audet i reported to Officer Hanmford Dart ,that he had brought his car to a | Stop near the curb when the other car drove up and caused the eolli- sion, but Bayer claimed that Audet's |car started to move ahead as he drove up. ROMAIN IN PHILADELPHIA. Stanley Romain of Star strect, whose absence from his ' wife and children caused them considerable worry for the past several days, is in Philadelphia, Pa., Mrs. Romain learned yesterday. She went to Newark, N. J., and found that her husband had been there but had gone, and she returned in a much relieved state of mind. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS 8 CHARTER eligibility, the elections of the pre- by an appeal to the nation for co- vious mecting were declared to he operation. The meatless and wheat- riches of 18th century compositions | fUl- appeared in concert at Trinity M, E,| The elder Freiheit took the wit- church last night, They played the |Ness stand after Officer John Ken- piano, ‘cello, flute and oboe, the |Nedy had testificd to making the ar- oboelst doubling on the sister in- ! rest when Mrs. Freiheit and son strument, the English horn—the alto ' called at the police station last night of the oboe family. |after the officer had been to the The English horn is the only in- ‘ house on complaint of the assaulted strument that completely belies jts | Man. His head bandaged, he accused name. It isn't a horn and it isn't ving#punched him in English. How It ever got the name | the mouth, the vye and the fore- is one of those little things that |head after N Frieheit had used musical lexicographers, or what the | improper language during a hus bespectacled ‘gentlemen are called, | Pand-wife tilt. Freiheit started the who research things and tomes, | trouble by accusing his wife of hav- have not agreed About. But it is an | in® taken a dollar bill out of his Instrument of rare beauty—merely | trousers pocket, which she dened. | his son of hi | Dome oil leases. While expressing every confl dence in Colonel Robert W. Stewart, chairman of the board of the Indiana Standard Qil, he sa id he totally disagreed with the position the - < |\aw in a smoke shop at 338 Fast H i ! ] jand Officers James M. McCue and | S[]N IS ARRESTED thout 4:33 Satunsey aticrmoon and. F']R ELE[:T'“N R"w ——R {a bottle of alleged liquor In his'’ Sre— hand. | \Bray and Russell May Take Pro- ! next door, spilling. the contents of | | Testimony that Adam Freiheit of [auantity of alleged liquor left. 311 Church street had attempted to | Navickas denied that he had of elections at the adjourned annual I nosc of his daughter, was offered in | treating some friends to a drink [town hall which made Richard H. {the police court today by Edward {when the®aid was made. Erwin and Benjamin H. Goodale, P. Roche made a finding of £uilty |of liquor and has been raided with- | B Russell are reported to be con- and imposcd a fine of $5 and COStS, oyt success. Men of drinking habits |templating legal action in order to father unless conditions in the home | to their part in the raid, the latter|held Thursday evening, February 2 are such that the family can remain | having taken the bottle and a glass |4 Mr. Bray and Mr. Russell were Iman had no right to take the 1aw |came out of the place, he said. ligibility of five persons present to into his own hands, but there was| gergeants 0'Mara and Feeney and YO'€ at the meeting. Mr. Bray won | While making his finding and the | testified that he knew the source Persons, who were allowed to vote. attending comments, Judge Roche | of the alleged liquor supply, but he| At the adjourned —mecting, held | court told him he would “talk” him- | Raymond Stack told the sergeant he | 0Ur discussion on the matter of self ‘into a fine if he was not care- was the owner several months ago lice entered by the frout door, { Nov 3 !bottle of liquor. Me denied that a | woman who lves nearby supplied | was unsteady, causing the liquor to ,spill on the tloor &8 he ran, but h Judge Roche found him guilty and |imposed a fine of $150 and costs and colonel took in refusing to answer questi ons put to him by the committeemen. | Main street. Deteétivé Sergeant 'about 4:30 Saturday afternoon and Church Street Man Said to Have, ™A% siene or tne potice ne ran trom | the bottle as he ran. When the ofii- | 18sts o Goun chloroform his wife and had held a | liquor for sale, according to Sergeant | meeting of the Center Fire district, | Freiheit, aged 19, who was charged | The scrgeant said the smoke shop |“hairman and commissioner respect- suspending payment, and advised | grequent it, the serseant said. make the elections of the previous under one roof in a peaceful Man- | away from Navickas, He also has ar- | ¢lected chairman and commissioner. |some provocation and for that rea-!ojficer Harper testified to the repu- ‘A‘"‘ election by less than five votes. | was interrupted by the young man |was ot able to catch anyone, al-|ON¢ Week later, a large crowd of {and on one occasion Stack ran |fied that a man named “M him the liquor. The reason he ran | was not actually trying to spill it, a suspended jail sentence of 30 days. tillegal. Mr. Erwin and Mr. Good- ale were then elected. Mr. Bray and Mr. Rufssell ealled on Mr..Erwin Saturday night, it is said, and demanded the papers of the fire district. Mr. Erwin refused to relinquish them, since he felt that he had been legally elected chair- man of the districi and entitled to hold the papers. Their request for Ithese papers was their first step in an effort to have the first election |declared legal, it is reported. | A hearing on the acceptance and hardening of Marvis street will be held by the board of selectmen on |less days and the efforts of the 1$9.000,000,000 organization he ere- {ated saved millions of tons of food |for export. | | After the armistice Hoover head- | |ed the American relief administra Ition which, In cooperdtion with the lallled powers, assumed the monu- mental task of caring for impover- ished {nhabitants of Europe. He | |has been described as “general lifc saving manager” for the eastern and {central European countries during ! |an oboe of larger capacity, which means it is lower in pitch and has a beautiful plaintive sound unlike any other. It figures prominently in the famous passage from the Dvorak slow movement in the New World symphony, the passage since used in the song “Going Home.” There were candles in the church, burned to lend color to the character (of the music. and to indicate the concert was given under somewhat similar conditions to those pertain- ing in the 1S8th century. when peo- ple had no electric lights or cven gas lights; but they had plenty of fine music to listen to, as the pla ers last night amptly demonstrated. The spokesman for the musicians A1d not make long specches between numbers, but he did offer a few words of explanation. All of the carly music written was prominent- ly identified with the oboe and the flute, and that was why the quartet of them, playing most of according to the original scores. Bach Handel, Boccherini, Tally, Purcell, Couperin. Mozart and others were represented, and the atience held its breath at times as ! the exquisite harmonies floated through the church. One familiar plece, the Handel Largo, was plaved in a manner rarely achieved and created a furore. Trinity Methodist church is pro- viding fine concerts ever so often. The success of shese ventures into the tone art have been ontstanding. The event of last night will be hard to eclipse. If a vote of the cong gation were taken it undoubtedly would be unanimops for a return engagement. Nothing 80 attractive has been heard in this city for a long time. 5 An estimated acreage of 104,500 was sown to fodder corn in west- ern Canada in 1927, ey FAMILY PROVES VALUE Mrs. Alfred Dubois, Gilbertville Mass., writes: *“I give John's Medicine to my seven chil- dren d find it the we have ever used. It frees them from colds and prevents more se- rious iliness.” . | Washington when he faced them as a witnesd in the committee’s investigation of the Teapot — 5 : I | George C. Ellinger testified that mNEwmfiT“N LuuKs found six men there. Navickas had | Tried fo worolorm w“e the smoke shop into his barber shop | Chloro | cers overtook him there was a small Newlngton, Feb. 13 — As a result can of ether directly beneath the Ellinger. He explained that he was hold last Thursday evening in the with nssaulting his father. Judge H. | has had the reputation for the sale |iVely, Robert H. Bray and Charles the young man to live away from his | Opricers Kiely and McCue testified | Meeting legal. This meeting was ner. Judge Roche said the young |yested intoxicated men after hey A 1ong discussion ensued as to the |son he was disposcd to he lentent. | ation of the place. Sergeant O'Mara The meeting supported these five {two or three times and finally the though he tried a number of times, | YOS Was present, and after a two through the rear door when the po- {lives on Rhodes street gave him a |was that he was excited. His hand he said. A nolle was entered by Prosecu- |,y yrgjay evening in the town hall, Dr. David Aronson testified that | GIRLHOOD TO best medicine | | he took five stitches in each of two cuts in Freiheit's head and also ob- served an injury to his lip. Edward Freiheit teetitied that his father at- tacked his mother after making an ineffectual attempt to arouse his | daughter to anger. He stepped in to proteet his mother and was struck on the shouller with a picce of wood wiclded by his father. He felt the need of self-protection and struck his father, not meaning 1o n- jure him, he said. Asked by Prose- cuting Attorney Woods why he had not called the police instead of tak- ing the law into his own hands, he [ replicd that “someone would be Kill- |ed by the time the police arrived.” | Producing the can of ether he said he had resolved some time ago to bring it to court if anyone in the family was killed by his father. Yes- | terday, toxication as hons on the table with his fists. the young man said. Mrs. Freiheit did not remonstrate until the dishes were | broken. his father was feigning in- he went about the 5 Fine Tmposed John Monko, aged 20, of 19 Hayes street pleaded not guilty to charge of breach of the peace and drunken- ness. He was arrested by Super- numerary Officer William J. Sullivan | o'clock yesterday afternoon | about 2 on complaint of his father. The lat- stified that the young man s and mishehaves, Monko testificd that he went to church yesterday morning and then 'met a few friends who invited him to drink. He took more than he could stand. He said he would work [if he conld find a job and he is ready |to stop drinking. | Judge Roche imposed a fine of $5 on ach count and suspended payment, placing Monko on proba- tion. He warned him that he may go to the e farm unless he leaves liquor alone. Autoist in Court Michael Veniditti, aged 19, of 123 Marlene avenue, Hartford, pleaded guilty to the charge of operating an automobile with a license. He was jarrested by Supernumerary Officer Janaitis Saturday night after he | passed a traffic signal on the left on | East Main street, Veniditti testified that raccompanied by a licensed driver. | Asked by Prosccuting Attorney J. ‘G. Woods if he was familiar with {the motor vehicle laws, he replied |that he @id not know a great deal ‘umm them. Judge Roche | Feeney whether or | companion had a | sergeant replied whereupon Judge asked Sergeant not Veniditti's Roche advised Father | Veniditii to obtain a license if he is | qualified. He suspended judgment. Liquor Law Charges Frank Navickas, aged 38, of 57 Seymour street, pleaded not gullty to two counts of violation of the liquor smashing dishes and pounding | he was | license and the | affirmatively, | ting Attorney Woods in the case of ;ymegiately preceding the special Mrs. John Lulewlcz, aged 46, of 114 |¢oyn meeting which will be held fn | Putham street, who was arrested On | (1s Grange hall. If the action o the charge of violating the lQUOr i, sejectmen is favorable, the peti law at her home Saturday after-lyion for acceptance will be acted up- Inoon. A jug of alleged alcohol Was|on gy the town meeting. All pro- |scized but the prosecuting attorney nerty owners on the street have [felt it would have been impossible |signed the petition with the excep- to prove that Mrs. Lulewicz had it tion of one non-resident. | with intent to sell. Detective Ser geant Ellinger and Officers Kicl |and McCue made the raid. ‘BLATE KT GRVTRAL LUYGH Grease Spills Over on Stove and | | The entertainment at the Grange meeting to be held tomorrow eve- Itine party. Mrs. Margaret Jones, istant lecturer of the Grange, will Ihave charge of the program. £ fined to his home by illness | Flumes Quickly Ignite Woodwork | In Main Street Restaurant. ! As James Keaveny, clerk in/ Schulte’s store at Main street and Railroad Arcade went into the Cen- ral Lunch, 305 Main street, about 12:15 yesterday, he saw smoke pour- | ing from the kitchen in the rear part | of the restaurant. Rushing out, he | turned in an alarm from Box 14 at Main and West Main streets, bring- ——— ing firemen who had only returned | Costs But a Few Cents to Have from the South church fire a short (‘Iean' (‘Iear Skin Yo“'" !time previous. ] The fire was caused by a pan of | Be Proud Of. grease and the flames spread With| y, ;i¢ur now many things you have great rapidity. Damage estimated at |, iy 1o ffiara b i several hundred dollars was done by |1/ Hid rent |fire, smoke and water, considerable |men | merchandise being destroyed in addi- | 357 1=t | tion to the damage to the woodwork .y, in the kitchen. The restaurant was |closed at once, reopening today. S | Licutenant Willlam J. Hartnett, |, M= JUanic Se0en of b it |who was suspended by the board of |hiickheads. My face was covered with fire commissioners for 30 days at the /them, but after using the olntment they regular meeting last week for violat- | ing the department rules, nsslntedi(: the firemen to carry in hose and do |y other work. -He happened to be [oitment for pimpies, g he fire was discovered, |Ecod as Peterson’s Cintr | nearby when 4 o |ad m the paper and |sample and was i and have got some more | {first box and my face e Now You Can Banish Pimples 35 cont box glve it a all_blem- e until you get on's Ointment ce to free your mkin f and good plos, Miss Mass., ‘I had tried most every kind of but found none s 1 saw your for m free 1 with 1t on my e it clears th —_—m WED.-THURS.—THE BIG PARADE PALACE TODAY 'Bazaar Tuesday and Wédnesday Nights United Hall, 310 Main St. Bridge Wednesday at 2:30 Admission 25¢ || Baa Torael Sisterhood {ning will take the form of a Valen- | Albert Leppert of Elm Hill is con- | | Miss Gertrude Fieber is confined | In Few Days | | are not doing your- a| effects of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- clear. I | CHARLIE CHAPLIN “THE_ CIRCUS"’ New York— “Breaking every known atten- I :lnm ot " MOTHERHOOD | Towa Woman Found Lydia E. | | Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- | | pound Always Helpful | Vinton, Jowa.—“When I was | seventeen years old I had to stay at home STARTS SUNDAY lance _record i i forabouttwo years before [ took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound, then I picked up one of your books B and read it. [ be- == gan taking the | medicine. Now I am a house- | keeper with six children, and I have taken {t before each ope was born. T cannot tell you all | the good I have received from it. | When I am not as well as can be I | | take it. I have been doing this for | over thirteen years and it always | helps me. I read all of your little booke 1 can get and I tell everyone | 1 know what the Vegetable Com- pound does for me.’—Mrs. Frank Sellers, 510 7th Avenue, Vinton, Towa. | Many girls In the fourth genera- tion are learning thru their own personal experiences the beneficial RESERVED Phone 230 BROADWAY BROUGHT TO NEW BRITAIN! Vaudeville’s Costliest Act table Compound. Mothers who took as a dependable medicine. And His Original (LycEoMm) |f , b AnatoleReme [ Ch Hostesses! Comedia ; TONIGHT *its the Real Night Life” ‘CANDY NIGHT” OTHER SELECT ACTS 5 Ib. boxes of candy given away. St On the Screen “SAILOR’S WIVES” From Warner Fabian's Story TODAY—TOMORROW “CHICAGO AFTER MIDNIGHT” with Ralph Ince Sth—“COLLEGIANS"—5th Reginafimfimy “ONYOUR TOES" This coupon and 10c will admit any lady to best matinee seats

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