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Z www I“"r“:l‘ X A S & @lcated. theatrical motices and reviews tu this colomn are written by press agencies for the Tespective smusement company. LOIS MORAN AT CAPITOL Tonight is the lust showing of ‘Beau Sabreu®’ at the Capitol where | t has been pleasing and drawing | arge crowds since opening Sunday | ast, It will be shown for the last imes at 7:05 and 9:10. Beginning | AT THE STRAND The final performances of Emil Jannings in “The Street of 8in" will be given at the Strand theater to- night in conjunction with the Mighty Atom, the world's most famous strong man, who has been amasing Thursday & great dowble feature audiences this week with his feats program will be offered. | of strength. 1our other acts supple- Romantic farce, wefll screened, | Ment this excellent bill. The new show tomorrow brings to with Lols Moran in a dual person- 4 ality role, is the offering at the Capl- ‘."ff"“"j’_fl'"“&“ _"“;,""d Fox o0 tol theater, where Fox fiims “Don't [ 2uCtion, "The News Parade.” whic] =aler, wi s ot | comes here directly from Roxy's Marey" opéas s thres day sun Tham: | LCLCC, S INFO, 100, oo ay. It i a refres| wedy- [ | adroitly directed by James Tinling, elpimed ope of the ssason's bost 08 | pictures. The cast is headed by One of the outstanding things in|Hally Phillips. The vaudeville for the picture is the interesting char- | the week end program will be head- acterization of Miss Moraw. During 4 by that typical American boy, the last few months, under the ban- | Master Jay Ward, who was chosen ner of Fox films, this younygster hae | last year as mascot of the American proven herself an excellent comedi- | Legion and who went to Paris as enne, and in the stellar role of mascot of the 2nd A. E. F. Master Priscilla Bowen she shoWws raresqVard is featured with his mother Ability and subtle comedy. land dad, Ward and Wooley in a The co-feature presents a tale of | hright vaudeville turn. Other acts 8pooks and crooks, “A Thief in the | will include Ross and Louise; Wade Dark” which has an all star cast|Booth; Krugel and Robles; Mangean headed by George Mceker. | Troupe. Beginning Sunday Ramon Nevarro | will be offered in “A Certain Young Man” with Renee Adoree, and Mar- | celine Days ' NO TRACE OF LOST EXPEDITION FOUND (ontinued from First Page) e e AT LYCEUM | The management of the Lydeum | theater wants to get off to an aurly | start and will begin right now by let- ting the public know of the gpva double feature program it has in store for the “Farewell Show.” bergen last week by the steamer The “Farewell Program’” is as- | Citta DI Milano to search for Gen- ranged to play Saturday and Swn-|¢ral Umberto Nobile and the crew day. Sunday night the Lyceum | Of the dirigible Ttalia. : theater will close its doors for altur-| Ideutenant Leutzow-Holm, Nor- ations and renovations and will re-|Wesgian flier, made his first recon- open again some time in September | NOitering cruise from the Hobby late with a main street entrance amg | Tuesday. He returned and said he other artistic changes, | sighted no trace of the Italia nor The main attraction for the “Fare. | the plucky chasscurs who started in well Program” is and has been con|Search of the polar explorers. sidered the greatest drama of the The chasseurs had only a ome measort starring Joseph Schildkraut| Week food supply and were divided in “The Country Doctor” with a{in two groups, each group directed super cast, by guides. One group was supposed chartered by the Italian government RADIUM VERDICT One Yictim Not Satistied With Settlement Hobby from the steamer Rraganza, New York, June 6.—The settle- ment of the suits for $1,250,000 by five women, former employes, against the United States Radium Corporation of Orange, N. J., were filed in the supreme court at Tren- ton yesterday. Each of the women receive $10,000 cash, probably today, and a $600 yearly pension. They are said to be slowly dying of ra- dlum poisoning. It was learned that another wom- an contends she was poisoned and may bring suit. She is Mrs. Marian Clapper Valese, 22 years old, of .3 Burchard avenue, East Orange, who worked for the United States alum Corporation for eight months in 1921. Her physician said that he would ask Dr. Harrison 8. Martland, who identificd the malady, to exam- ine her. Dr. Martland, who is Es- gex County (N. J.) medical examiner, ald that he had received more than a score of requests for examinations, but that he had referred such pro spective patients eclans. Suits of two of the wémen, Mrs, Edna Hussman, 50 Buchanan street, Hillside, N. J., and Miss Katherine Schaub, 147 Scuth Seventh street, Newark, against the Luminite com- pany of Newark, are still pending. A settlement on these cases will be reachcd some time this week. Raymond H. Berry conferred yes- terday with Leslie Fort, president, and Jehicl Shipman, counsel for *he company. Mr. Fort confirmed the fact that a settfement was in pro®- pect, but said that by agreement its terms would not be made public, Besides Miss Schaub and Mrs, Hussman the women are Mrs. Quinta McDonald, 386 Highland av- enue; Mrs. Albina Larice, 463 Austin Place, and Miss Grace Fryer, 467 Tremont avenue, all of Orange. All have expressed a desire to go away and rest. Miss Schaub said that she wished to visit the shrine of St. Anne de Beaupre in Canada. All expressed satisfaction with the award except Mrs. McDonald, who mald that she was disappointed, as it seemed small in comparison with what she had expected. She doubt- ed her ability to care for her two children, 8 and 5 years old, on the fncome she will recely For the privilege of issuing notes, the Bank of England pays the gov- ernment nearly one million dollars a year, plus a percentage of certain profits. BLUE ROOM CAFETERIA Will Open WEDNESDAY JUNE 6 Excellent Home Cooking 140 MAIN ST. One Flight Up H. DAMNLING, Proprietor Open from 8 A. M.-7:30 P. M. Ra- | to private physi- | for the Nobile search, that Captain Jora had made his first tour along Mossel bay. Sora is directing a group of chasseurs. Bora, according to advices received on the Hobby, questioned the Swed- ish hunter Erichson who has been on Mossel bay for more than a year. He denied having heard any motors dwring the time the Italia was com- ing down from the North Pole. Lieutenant Holm will make sev- eral flights over the territory. He will carry a small sled, food for one weeis, sleeping bags, rifies and three ting of pemmicanized food. Al this will be tossed overboard should he sight the crew of the Italia. Russia Speeds Relfef. Moscow, June 6 (UP)—B8oviet Rusemia today rushed preparations (1o sparch Franz Josef Land in the ballet General Umberto comroander of the lost Italia, had landed there, The pick of Russia’s flyers, in- cluding several heroes of noted flights over the snow bound wastes of the north, are included in the relief expeditions now being organ- ized and which may get underway late teday or Thursday. This' concerted effort to search Franz Josef Land was decided upon after 14 had been confirmed the governnient radio station at Obdosk in North Sibcria had received, the following radio dispatch: “Dirigible Italia grounded Franz Josef Land. 8,0 S After confirmation had been ob- tained of this message's receipt by Noblle, dirfgible thorities and the Italian embasay felt certain that Nobile and his 15 aldes womld be found on Franz Jo- sef Land. Russia prepared imme- diately to dispatch airplanes and ice cutters to the vicinity of the is- land. The afrplanes Junker 13 and Dorneval, piloted by Chuknovaky and Bobushkin, will leave Leningrad probably Thursday for Archangel. From there they will go to Nova Zembla where two bases will be es- tablished so that flights may be made over Franz Josef Land. Chuknovsky is one of Russia's DANCE Given By NATHAN HALE CHAPTER Order of DeMolay Grotto Hall Wednesdlay, June 6, 1928 ' Dancing 9—1 Admission $1.00 Couple TWO FEATURES MARY CARR —if— “A MILLION FOR LOVE” with RIZED HOWES the government station, Soviet au- | LYCEUM FEATURES TODAY—THURS.—FRI. most famous pilots and has had & part in some thrilling air tours over the frozem north, He told the United Press he was confident of finding Nobile and expreased a de- termination to locate the crew of 1% that recently flew over the north pole in the Italia. He sald he and his comrades were familiar with the region where now it is beleved Nobile landed, probably around May 256 when their radio signals euddenly stopped as the Italia fought terrific headwinds on its cruise down from the north pole. The ice boats Persay and Maligin will start immediately for Nova Zembla and will carry supplies and | equipment for a short wave radio to be used at the flying bases. It is expected that Chuknovsky will fly from the northern peninsula Litke over Franz Josef Land and will carry a supply of food in his plane, He will drop the food in case he sights Nobile and the Italia | crew. When Nobile left Kings Bay, Spitzbergen, ubout two wegis ago, he carried sufficlent food for about a month. The Italian explorer was prepared for a forced landing and it is poasible the crew in good condition provided their great polar craft did not crash. NOT ANTARCTIC RACE American Geographical Society Ex- plains that Wilkins and Byrd Are Not Sporting Opponents. New York, June ¢ (P)—The pros- pective expeditions of Captain George Wilkins and Commander Richard E. Byrd to the Antarctice are not in the nature of a race to the pole, said a statemeng by Dr. Isaiah Bowman, president of the American Geographical soclety which Bas endorsed and’ is con- tributing to both expenditions. On the contrary, said Mr. Bowman, the flight coordinate each other, the two fliers covering seperate sections of the huge unexplored region, one one side of the great mountain range known to extend into the Antarctic will be flying Commander Byrd. on the other side Captain Wilkins, each gathering data to make a complete record of the coun- try. The plans of Commander Byrd, he said, call for a flight from the ice barrier to the South Pole and the high Antarctic plateau. Captai Wilkins is to fly from a polnt in the Ross sea near the ice barrier along the ice where the coast is believed |to lie toward Graham land- His iplane is to be equipped with pon- i{toons so that at the completion of | his fight he can land alongside one of the many whalers which cruise in that part of the ocean and be picked up. Captain Wilkins, said Dr. Bow- Moscow, Russia, June § (M—Ela- tion in Moscow caused by a growing belief that the missing _dirigible Italia had come down om Frans Jo- sef Land east of Spitsbergen, gave way to vague doubts today when at least one of thé SOB. mcssages thought 1o have been picked up in Sibe rned out to be a false Stharls turned o {man. will leave Panama on a Nor- 2 vegian whaler about November 1 It appeared today that the Mur- |'Vegian 1 . manlkp:muon which yesterday re- @nd will begin his flight about Janu- ported hearing the Italia, mistook |3r¥ 1. Just as Commander Byrd be- radio instructions sent out from &ins his work on base stations at the Moscow concerning rescue plana for fice barrier. the missing dirigible's call. 5 E Federal Horticultural The failure of the big Siberian Board Calls Conference railw stations which have been N rly at intervals 4 calling Noblle regularly Weiiotion Taried il eral horticultural board of the de- | of ton minutes to secure a response, ed further misgivings. hantravmod partment of agriculture has called a conference to be held June 27 at Still the most noted Russian arc& o ., such as Vise and | Onf 'z’iuufféiii?h" cling to the idea that | Washington to consider the advisa- the Italia came down on Franz Jo- [ MUty of modifying the requirementa sef Land and that the first message [ EOVerning interstate shipment of reported to have been picked up re- | five-lcafed pines and of curraht and and gooseherry plants on account of the white pine blister rust. garding this in North Dvinsk, was States desigaated by the depart genulne. ment ag infected by the disease an Guided by expert opinion, the Soviet rescue commiasion has decld- led to continue its preliminary | Which are now controlled as to ship- preparations to search Iranz Joset |!nents include: i Land and Nova Zembla to make sure Connecticut, Maine, Maseachu- that Nobile and his crew are not |Sctts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont. Currant and gooscberry plants other than European black currants, under the present regulations may be shipped anywhere in the United stranded at those places. The powerful ice cutter Maligin, | bearing the plane UL-3 will proceed | to the western shores of Nova Zembla and will go to Admiraity peninsula whence she will send fuel to the |States except into certain limited Russian harbor located at the north- | blister rust L‘Of.fll.'ol areas. Five- ern end of Nova Zembla where the | leafed pines originating in these states at present are movement into non-infected areas nor from heavily to more lightly infected states. rescuers will build a base for & pow- Tot fallowad erful plane which will fly from Leningrad by way of Archangel. This plane will be piloted by avia- for Chuknovsky, Soviet Russia’s greatest arctic flier, who will navi- gate the western and southwestern shore of ¥sans Josef Land. He will make a particularly careful search around Cape Flora, which Nobile knew and probably would have tried hard to reach. Newspapermen Witness “Tellling the World Hollywood, June 6 (UP)—Sixty Southern California newspaper pub- were guests of the Metro-Goldwyn- From Cape Flora Chuknovsky will fly over Franz Josef Land and he assoclations at a preview will either land or drop provisions |fllm, “Telling the World,” which deals with the manner news is broadcast. The newspapermen posed Before motfon picture eameras and were guests at a dinner. “Telling the Worl. depicts the adventures of a United Press corres- pondent in the Orient, with the plot woven about the news glves to the world. and medical supplies for the missing {5 which ship. The 8oviet rescue commission has appointed three leaders for its ex- pedition, these being Prof. Vize, arc- tic exploror, Chuknovsky and Cap- tain Anufriev. | Non-Resident License To Fish for Coolidge Madison, Wis., June 6 (M—A solld | gold button signifying he is a legal ly licensed non-resident fisherman in Wisconsin will adorn the lapel of Calvin Coolidge when he drops his hook in the waters of Brule river this summer. Your ordinary garden variety fish- | erman-tourist from outside the state contents himself with a celluloid but- ton, «nd he pays $3 for it, but the president’s gold emblem will be his without fee, presented to him by either Gov. Fred R. Zimmerman or officials of the state conservation de- partment. A Madison jeweler is preparing the button on orders from Col. Louis B. Nagler, director of state conserva- tion. ] The best known telephone num- ber in New Britain 925. PALACE Mang Beastiful Gitts Will Be Awarded to Ouwe Patroms Bring Them! ill hold a reception for the k dies Saturday Afternocon on the stage. ay Ward will he On the Ncreen LOIS WIL! LILYAN TASHMAN n “FRENCH DRESSING” Co-Feature “THE SODA WATER COWBOY" THURSDAY RRISON FORD—GEORGIA HALE "WOMEN AGAINST THE WORLD" Co-Feature CONEY ISLAND GEORGE WESTERMAN Teacher of Violin Winner of Kate Stanley Hcholarship beyond 5o as to explore a part of | s NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1628, HERES LOW-DOWN ON KANSAS CITY Description of 6. 0. P. Conven- | tion Sife Kansas City, Mo., June § (UP)— Transcontinental travelers who know vaguely of Kansas City as the town of the handsome unien station and the provocative war memorial, | the town of heat in summer and of | hills in both summer and winter, but who thinka of it now as the cen- ter of the republican party, may be interested in learning just how the G. O. P. machine aets amid this mid-western scenery, This is going to be the most eco- nomical convention for shoe leather and shank's mare that the republi- cans have held within the memory of oldeat national committeeman. Take one of Barnum's big tops and ou could drop it over almost the whole show. Start at two hotels, the bach and the Baltimore. Anyone who has stopped between trains long enough to get away from the union statfon knows where they are | —65 cent taxi distance uptown, at the corner of 12th and Baltimore, diagonally opposite each other. Sometimes they make faces at each other, one a relatively modern up- |start built about the time they be- |Ban to conserve space in hotels, the lother a still imposing monument of |the good old days when it was the center of everything metropolitan for the ranchers and the wheat | growers, the oil men and the ! Osages, the buyers and the mer- |chants of the great southwest. National committeemen are | housed mostly in those two hotels. ‘They will be the center of whatever midnight pow-wowing that concocts | political deals from clouds of cigar Muehle- smoke. Push through the revolving | doors of cither hostelry and it's 10 [t0 1 youll step on the heels of a political headliner. Working rooms of newspapers and press association lare at the Muehlebach. | A block south of the Muehlebach and you run abreast of the Hotel | President, a newer place of the bot- tle-opener-in-the bathroom period. National committeemen are there, too, also the campaign headquar- | reach the most Imposing of campaign headquarters, you must chase back to the Baltimore, where | you see Lowden for President on | the mezzanine and Hoover for Pres- | ident with a coupie of more rooms within & few weeks, it will be no new experience, ‘Twenty-elght years ago William Jennings Bryap received one of his nominations there. It was then a structure that had risen Phoenix- like in 90 days. The old hall had burned just after Kansas City ob- tained the convention. And how the town built a new one in record time i3 a story the old settlers still tell to illustrate the spirit of the weat, That completes the tour. Conven- tion delegates will make aide excur- sions, none of them long if they are bent solely on convention bus. iness. The Bhrine Temple, where contesting delegations are being heard, is but three blocks from the now familiar starting point. Small- er hotels are within the same area. 8o 1s the shopping center. vote, of A del- cgate may sleep, cat, buy a clean shirt or a bottle powered beer without w than three blocks from point. It will be a poor convention for those visitors who figure taxi fares as a convenient and flexible item for expense accounts. FLIERS AWAITING CLEARING WEATHER (ontinued from First I'age) 15" was all she would say when pressed for a_possible starting date. Secks No Big Stakes Miss Earhart made it plain today that the only stake she hoped to win by the flight was “the privi- lege of flying and the pleasure of having & hand in a fine adven- \g more any given | ture.” In a message from Trepassey, N. F., to George Palmer Putnam, New York publisher anl one of the flight's backers, she said “Please get tne point across that the only stakes I win is the privi- lege of fiylng and the pleasure of having a hand in a fine adventure, whose success will be a real for- ward step in aviation development and perhaps somcthing of an in- spiration for women." Mr. Putnam declared Miss hart is receiving for the flight. Bad Weather Ahead A change for the worse in the next 36 hours over the ocean route the FriendBhip must travel ar- no compensation weather burcau. He sald that the barometer was falling at Valenela, Spain, with southerly winds blowing. This, he sald, coupled with the easterly high- | was ters of Senator Jim Watson. But to predicted last night by Dr. Jumes i the H. Kimball, head of the New York | n the third floor, Curtis for Presi- winds and clouds over Ireland, “in- dent will be doing buainess there. dicates that a low pressure area is | too, by the end of the week. | moving northward, probably across | | what Atlantic and weather reports fore- |by the fagt that threc other women cast excellent weather and & follow- 'had flost their lives in similar at- ing wind to mid-ocean. Reports tempts. She sald that although she from Boston indicated conditions 'had done a great deal of fiying (she in mid-ocean were not so favorable. |has credit for 500 hours in the air) Miss Amelia Earhart, the femi- |she had never before been on & |nine member of the crew, Wilmer |long flight. | Stultz, pilot, and Louts Gordon, me- | Newfoundlanders, who have ssen |chanic, expressed keen disappoint- |the start of many transatiantic |over the delay but retired last night [flights during the past few years, expressing the hope that dawn!say the mystery surrounding the | would bring more favorable condi- | Friendship's attempt is something | ttons. new in their lives. Although the 1, | To make a safe take-off the 000 gallons of gasoline from which Friendship would have to head the plane refueled, were shipped |eastward out through the narrow here for that purpose nearly s {harbor mouth. But with the wind month ago, this first did not be- out of the west and on their tail |come public until Sunday, when the a take-off away from the wind was fight started from Boston. considered too hazardous for the { heavily loaded plane il - | Take-Off Difficult ill Have Mississippi V The pontoons which aad we DIY, Uninstructed Group greatest factor of mafety for the Jacksom, Miss., June 6 UP— Missls- occan flight. also make a take-off | SIPPl Will be represented by a dry, uninstructed delegation at the demo- cratic national convention. | diMcult and conditions must be | just right before the big monoplane | Tt can break the suction of the atee| Voting down almost unanimousiy on_ her smooth boatlike supports | % ProPosel to commend Governor g e b Smith of N. Y. as a “courageous | The forecast todny was for a N experienced leader able to lead {continuance of the fresh westerly | Lo DAY o victory,” the atate con- vention terday alse ide gales, but Stultz hoped for a mone. | oo 08 Veerioy o aneh: Angi (tary lull or wind shift that would | i the delega a e - |enable him to get the big plane off | du,,““ SE7E5h SRR Rt gl |the water. | The stand for prohibition came | The mystery which surrounded |wich a vote for “retention and eu. |early preparations for the fiight | forcement” of the eighteenth amend | continued. | ment, | The filers were reticent in dis- | The eight delegates-at-large, who Y| with the district delegates will caat had not definitely decided where the state's 20 votes at Houstom, in- they would land; that they are mot clude Governor Bilbo who favored | seeking publicity; that their flight | instructions against any “wet” and is a private venture and that they | Senator Pat Harrison who opposed do not care to give out information. | instruction and asked that his name | Miss Earhart, whose slight, boy- [not be considered as a “favorite |18h figure attracts attention wherever | son.” |she goes, said she had found the | flight so far very enjoyable. She is | looking forward cussing thelr plans. They said the: Herald Classified Ads are wonder eagerly to being | messages. ALMOST A MIRACLE PERFORMED 1f this hay tes, ned in your family yeu, call it & miracle. Mrs. Julia Libby, Goodyear Ave., Mel- rose (Mass.), writes: “Not long age, when m jughter was 3 years old, Signs of Worms are: Constipation, de- sto -:Ih. upper lip, offensive h—t‘. hard and full stom- they belleved was uuflckntllhc first woman to fly the merth fuel to carry them over the north Atlantic and scemed little daunted which he | TOMORROW That Typical American Boy! JAY WARD Mascot of the 2nd A, E. F. Now Featured with WARD & DOOLEY Get your bearings agaln at the | corner of 12th and Baltimore, walk |a block north, and you bump into the ever s0 tall Kansas City Athletic | club bullding, which has extended | its hospitality to visiting news- ! paper men, who've almost filled the | lishers and editors and their wives building while permanent residents | the Start at | Mayer studios and the United Press the same center of things and walk | of the south a block and you meet the ., moved out for a fortnight. fleld marshal doorman of the Kan-|pypope sas City club. There are celebrities ithere, too. « Now for the big show. Starting again at the traffic signal that spins midway between the Muehlebach | and the Baltimore, you walk three | blocks west to 13th and Broadway | and there you are—Convention Hall, | When that building sees the nomi- | ‘nltlon of a presidential candidate | jmay Suuyg 23w}s 2y} we UCOWINFY AEPIMES AP -PIY Y3 ioj wondadax ¥ proy [IM Pres Lef | Pupil_of Carles Fnssellbrink at Tnet! 2 o e s " /N "Ross & Louise | Wade Boot Kruele & Co, “Dances” “A Song Cycle” ‘Just Lafts” Vaudeville's Supreme Novelty THE MANGEAN TROUPE TWO T—Artists—7 “Pastimes of the Wild West” Co-Feature RANGER The Wonder Dog in His Latest and Best “FAREWELL PROGRAM” SATURDAY and SUNDAY JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT ——it— ‘THE COUNTRY DOCTOR’ Co-Feature MRS. WALLACE REID —in— “HELL SHIP BRONSON” LADIES’ MATINEE This Coupan and 10¢ will admit a lady to best mat. seat. ON THE STRAND SCREEN! William Fox presents ‘THE NEWS PARADE" Directly Here From Roxy’s Theater the path of the fliers.” Are Harbor-Bound Trepassey, N. F., June 6 (® — Harbor-bound by strong westerly winds which would favor them if they could met mafely off the water, crew of the transatlantic plane Friendship today hoped for a moderation of the gale which has od the start of their flight to Their plane was loaded with Pick o’ the Pictures! C LAST TIMES TONIGHT 7:05—9:10 “BEAU SABREUR” THURS.,, FRL, SAT. 2—Excellent Features—2 A Merry Tale of Flaming Youth with LOIS MORAN NEIL HAMILTON Co-Feature CREEPY! SNEAKY! CREAKY! ach with pains, pale face, exu heavy, short dry cough, grinding of the teeth, little red en th u..‘l::n:‘n= ‘Il‘a t! slow fever. “Safest Ride in Town” Something to Think About How many times have you spent $1.50 to have a suit cleaned and pressed after a drenching rain . . . when thirty or forty cents invested in a comfortable Yellow Cab ride would have saved you ;noney, time, and per- sonal discomfort? Think of this the next time you are caught in a shower. ONE FARE! NO CHARGE for extra pas sengers. NO CHARGE for extra stops. Pay what the meter reads.