New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 15, 1928, Page 5

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i ell rve ith nd na- ity -« A& A P -l = (= | 4l ¢ Unless otherwise Indicated, theatrical written by press wgencies for the l | == - A X N “WHITE SISTER” AT CAPITOL Tonight “Road House" the sensa- tional movie, will be ofiered at the Capitol for the last time as the pro- gram changes on Thursday for a double feature show, Lillian Gi. triumphant “The White Sister,” an T production for Metro-Goldy er comes to the Capitol Thursday, Friday and Sa gala revival, “The White Ttaly with the Ttalian government. It characterized as one beautiful films ever s In addition to the of Miss Gish, who plays 11 which Viola Allen starred fully on the speaking stage, ‘The White Sister” has many thrilling and spectacular The tion of Mt. Vesuvius supp max for this powerful p: was directed by Henry Kinz, known for his work in “Tol'able David,” “Stella Dallas.” “Romola,” “The Winning of Barbara Worth,” “The Magic Flame” and othe The co-feature offer and Chester Conklin in Noise.” Beginning Sunday for four days Richard Barthelmess will be presented in his latest “Out of the Ruins.” FEDERAL JUDGE TALKED T00 MUCH; NOW ACCUSED succe: spiration Sister' enes erup- the cli- which Alice White “The Big Complaint Made to Justice Tait About Statement Shounted in Open Conrt 15 (Ar 1 1 Atwell ot who 1s sitting temporarily in rooklyn, was made yesterday to Chtet Justice Wil- liam Howard Taft by I. R. Serri, a Brooklyn attorn. rebuked in court by J Atwerr The jud, uked Se jury had found M Luca of Brookly client, guilty of possessing and selling liquor. The lawyer in summing up case told the jury that his “def tion of a modern miracle is hibition agent who tells th under oath.” The judge sa my country a lawyer who made an accusation against an officer of the law would be smashed before he got out of the courtroom.” Then Judge Atweli turned to the woman and told her she had been unfortunate in heg ¢holce of coun- el and advised her to move to an- ther neighborhood, declaring that “white folk and colored do not live together. This last statement, Serri com- plained, had rouse considerable re- sentment among Brooklyn's negro population, with the result that a mass meeting had been called for tomorrow night to register a pro- test. Agents testified at the trial that whites and negros were drinking to- sther at the woman's' place. Aug. ormal Jud after a na De his | oh ToANYE R te ot 3 0 ln!-lu' g P SO L’ 5= Botices and reviews in this colump are Tespective amusemeat company. GREAT BILL AT STRAND | Tonight is the last showing at the rand of Greta Garbo and Conrad Nagel in “The Mysterious Lady” and n llent five act program of audeville. The program | Thursday and offers a bill of vaudeville | hits, The feature photoplay being adaption of Re ch’s popular The Mating Call,” a tale that 1s real interesting in book form and |more so since being made into the jmovies. Thomas Meighan has the brand new and photoplay an | story leading role and he is very ably as-| sisted by R Brent The ville show w nee Adoree and Evelyn five select vande- neaded by Ray and Stone, pair of enfer- tainers and features of many musical comedies on Broadway. An- Gther & attraction will the Four sensational gravita- sts. Other acts will include Ralstons in a uniqe offering Versatile Three in “Changes and Dixon reet G an excellent satire that 1 be well received Beginning Monday of next week for three days the Strand will pre- sent Clem Lewis’ New Britain min- strel Follies. The act has a cast of fifty people. Mr. Lewis has been ldrilling his company for the past three weeks and an excellent show is guaranteed TAKES HIS OWN LIFE 2 e late be the Princeton Graduate Spreads College changes | nd Hoier in “The Wall | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, LOEWENSTEIN GASE STILL MYSTIFIES Finding of Poison Further Com- ‘ plicates Matters ‘ Paris, Aus. 15 (P—An unefficial | report that toxic matter had been found in the viscera of Captain Al fred Loewenstein, Belgian financier, [today added to the mystery which has surrounded his death Members of the Loewenstein fam- |ily had requested that an exhaustive | examination of Captain Loewen- | |stein’s body be made after it was| | found on July 19 in the Engl hannel into which the Belglan b {tallen from his private airplan {July 4. 1t was stated that t |ject was to make impossible the | cropping up in the future of sensa- {tional and fant c stories about the | banker's end. The investigation w {to Dr. Paul, chief ¢ | for the Surete Gene Scotland Yard, and a | ity on medical jurispr Matin says that the report rent at the court house in Boulogne | that the expert’s report, which will not be made public, reveal | existence of traces very re | acteristic toxic matter.” | The report is to be forwarded to the court in Brussels which con- ducted an inguiry into the disap- pearance and death of the financier. | | Should this lead to a reopening of | the investigation it is hkely to have| diplomatic as well as judicial ramifi- | cations since the body was recovesed | |outside of the territorial waters of | {either England or France | | Kohn Abrest, the toxicologist to whom the ana the viscera | | was entrusted, to divulge | { what had or had not been discovercd {and said that he had made no re- | | port as yet for the good reason that | | he had not finished his wor Le Journal, however, s: that Abrest recently told d on entrusted mical anal the French ading author- | den; Le the of a 1 today meone | thoritative houses. AUGUST 15, 1928, wm Ns These hats more nearly approach |semi-conscious condition. The boat | but await developmenta. beret lines in contour. WHH CLINGING LINES SEEN AS SOMETHING NEW New York, Aug. 15 (UP)—The re- cognition of the tailored cloth frock as a style garment for fall has paved | the way for further consideration of cloth frocks—namely, those that are | rot so severely tailored judice that hung over all cloth dresses, disqualifying them for any- thing but hard utilitarian wear dur- The pre |ing the dead of winter. is fast evap. | lke the iailored coat-dress, the first orating—the result, without doubt, | of the establishment of the light- weight type of dress woollen | There are innumerable versions of these weaves, ranging from light- weight tweed mixtures to plain types sufficiently transparent to give them | the identity of georgette. They, of | course, have been on the market for | some time now, but they are seen in | much greater numbers among au- | 1t would seem that a dress fabric to be successful must be fluttering or clinging, or both, and because the lightweight woollens have been de- | veloped to have these qualities their chance for favor looks quite certain. 1s New Idea The idea of a cloth dress made on | dressy lines is unquestionably new, | and without belittling the position of velvet or crope satin. One dares to think that such a tyvpe offers a wel- come variety to these others which appear in such great numbers this | season | There will be so many expressions of the cloth frock this season that, | in this age of fine departmentalizing, | a department of cloth frocks alone could very adequately be stocked. | There is the tailored street dress | of coat-dress type, at present the | | strongest candidate for early wear the sports type that usually means two-piece styling; the formal dress in afternon or warmer colors, and | the woolen dress as part and parcel | of the ensemble that features coat | and frock in different weights of the same pattern. This latter is a | novelty that is handled by exclusive houses. Turbans Popular | turbans are going to be | important this season than That more Banner on Floor and Fires Bullet | Who questioned him on the subjwt.|they have been for a long time is Into His Temple, New York, A 15 (P—Spread- Princeton banner on the throom, Samuel Clark: cklus Peck, rs old, a gradu- of the university in the class of 1927, fired a Lullet into his right and died some hou ater without rega consciousness He was found in his three-room apartment in Waverly place by his room mate, Samuel B. Payne. The latter told police Peck, who employed as a statistician by the Guaranty company of New Yori had been suffering from a nervous breakdown Several temple notes and letters were found by the police. One letter, un- Iressed, read: “To Clara in death, Good bye and good luck. You will do batter without me. The other notes w One of them referred to the “ever wonderful Princeton” and said could never forget “what Princeton had done” for him. Among those to whom notes were addressed were Clarke of Middle- hurgh Y., William L. Matthews of Spokane, Wash.. and Miss Ella T. Backus. Scotia, N. Y An unopened letter was found | from his father, Walter T, Havana re incoherent. IREAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS T e TONIGHT ONLY GREAT EX BEACH'S “THE MATING CALL" FVELYN BRENT RENEE ADOREE JAME S CRUZE BEGINS i 50 People—All Local Re: HE DARED!—-Sufiering, Death, Dishonor, Just to See HOW GREAT A CHANCE — WOULD YOU See “OUT OF To Learn How Much a Man Can Love! with RICHARD BARTUELM CAPITOL — BE EDDIE DAVIS AND GIRE &Efi’;&fi i GREAT GARRO in “THE MYSTERIOUS LADY" VAUDEVILLE SHOW with JAZZ BAND ¢ Y N FoY 4 : R ¥ L— VAUDEVILLE 5—SELECT ACTS—3 RAY and STONE 4—DANUBES—4 DINON-HOILR €O, “The Wall St. Girl” ‘The Ralstons Show Event of the Year! M LEWIS PRESENTS MINSTREL FOLLIES" lents—50 People the Girl He Loved— TAKE? THE RUINS” ARION NIXON GINS SUNDAY he | Peck of | there is nothing, noth no pois- | oning, simply the remains of an or- | t meal and sea water.” | e The newspaper Telegramme a highlight evident to anyone con- cerned with millinery. Turbans in- variably sway the millinery taste when fashions costume make so | like the | phase | combinations of colors | gone FOR AUTUMN WEAR' A specific example is the cloth ! tailored dr which is about to! realize a strong comeback, especial- 1y in the coat-dress type that makes mart tailoring the most essential factor, and fairly begs for a hat| that is equally trim and well groom- ed in line and bearing. The turban answers this demand perfectly, for essential of it is that it fits the head well-known paper on the wall, and that above all else, it be | correct in line. The term “tailored-line” is really | another way of saving smooth line, | for no matter how worked and in- | tricate the fabric is, the finished ef fect must he smooth and unencum- bered. The new turbans are mar. | vels of workmanship, for in every of their development they carry out this idea of neatly tailor- ed line. The vozue of the turban is all the more impressive this sca- son for it is developed in so many difierent media, adding to the al- wayvs familiar felts, hatters' plush, velvet and feathers Plush Version is New The hatter's plush version is quite the newest, since the hatter's plush itself is the last arrival. The feather | t . NOW pre well known, is important and is rezarded favorahly by a greater number of milliner authorities than at its first popular | debut last year | But even the feather turban bows | to an era of workmanship and de- | sign and as a result takes off an altogether new look. For one thing, there is greater ingenuity displayed in the placement of the feather pads, and, in addition, greater scope in the choice of feathers and the That a great milliners have a2 good word for the feather turban, par- ticularly for the early season, is not | be to overlooked The velvet turban seems a fore- | conclusion to share in the favor that velvet frocks are sched- uled to enjoy. The little turbans | that are shown with these frocks and costumes are really less severe | than the other turbans mentioned. | Again they reflect the personality of the gown they are to be worn with and instead of the “construct- | ed” development that identifies a | Boulogne quoted the judge of the|strong a point of tailored outline as | tailored dress or hat, the velvets | court as saying that the presence of poison in Loewenstein's intestin id not necessarily indicate that the capitalist had died from that cause. It was known, the judge said, that Loewenstein was in the habit of tak- !ing aperient medicines and that he took a large dose on July 4 bhefore leaving the Croydon airfield. Such a strong dose, he continued, could | account for the accumulation of tox- ic substances. IST HURT Simsbury, Aug. 15 (UP)—Run- | ning his bicycle into th pedes- | trians, Joseph Yarmiscic, 38, was thrown to the ground, fracturing his skull. At a Hartéord hospital te | which he was taken it was reported he was in a serious condition today. The pedestrians were uninjured. More snails and frogs are eaten in | Paric than in any other city in the 1\\crld. * PICK O' THE PICTURES TONIGHT ONLY “Road House” THURS,, FRL, SAT. DOUBLE FEATURES! The Triumphant LILLIAN GISH nd a RONALD COLMAN God gave them youth, God gave them love, Even God could give no more! — Co-Feature ALICE WHITE CHESTER CONKLIN —in— “THE BIG NOISE” BEGINS SUNDAY Richard Barthelmess —in— . “OUT OF THE RUINS” ey do now. *’couusc-ncur ave & softer, drapery qualit | Search For Men Who Lost Lives Off | | Sound. Sunday night when their 15 | place; | phia. | whe found him clinging to the bot- If there is doubt in anybody's mind just how fitted the turban will or should be, one need only recall that ther are about a dozen tricot braids on the market that are only possible—and then the last word in | smartness—when they are wrapped | closely around the head. STILL NO TRACE FOUND OF FOUR DROWNED MEN Fisher's Island Sunday Continues. Westerly, R. I, Aug. 15 (®— Search for the podies of four young men who drowned in Fisher's Island foot sail boat capsized, continued through last night without guccess. The missing men are: J. Trow- | bridge Cottrell, 19, a Yale freshman and son of Arthur M. Cottrell of this | Lloyd Gus Bankson, of Philadelphia, a class mate of Cot- trell's; Joseph Scales of Louisville; and Charles J. Mcllvain of Philadel- The sole survivor of the party of five which left Watch Hill for a | cruise to Fisher's Tsland is J. Barry Colahan, Jr. of Chestnut Hll Penna. Colahan was rescued by George Adams, a Noank fishermar tom of the overturned hoat, in a — PALACE — TODAY JETTA GOUDAL in “THE FORBIDDEN WOMAN" Co-Feature “GOOD AS GOLD” TOMORROW ONLY )lARIU)I' DAVIES n “PATSY"” Also MONTE BLUE “ACROSS THE ATLANTIC" FRIDAY ONLY DOUGLAS rAlRBA)KS n STAIE FAIR wild Trotting Races . ODLO from Buck Lucas’ Rodeo Ranch Bronco Riding Trick Riding . . Fancy Roping Brahma Steer Riding . . Thrills and Spills Galore Fireworks Every Evening . . A Week of Thrills and Fun « «+ Bulldogging « Running Races Automobile Racing . . . . . AutoPolo . . . . Dog Show . Circus Acts . Horse Show Agricultural and Industrial Show Pony Polo CHARTER OAK PARK HARTFORD September 2nd to 8th pany. printing press manufacturers, was picked up yesterday off Fisher's It is expected that the coast suard Island. boats and army planes which have Cottrell's father who is connected |been used in the search will be with C. B. Cottrell and Sons Com-"o;;l:;ed back to their bases late is at present in Europe. He had just arrived In Switzerland from WEST ENDS PRACTICE Paris with Max. another son, when word reached him of the accident.| e West Ends baseball team win A cable from him today stated that |hold a practice session Thursday he would aatch the next boat from |evening at 6:30 o'clock at Willow Paris. The parents of the other Brook park. All members are re. boys are here, unable to do aaything 'quested to be present. e ——— - “Safest Ride in Town” Built for Their Job Yellow Cabs are especially built for the work they do so well. You are separated from the driver by a partition, there is ample luggage room beside him, no bags and suitcases un- der foot. When you want to get there in safety and comfort, call a Yellow Cab. ONE FARE! NO CHARGE for extra pas sengers. NO CHARGE for extra stops. Pay what the meter reads. He May Be Looking For— An Automobile. A House and Lot. A New Tenement,. A Piece of Used Furniture, A Woman to do Housework. A Painter or Paperhanger. A Cottage at the Shore. A Furnished Room in Private Family. And He Is Looking— in the Herald Classified Advertising Section—“Where all New Britain Gets Together With Mutual Profit.” IS YOUR AD LISTED THERE? Telephone 925 Now. Yes, a trained ad-writer will assist you in preparing a result-getting advertise- ment.

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