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q:.i tjpu 1 ) Usless atherwise indicated. theatrical » @ritten by prese agemcier for the - “MATING CALL” AT STRAND Starting today for the balance of the week the Strand ofers Thoisas Meighan in his st photoplay. | “The Mating Call” with five acts of seleet vaudeville. “The Mating Call” is .rom the pen of the famous er, Rex Beach. and is a great romance with a very interesting plot. Renee Adorec and velyn | st ‘Thomas .\h-:gh;m] with their excellent roles vaudeville progr: five entertaining acts 1"our Danubes in *“Defy the Versatile Three in “Changes;” | Dixon and Hoier Co. in “The Wall | Corwan and the and Stone and | "Nothing. Al sodge of entertainment. | n presents | including the ng Gravit | will offer Clem Lewis’ Minstrel Foll with a local residents who have hearsing faithfuly the past weeks under the direction of Lewls, who guarantees a fine s py show when the curtain Monday matince. Some very nent singers and danc cluded in the that Mollie Dreyer, Clara Hindler. Anderson, Charles Moore, Shahanian, Dick Moffitt and cothers, re- two Mr. been promi- | are in- features Mae | Harry ! many | BEEF PRICES ARE | RISING RAPIDLY Caused by Post-War Diffculties, in Cattle Industry ‘ e —rhe | at least, as | Washington, Aug. 16 old fashioned wild west exemplified by cattle ranges coming back intg its own. Beef prices in the last few have n to heights that memories of war s and the e ranches of America ning 10 reap a profit s of depression. Dr. € V. Whalin, heat expert of e agricultural department, said to- 1y the high s | weelis invoke | cat- | Siraton are arter cight f prices are the cattle industry after the war “In 1920 therd duc tion. the bottom dropped out of the cattle market, and heof \were swamped with umulated ebts=” Dr. Whalin, said. i “The indusiry is now coming bick it it will be at least five years iore the supply of cuttle is normal gatn. Beef prices will continne high 15 1ong as there is o shortag Di. Whalin said he believed the W point in the shortage of cattle | \ ranges had been reached but this | ses ot mean the crest hus heen L cached in the advancing prics of oot WAS Over-pr raisers is not serious and of famine,” he s cattlemen did he situation there will be no said. “1or many ye ot have money to restock the ranges, but now they slowly | catching up with their losses and restocking. 1t owill be this new stock i ket, however, and | market shortage will continue. | “There is a little importation of | beef from New Zealand at present, but it does not amount to much a; that country has very little beef for cxport. At present there is no appre- | clable import in beef and little like- | libood that impor will become heavy “The embargo in bLeef import: trom the Argentine still is in effect of the foot and mouth | in that country. | antime people are turning 1o other meats as a substitute for beef. This will be a great year for pork and a good year for lamb and mutton.” | Sirloin steak sold at conts a pound here today. several years hefore ady for the mar- therefore the {Electrical Inspector In Haverhill Dropped Haverhill. Mass., Aug. 16 &) Harry 1. Small, for 15 years city inspector of wircs, was dismissed from the city's service today by the leity council. He was tfound guilty of incompetency, tfavoritism, conduct hinbecoming a city oflicial and issu- ing permits 1o unlicensed workmen. The charges were brought by several | electrician J\ *TH Wiliiamstown, s, Aug. 16 w;i —Two of the wost important issues between China and forcign powers Pgare estra-territoriality and the con- tinuance of the foreign-manned | [Chinese maritime customs service Piof. G. H. Blakeslee of Clark uni-| versity said today In an address be- fore the institute of politics, Pick o' the Pictures! CAPITOL )] e Triumpha y LILLIAN GISH ALICE WHITE. .,’i' t“n ||‘||‘ | healing. | spent |is | giving - \eer and reviews 1B this coluinp are eupective amusemest comnany Pl g LACH | Baints and cutthroats, shrines and | robbers’ lairs are the fiercely con- trasting motifs of Douglus - banks as The icho, the new | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1928. AKELEY MEMORIAL TABLET PLANNED \ Widow of Explorer Asks Per-| mission of Belgian Govt. New York, Aug. 16 (®—Permis. | sion 1o place a commenorative tah- let of bronze on the tomb of the African explorer, Carl Aikeley, who lies buried where he died in the | heart of the Belgian Congo, has been | requested by the Belgian govern- United Artists production, which opens at the Pal omorrow. How Doug came to impersonate | another robher chief, this time a | super-brigund. is now revealed. ! The story of Douglas Fairbanks | The Guaucho deals with a beauti- shrine city, whose wealth is cov- d both by the bandit chief and a | heming dictator. The s fdea ame 1o Fairbanks upon sion of his visit 1o Lour where many aftlicted pe at the cathedral Doug saw #pparent mir fu Nons see tar. There les of faith | cure SWHITE SIS R” AT CAPITOL A revival of The White Sister,” starring Lillian Gish, takes place at Capitol theater today for four Konald Colman plays opposite ss Gish and heads an all-star cast. The film, reputed 1o be one of the greatest love storics of all times, ran several years azo on DBroadway for the greater part of a year. The story s luid amid beautiful Italian | lery, where seven months were | in making the production .n | the actual settings of . Marion | wford's famous novel, of which the picture is an adaptation. The cofeature offers Alic hester Conklin in White he Big Richard for Tiar- four grip- ng Sunday will he offered days in “Out of the Ruins, ping drama. STRATON HITS AGAIN Calls Voon Sonater George and | Joscphus Danicls o Repudiate Candidacy of Gov. Smith . N. Y. Aug. 16 John Roach to S -nator Danicls, | Lalke D has written of CGeorgin and Josephus tormer secretary of the navy calling on them to repudiate the candidacy | of Gov. Smith, Reciting his con- troversy with the governor in the course which he refused the permission o answer in Baptist church the ¢ Zainst him, D them to turn from Gov, Smith veligions forc ) the south letiors the s cenwood (R--The Rev. of nernor Calvary he had made m ealled political allegianee to “The moral and which will at last sw He enclosed in the mon 1o which Gov. Smith took ex- coption. In it the democratic nom- inee was referred to as “the dead- licst for in America today of th ferees of moral progress and true politcial wisdom.” Danjels was in Albany political conference with thy nor yesterday and Seuator is to be there today o their tor Gover Georg, Heavy Windstorm Again Rages on Cuban Coast na. Aug. 16 (A — S)wrl:\\‘ dispatehes to Mundo state th: Santiago De La Vegas was struck in last night by a heavy wind. storm. Much of the damage centered in the cemetery w trees were uprooted and imonuments thrown down. The Cuban national observatory here, although reporting that Cuba in no immediate danger fron hur views the gener,' W conditions with some mis- The authorities v that at his time of the yea shoul? be free of all disturl The arometer was v morning. Temperature w was, ae several rying this high AND CONCERT Group Will Present Program at Wil- low Brook Park The Rizza band will program Sunday evening, E for the The concert will be ! held at Willow Brook park and wili | include the following selections: i eneral Umberto Nobile, | ntini. r0 scolections by Verdi Cavallerio Rusticana by Mascagni. Mefestofele selections by Boito. | Itigoletto by Verdi. | Aida (Consacrazione del Primoat- | to) by Verdi. March, S8ymphonic, by Orlando. RIZzA present a | BRI, | KING'S YACHT IN CRASH Cows, England. Aug. 16 ®—The | King's yacht Britannia collided nnh‘! her escort (he minesweeper Selkirk | in Cowes Roads today and was un- able to compete in the Royal Vie- toria Yacht club’s regatta, King George learned of the acci- dent to his yacht at Aberdeen, Scot- land. as he was en route to Bal- horal stle. Speedy repairs ma; enabl Britannia to race at Southsca tomorrow, BEGINS AT 8 P. M. TODAY., FRL, 8§ Continusus nt Return of | vember ment in 4 communication just ceived by the explorer’s widow, M Mary L. Jobe Akeley. M. Jaspar, prime minister of Bel- gium and minister of the colonies, has made the request through Prince Albert de Ligne, Belgian ambassa- | dor io the United States M. Jus 1ys, “This action is desired a taken of the admiration of the Bel- gian government for the great Amor- ican scientist” and that he wishes Mrs. Akeley (o consider the offer as u tribute to the memory of her hus- bund and to herself., Carl Akeley died suddenly on No- 436, on the high slope of Mt Mikeno in the Parz National Albert of the Belglan Congo, where he and Mrs. Akcley had undertaken (o fulfll a mission from Albert, king of the Belgians. Mrs, Akeley, aided members of his par hoys, prepared his grave in the solid volcanic rock, and, using the only materials available, built a coffin of native mahogany, metal-lined, and upholstercd with soft woolen bLlan- Lets, an eight foot stockage of mu- cted around the ent the encroach- ments of the jungle. A great slub, | made of cement which Mrs, Akeley {Bad her black boys carry from a overnmient post w hun; miles distant, rs the explorer’s name and the of his death, The bronze tablet which the 1an governmont now Proposes dedicate to Carl Akeley's will surmount this cement a future expedition, M, plans personally fo sujn placing of the failet Land’'s grave, ARRESTED AS SUSPECT Man Taken Into Cu by the other | and her black 3el- to memory slab, On Akelev the hus- vise on her ¥ of Police at Randolph, Mass, Rundolph, Mass A e who des { as Mednis of i captured Dy Patrick . MebDonnell off North Main street day and held Mree burglaries. | Medenis is alleged have ob- tained a total of 1 otrom the Nomes of Roderick J. Hultzen, John . Kelly and Fred White during the night A bout and O man wis Iolice in i here Chict woods to- with arly in conncetion to midnight. Chiet Bdward the by and later Medenis tn the fired man, surrendered Medinis breaking and entering. In his pock- s police found a dirk, a diumond ving. a pearl ring, two small rings and four strings of MeDonnel: Dolan began tar. They sep. Mebonnell the woods, at tollowed, ots. The noy search | avated upon in chief dine for n Dur- the Provi- | wounded, chase five Who w without was held on e HAS BIRTHDAY PARTY Mary Elizabe*h MeDonnell, ter of M nd Mrs, Thomas Me- Donnell of 450 Main treet, enter- tained 12 of her friends at a party diay afternoon in honor of o sixth hirthday. The home was | decorated in yellow. Lunch was rved and Mary cived many bheautitul g Among those pres- ent were: Marjory and Heen Camp. thell, Loraine MceGrath, Jean Bailey, [ May Kelly, June Robinson, John | Kennedy, Dan and Sonny iley, | William Cofty. Dorothy Dwyer and | Mary Myerton, |— PALACE — | TODAY MARION DAVIES in MONTE BLUE | “Across the Atlantic” TOMORROW ONLY . CHESTER CONKLI in “THE BIG NOISE” A Mirth Explosion “New Britain Minstrel Follies” ~d C a D o Y o HONROE DOCTRINE WILL | COME UP FOR DEBATE| | League of Nations Has This Matter | Brought Up By Costa Rica i Aug. 16 (P—A debate on | |the democratic town committee is |scheduled for the opening meeting |of the presidential campaign tonight at the party’s quarters in United building, C. '. Curtin, president of the Smith club said today. Inaugur- ! BIG POVER PO |for a dinner or outing are also in contemplation. Mayor Paonessa and |Attorney Thomas F. McDonough wili peak. Directors of Several Companies marine and wounded three tn g com- bat 60 miles from Bocay. They are believed to be the main body of the {Temnant of the Sandino forces. | | German Swimmer Makes Good in Difficult Feat Danzig, Germany, Aug. 16 P— Otto Kemmerich, German long dis- |tance swimmer, landea at Zoppot | clined to interpret the | munication will be | law led to1 ‘Mi:siué St':!dc‘l;l'sfib‘él'c {Royal Mounted poli Discuss Plans the Monro: Doetrine is belicved like ly to occur in the assembly of the League ot Nations in September, Costa Rica has appealed to the league for an interpretation of the doctrine in order to resolee difter- ences of opinion. It is understood the council of the le de- Boston, Aug. 16 (UP)—aA huge New England power pool may result | froin a plan being considered by the | New England Power the Edison Blectric company of Bostou. Officials of the ssuciation and | doctrin has informed Costa Rica that in u cordance With its request the com- icd to all it s up association proposal would submitted to the dircctorates of lioston organizations in the immed- fate futurd Should the v said, New En, of the biggest in the torw members of the leagug believed, will bring the doctrine for debate in the assemibly, Josta Rica raised the « reply to an public join the it resigned in American state tote that operate o the interpretation. Article 21 of the league declared that the covenant such rezional be carried out, nd would | vlectric soure th seal that leazue from 1924 the announ inits it decided to co- 1 felt obliged to ask N which Centad an arca of power S000 square association 2 ommunitics with a total ulation in excess of It includes the Power company of thode 1 before pop- New und Power T compuny, Rhode Island viee co 1y, Bellows conpan w covenant did not understandings for the maintenance of po s the Monroe Doctrine, the note says, hut the international scope of the doc- trine has been extended by convert- ing it “for all natory to the treaty of ailles into a con- stituent part American public insmission Public Falls Power ence Gas and Eleetric Grafton Cou nd Power cor and Southbridg: company, and the Light corporation, The Edison Elcetric 3% cities and towns, including | Boston. It also seils electricity builk to 10 other Light companies and municip; proxir Ay 1,265,000 customers are ed hy ization, Webster | Electrie Electric pany and Lowell ions N Ver ot company ser- Costa Rica recognizes the unde- | ves niable benetits which have sulte from the dectrine but emphasizes that a generaliy accepted interpre tation is desirable in pluce of the present differences of opinions, which have cven appeired various seeretaries of state of the United . . E 5 SMITH CLUR MEETING of whether the Alfred President club will es- Lere or con- rented by individual sery the organ- Discussion 12 Smith for tablish tinue Fishing Schooner Burns To Watarline at Halifa Halifax, N. .. Aug. 16 (A—The w Bedford, Mass., swordtishing schooner, Mary . Kuth, was hurn- water's edge while warped overnment wharf at Isaae’s Harbor Halifax vesterday Capt ! Ben Bishop and h O sevea men ese d to shore. A hackfive from the engi iing plant cauzht som. and soline which the inst taken on hoard minut vessel was The Mary I, Hatheway and sedford, Mass, headquarters to use the rooms BEGINS SUNDAY CAPITOL i to the S wrew of the erude oil sehooner had and abl fow frow in a s the 70 Ruth was owned company of In Canada, Report Says Regina Ang. 16 (P —The rouniversity Towi students en- d on a geolc U expedition in- the Hudson Bay country, unre- ported since early in July, are s according to word received here, The four boys, John Fuller, Peter Boddum, Armstrong Max 1. Kane are well equippe provisioned, and are makin way toward Hudson Jay, Corporal J. J. Malloy of can Narrows chment Sask., of to Gordon the a of BIG DANCE RNAL HALL ERLIN AUGUST Music By L ORCHESTRA 18 Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 MAIN ST. NI (Opp. Arch) N% ) PHONE 1409 Bargain Days |Sandino’s Rebels Thought Puerto Cabe; | 16 (P —Ameri ed to have hemmed in the forces of Huminating | tpe re |along the Coco river near the Hon- du Airplanes are flying daily over the tions and occasionally bombing them | while marines in boats | make their way through the jungle | hunting the Licut, | mont has 1 serves | ogg The rebels were group which on August 7 killed one near here at 10 o'clock last night |after swimming across the Bight or | Danzig from Pillau in East Prussia. His time for the 80 kilometers (about 50 miles) swim was 43 1-4 ! hours. | | He swam the ccompanied, To Be Caught in Woods s, Nicaragua, Aug. an marines are belicy- entire distance un- carrying only a com- | pass, a thermos bottte and a signal | Whistle, He was completely exhaust- | ©d when he landed. bel General Augustino Sandino boundary. on searching out the N SAYS NOTHING neer Philip A, Merian, $4.250 salary was voted the common council last night and who had previously announced he would not remain on the job un- less a satisfactory pay adjustment was made, would not ‘say today whether he is fed with the amount voted him or if he will con tinue to work as city engineer. | or the present 1 have nothin to say. T may have an announc ment a little later.” was Meri answer to the quer: rebel posi- | and afoot by insurgents. Merritt A, Edson of Ve a marine detachment ctorious attacks on the reb- g anolita on the Coco The marines killed four in wounded one and captured no marine sa casual- members of the No your matter how good clothes niay be, or how muc paid for them, ) right uni quently dry cleaned. e Spot F Garments 1 Fire Spots” d Agaiue and Theft STAR . CLEANING (0. 293 AND 688 MAIN 8T. .. to do ALL THINGS WELL- as a pencil and five cent note book r that roams the highways and byways today is alleged to have some partic- ular virtue in which it excels. That you who buy these automobiles may have some basis for fair comparison, Reo makes this simple suggestion. the others. Try it out with each of the two, three, four, or more automobiles you demonstrate before you buy. A pencil and five cent note book can be your only tools. others, After each demonstration jot down those teings which impressed you most in the car youve just driven: the acceleration—the steering—the riding—the speed—the comfort—the style—or whatever the outstandingly impressive points We know Check it on every cars did well. Check its top speed against the fastest of the others. Stand off twenty feet and compare the Reo Flying Cloud’s lines with the handsomest of will prove int that each of the other Point it up hills which only a few of the others could climb haxrdily. Stop it on shorter notice than the best of the Pit it against the flashiest performer you've driven when the stop light turns green. Take the rough roads faster th: easiest riding of the other cars. what your answer will be. For the you dared to in the may have been. Reo Flying Cloud of 1929 is built like the Do this for each car you try. Then drive the Reo Flying Cloud of 1929 with your note book before you. FLYING CLO Sport Coupe, illustrated above . RE KENNETH M. SEARLE Cor. Elm and Park Sts. Friday - Saturday For Quick Clearance In All Departments Many articles which must be sold to make room for Fall Goods. WATCH OUR WINDOWS STRAND _Today Fri.,, Sat. THOMAS MEIGHAN RENEE ADOREE, EVELYN BRENT in Rex Beach’s Story of Romance ~ ‘The Mating Call’ Clem Lewis Presents Cast of 50—New Britainites—30 N Y EGAD TASON, QUICK,« ASSISTANCE (- » ~ LEND A 'HAUD AND HELP ME FAND —THIS -TWERTY POUKDER ¢ <o 4t BY, TOVE, WE WILL NOT EAT “HIS FeLLow,« I 'WILL HAVE T MOUNTED AUD SHELLACKED, -THEM DONATE (T To -THE: oWL's cLuB T HANG IN A CONSPICUQUS PLACE AS A SILENT BOASTOF MY SKILL As A FISHERMAW ! < o ! e Y Sy "\ \ famous clipper ship for which it is named— built to do all things well. REO MOTOR CAR CO., Lansing, Michigan WOLVERINE & CO. Tel. 2110 By Ahern PONC LBTM GET AWAY, . MiSTAH MATOR /e wats FLIP HIM BACK OVER \OUR : SHOULDER,,: AW TLL RASSLE Him W(F A “ToE- HOLD ¢~ EASY dowl o