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MAE WEST'S PLAY FINSHES 115 RON Has Two and Two-Thirds Per- formances 0@ Broadway New York, Oct. ¢.—UP—Indica- tions today were that “Pleasure Man,” Mae West's raided play, had finished its run on Broadway after two and two-thirds performances. Its cast arrested for the second time in three days the doors of the Blltmore theater locked against it, its author arrested and Mayor James J. Walker and other city officials in- sisting that the play be barred for all time counsel for Miss West and the actors admitted defeat. “It would be foolhardy to conti said Nathan Burkan, Miss West's lawyer. Matinee Stopped A temporary injunction to pre- vent police from interfering with the production, issued Tuesday by Supreme Court Justice Valente, was unanimously dismissed yesterday by the appeliate @ivision of the supreme court and the matinee performance of the play was stopped during the second act by police and the actors arrosted, Officials of the Biltmore theater then announced that all ticket sales had beep stopped. Mayor Walker In ordering that further drastic action be taken againgt the play 1t efforts were made to present it again, said: “We shall not have disgusting or revolting degenerate shows for ex- hibition In this city.” Audience Protests The closing of the show and arreat of the cast during the matinee met ‘with some protest from the audience. Jay Holley, one of the actors, went to the footlights and started to make a protest against the police action, While the audience was ap- plauding his plea for *“fair play” the police jerked him back into the wings and the curtain dropped. The members of the cast were hustled into patrol wagons and taken to police court for arraignment. Miss West, who is not in the cast wan not rearrested. The actors were released on $500 bond each for ap- pearance in court today. Claim Prince Nicholas Has Eloped in Rumania Budapest, Oct. ¢ M—The news- paper Pesti Naplo sald today that! Prince Nicholas of Rumania had eloped with a- Rumanian girl of aristocratic lineage and was living in the Paris villa of his brother Carol, the former crown prince of Rumania, No confirmation of the report was obtainable from other sources. . The paper said the censor at Bu- charest did not permit the matter to be discussed publicly while the Rumanian court maintained that Prince Nicolas was on a holiday in Europe. (Prince Nicolas is 25 years old and visited the United States in 1926 with his mother, Queen Marie, and Princess Ileana. He is a member of the regency which rules for the six year old King Michael, whe is his nephew and Carol's son). ~ BORAH CONTRASTS RIVALS' POLICES Citss Hoover aod Sumith Farm Programs Fargo, N. D, Oct. 4 (P—Senator William E. Borah of Idaho outlined Herbert Hoover's program for agri- cultural relief and contrasted it with Gov.' 8mith's policies in an address here last night. " To aid the farmer the Idahoan said, the republican presidential nominee favors construction of the Great Lakes-8t. Lawr ‘nce waterway, as well as an increase of tariff on farm products. Hoover would advocate legislation to revise the marketing system, Sen- ator Eorah said, ‘“so the farmer would not be robbed.” He cited the nominee's figures showing un -ar il waste of eight billion dollars in marketing expense. A federal board would be created by Hoover, he said, to eliminate sea- sonal surpluses. This board would have authority to assist the farmer in marketing according to sound economic principles, he explained. Gov. Bmith’s only farm relief rec- ommendation, Borah said, has been the suggestion that a commission be appointed to study the question and recommed needed changes. SURROUNDED BY FOOD But Could Not Eat Because it Was in Tins and He Was in a Box Car. Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 4.—(#—Ed- ward Connelly, 38, a chef, was sur- rounded by food for seven days and yet, he said today he nearly starved to death. Connelly found himself locked in a box car which was shunted to a lonesome siding. The car was load- ed with boxes of canned food, pack- ed high all around him, When his pounding on the door finally brought rescue yesterday, Connelly explained that he had fear- ed to break into the food because it might be thought he was stealing. When hunger finally drove him to consider getting into the food, he had lost his knife and could not open the boxes. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Mlld enough for anybody...and yet THEY SATISFY * * HINK what that means: “Mild enough for anybody . . . and yet they satisfy!/” Mild—yes. But something more—a quality of leaf, a skill of blending, that brings out the natural taste and goodness of the tobaccos themselves. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1928 ROOSEVELT SAYS SOUTH I CERTAIN Declares Smith Will Receive Tremendous Yote Warm Springs, Ga.,, Oct. ¢ P— On the eve of his departure today for Columbus, Ga., Cleveland, Ohio, and Boston to speak on behalf of the democratic national ticket, Franklin D. Roosevelt said the southeastern states would give Gov- ernor Smith a large majority on election day. The nominee for governor of New .York said the ‘“so-called Hoover Democrat” movement in South Car- olina, Florida, Alabama and Geor- gia had all but collapsed. On the basis of observation tn the two weeks he has been in the south. Mr. Roosevelt was of the opinion that the only Hoover vote from peo- ple “who formerly called themselves democrats” in those states would come from a handful who will vote “not for Hoover but against Smith on the simple and clear ground that the latter is a Catholic.” Favorable Reports Asserting that he also had favor- able reports from North Carolina, Mississippl, Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma, the New York nominee believed that “a flood of scurrilous and disgusting” literature in the south will prove to be a blessing be- cause it had resulted for the first time in a generation in a definite democratic campaign organization to work for the national ticket. To his opinion that many acces- sions of strength for the republican national ticket in the south, may be attributed to religious bigotry. The nominee added that no fair minded people in the south accused Mr. Hoover and Mr. Curtis, themselves of stirring up religious feeling. “On the whole, however,” Mr. Roosevelt concluded, “this campaign of vileneas is proving a blessing.” Telegrams of congratulation which taxed the capacity of tele- graph offices here continued to pour in throughout yesterday. Mr. Roosevelt will address a dem- ocratic rally at Columbus, Ga., to- night and speak in Cleveland on Saturday. After two appearances at Boston on October 11 and 13, he will still have three weeks to work in New York for both the mational and state democratic tickets he said yesterday in disclosing a rough outline of his plans. He expects al- 80 to stay in New York headquarters for a while. ZEPPELIN READY . T0 START SUNDAY Will Commence Its Trip fo United States Berlin, Oct. ¢ M—The new Ger- man dirigible, Graf Zeppelin, hav- ing succeasfully come through its final test flight is ready to leave for the United States on Bunday. It was announced that only unfavorable weather would delay the airship's departure, Graf Zeppelin on the test flight of 34 and a half hours covered about 1,800 miles at an average speed of more than 52 miles an hour. The ship flew from Freidrichshafen, where it was built, over Holland to England, and after returning, cruis- ing over Germany, back to its base, As a rehearsal for the transat- lantic flight the airship was navigat- ed throughout the night exclusively by instruments in the pilot's cage, which was entirely isolated from the chart room behind it. The dirigible was sald to have b shown no warpings or other altera- A, 4 “Peachy” Way * to a Man’s Hearf Mix ! cap cream or cottags chesss with lvln:u layonnaise, heap high ::-dp-di‘:flm VANHOE Mayonnaise mad ewrvs on lasese { MINOR, READ & TULLOCK Distributoe - Tobacco goodness, and without over-sweetening; mildness with character—that’s the Chesterfield difference. And it’s the most important difference any cigs- rette could offer! pcttndipunsSbancs@, tions of contour through shifting of inflation gas. This is always consid- ered possible in a new airship of such dimensions, e¢specially when it encounters strong head winds. Werfect Motors The motors functioned perfectly throughout the trip. An experiment on running all five motors simul- taneously on the newly developéd “Bla gas” was successful. For the greater part of the flight, however, benzine was used 50 as to conserve the lighter fuel for the flight to America. §0 YOURE MARRIED, DORIS/ HOW DO YOU UKE HOUSEKEEPING ? NEXT WASHDAY INEVER SAW SUCH WHITE CLOTHES, DAUGHTER / HOW YOU MUST HAVE SCRUBBED ener, officially known as LZ the guests of the flight tenant Rosendahl, U. 8. Navy, commander of the dirigible Los Angeles, orgi ly the at Friedrichshafen. Avignon, Oct. 4 (U Latty, archbishop cf Avignon, died yesterday. Sixty-nine persons, Including the crew, accompanied Dr. Hugo Eck- builder of the Graf Zeppelin 27. One of was Lieu- Commander Charles E| WLZ-126, which was also Bradley N, Fiske Will Support Hoover New York, Oct. ¢ UP—Rear Ad miral Bradley N. Fiske, a first voter at the age of T4 years, today an- nounced his intention to support Herbert Hoover because he believ an important issue in the campaign is public sa “I am 7¢ years old and | have [lse\‘er voted, mainly becauso of the conditions in my seafuring lfe” ho | said, “but this year T think it ts my duty to vote for the nominec of the republican party. “I think this for the simple reason that the democratic party has shows by its record, when it was in power, that it s unworthy to be entrusted Adiniral Fiske, who was chief of with the safety of the United naval operations from 1913 to 1915, | States.” —Monsignor He was 84. FINE,ALL BUT WASHDAY. 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