New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 13, 1928, Page 11

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‘THE PATRIGT T0 BE ATTHE GAPITL “The Petrist.” which makes ita appearanch at the Capitol thea begipning Sunday for four dage.” Emil Jaunnings' greatest starring vehicle. 3 by that master of subtle- ty. Ernst Lubitsch, “The Patriot” brings te the acreen a story of the Russian osurt a ocentury ago which, for suspemse, dramatic force and lavishness of production, has rarely been equalled, never surpassed, in any local theater. Produced in the mount studie in Hollywood, *“The riot" brings te the acreen the amasing attention to detall and set con- struction which marks Paramouat pictures but it also presents 2" story of such sweeping force that the audience is engromsed in a study ef the characters. = EMiL JANNINGS - IN VTHE PATRIOT? A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Florence Vidor, the gracious and beautiful aristocrat of the screen, plays a role opposite Jannings which offers marvelous opportuni- ties for her suave and meticulously careful artistry. Lewis Stone, who plays the name part of “The Pi presents a character which, for dignity and convincing realiam, might be that of the original, Count Pahlen, whose name is plastered all over the pages of Russian history & century ago. On Thursday a change of program brings & double feature bill headed by Fay Wray and Gary Cooper in “The First Kiss,” and Rod La- Rocque and Sue Carrol in “Captaio Sfyagger.” PALAIS ROYAL Tonight is a big night at Palais Royal, Hartford's ballroom de luxe &s a battle of music will be steged instead ®f the usual Saturday night carnival. EJ Gurley and his 8ynco- pators, New England's hottest col- ored jazz band, will be one of the contestants and the other will be a famous band playing at one of Hart- ford's theaters. Sunday night the regular Sunday program will be in order with Ed Gurley furnishing some special orchestrations and nev- elties. Dancing Sunday night will start at 7:30 p. m. and end at 11. Dancing {8 held in Palais Royal Tuesday, Thursdays, Baturdays and Sundays only, with the other nights available for rentals for social pur- poses or private dances. Tuesday and Thursday are ladies’ nights, Sat- vrday and Bunday special features. According to an avalanche of splendid reports of “Nobody's Girl,” the new musical romance which will be seen at Parscns' theater for three days commencing Monday, October 15, is a most unusual and highly effective blend of dramatic and humorous action. The hook was adapted and revised by John E. Young, well known author and co- median, while the lyrics are by Gus Kahn and Ray Eagan, and the ncore is the master stroke of William Ortmann. The wonderful cast requires no special introduction to music lovers or theatergoers, including as it does, such favorites as Ilse Marvenga, Roy Cropper, John E. Ygpung. Joe Men- deison, Nanette Flack, John Park, Eulalia Young, George Mack, Ev- elyn Darville, Tom Morgan and Ted Muhoney. CIVIL SUITS RECORDED The following suits were brought through Attorney Morroe 8. Gor- don: & ° .8, R. Bchafer aguinst the New Britain Iron Construction Co for $200 on a note and furniture, Dorothy Kolodney against Cianflone, for $200, Btephen Wasik against Burkhardt for $125. Lehrer's Hardware against Dorbuck for $400, Elias Panish White for $100. Joseph Zotter against William Norton for $250. Papers were sefs- ed by Constable Recor in all the foregoing suits. John Ernest John against Charles 0 THOUSANDS FOR TREE:! Fort Myers, Fla., Qct. 13 (#— Mrs. Thomas A. Edison will return here this winter to filnd work be- gun on a $30,000 tree planting pro- gram recommended by civic organ. {zations, one of which she heads as president. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS * BOY SCOUT NEWS The appointment of Raymond Mainer as patrol leader was the most important change in the reor- ganization which was effected by Boy Scout Troop ¢ at its regular meeting last evening at the First Congregational church., Mainer, the youngest patrol leader in the troop, succeeds Joseph Szabo, who has re- tired and will help the cemmission- ed officers in another field. The oth- er three patrol leaders were re- tained, and the following assistants and patrol names were chosen at patrol meetings: Pterodactyl, patrol, William Baker, leader; Harry Slade, assistant. Weasel patrol, Winthrop Warren, leader; Richard Hube, as- sistant. Stag patrol, Raymond Mal- ner, leader; Richard Quigley, assis- tant. Bear patrol, Wajlace Davis, leader; Gordon Ely, assistant. Richard Hube was elected troop quartermaster to take the place of Clarence Derrick, resigned, and Har- ry Slade was reelected troop ecribe. ‘The patrols chose troop reporters, these being Penn Kimball, Wealey Ellms, Adolph Wacker, and Leon Dickinson. The Stag patrel took the lead in the new merit system con- test. A hike for members who want to pass their outdoor second class requirements will be held tomorrow afternoon. BATILE OF SEAES . AT THE STRAND Al Star Cast to Feature Pleasing Film There are few pictures being made now that can evoke a large audience into a silence of tears and the very next moment make themd laugh—a loud uproarious guffaw of spontaneouws merriment—yet D, W. Griftith's “The Battle of the Bexes,” to be shown at the Strand theater beginning Sunday for four days, did that very thing. ‘The joys of the average home; its disappointments; its humor and small tragedies have been ably caught by Griffith, who shows an innate sense of the romanticism ly- ing behind America’s greatest insti- tution—the home, It seems safe to say that no bet- ter example of comedy through pa- thos has been seen in years. The picture is so thoroughly human that & sympathetic flow of interest is aroused in the actions of all of its players. The story is built upon the theme of a modern gold-digger who wrecks a man's home and steals the man to satisfy her own lust for gold. In the end she loses the man but is victorious in that she has ac- complished her purpose—money. Throughout the story there is a strong upper current of pathos as the man's wife and two children struggle to regain their home—the old battle of the sexes. - Jean Hersholt, as the erring father, portrays what is easily one of the finest character roles of his great career. Phyllis Haver as the gold-digger, Marie, plays an unsym- pathetic role and is the direct causg of much of the comedy. Belle Ben- nett gives a sympathetic perfor- mance as the mother who becomes halfcrazed; Sally O'Neil is natural as an unsophisticated home-girl who is instrumental in bring her estranged parents back to the do- mestic fold and Don Alvardo as Jimmy plays the role of a male goldgliger. The rest of the cast in- cludes William Bakewell and John Batten. . The vaudeville bill on Monday will be headed by Dave Harrls,’ the inimitable Broadway comedian, and fhis girls, a snappy. peppy revue. Other acts include Leon and May, “The Cyclists;” Harris and Ffankie in “Legerdemain;” Jerome and Ryan, “Those Hot Boys” and the Pearl Lee company of variety artists, On Thursday Wallace Beery will be offered in “Beggars of Life, Wwith Louise Brooks., Coming soon to the Strand is Richard Dix with Ruth Elder, transatlantic axiatrix, in “Moran of the Marines.” 1 Foreclosure Suit Against Lyons Street Property A foreclosure action has been brought by Mendel 8icklick against Vincenzo Puzzo, Paolina Lenares, der on a $6,000 mortgage note on property located at 14 Lyons street, through Attorney Harry H. Milko- witz. An unusual feature of the action is that the attorney for the plaintiff is the signer of the note, which later was assumed by Dora Schneider, The complaint states that on Sep- tember 1926, Harry Milkowitz signed a note for $5,400. payable in $200 installments every six months over a period of eight years. Later the signer sold the property to the defendant Schneider, who assumcd the mortgage She in turn sold the property to Concentina Puzzo, who later transferred the proptry fo Paulina Lenares, who assumed the mortgage. In this case the mortgage was assigned by George Schmitt to i i payment due on October 7 was de- faulted. The plaintiff claims fore- & recefver to collect rents. Con- stable John 8. Recor served the pa- pers. ENDORSER BRINGS SUIT |tion of the house. Concentina Puzzo and Dora Schnei. | V48 directed to the defendants and the plaintiff, who claims that $60@ was pald on the note and that the | closure of the mortgage, possession . of the premises, and appointment of | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1928, HARD POLITICAL DRIVES LAUNCHED (Continued from First Page) the situation la not so easily resolv- ed. » ‘The republican are putting gre:.ter and grester emphasis on the tarift, Chairman Raskob has declared that Gov, 8Sniith fully understands the need for protection, and that the tariff has no place in the campaign. Out of the several-sided arguments started by this statement has emerg- ed a demand by Senator Curtis that the democratic presidential nominee make good his promise to discuss this subject in detail. Curtis and Robinson While Senator Curtis has been hammering away on the tariff ‘n the northwest, 8Senator Robinson has been making a series of speeches in the far west accusing Mr. Hoover of inconsistency in regard to Boulder Dam, and Mr. Hoover, in Washing- ton, has further clarified his viewa regarding Muscle Shoals and the St. Lawrence waterway, An entirely new eampaign argu- ment was given momentary currency | during the week by former Senator Hansbrough of North Dakota, who sald in a radio speech that Mr, Hoover had large oil holdings in Co- lombia and Mexico. The shower of denials included one from demo- | crttic headquafters, in which Chair- man Raskob said he knew there was “absolutely no truth in the charge.” Woman's Sphere Grows In the closing weeks, woman's place in the campaign seems to grow ever greater. In many communities women have thrown their energies into the battle with a zeal difficuit to match in the annals of the man- made campaigns of the past. As keen a political analyst as Senator Moses said a few days ago that the votes of the women probably would be the deciding factor on election day. Impressed by the activities of the “Hoover women' from coast to coast republican leaders count the nation- wide increase in the number of registered women voters as a dis- tinct Hoover asset, but the demo- | crats reply that many farm women who never saw a polling place. be- fore will vote this time for Smith, | and that many women among tl foreign elements, heretofore aloof | from politics, will help to swell the democratic vote, Leaders in many states have told the Associated Press that feminine interest in this campaign far outruns that of previous years. A typical letter from Miss Alice Burr of San Francisco, president of the Califor- nia League of Women Voters, tells how increasing numbers attend the meetings of her organization to re- ceive non-partisan instruction on the | iscues, More Taking Part “It 18 interesting to note from the number of outstanding women who are taking prominent parts in both | | the republicgn and democratic cam- | paigns in this state,” writes Miss | Burr. “In riost cases they are giving their gervices with a sense of work- irg for a righteous cause, rather than for reasons of party loyalty. They have made their choice of can- didate not along party lines, but in answer to the question: Which can- didate will more effectively put int§ practice those principles of govern- ment for which I stand?" Record Breaking Vote As the last of the states compl.te their registration, prospects for a record-breaking turnout of both men and women on Nov. 6 grow better every day. Great proportionate in- creases in the registration lists are reported alike from the crowded wards of New York city and the sparsely-settled rural counties of New Mexico. In 1920, the first year of nation-wide woman suffrage, the total vote for president was twenty- six millions. In 1924 it was twenty- nine millions. Some political ob- servers now predict a vote of forty millions in 1928, 7 WoM S FOR $700 | Sult for $700 was brought today | by Elizabeth M. Roche against | Frederick L. and Florence Bacon through Attorney Monroe 8. Gor- don. The plaintiff claims that on! June ¢ the defendants were indebt- ed to one Joseph Roskofski in va. rious sums for service rendered ang work done in ‘he construction of a hoyse at 148 Cherry street for the defendants, Roskofski later assign- ed and delivered fo the plaintiff all his earnings due and to hecome due on the last payment in the construc- The assignment | sworn and served by Constable John 8. Recor. The plaintift claims that the last- payment, $400. is now due. Constable John 8. Recor served the papers, TODAY DOLORES DEL RIO —i— “NO OTHER WOMAN" —Co-Feature— BUCK JONES in “30 BELOW ZERO"” and 3—ACTS—3 of Vaudeville SUN. and MON, “WOMEN MEN LIKE” with ALICE LAKE Also FRED THOMSON —in— “ALL AROUND FRYING PAN” NEW BRITAIN PARKS GAINING IN BEAUTY Public Reservations Beipg De- Veloped by Supt. Ellingwood —Photo by Jahnson & Peterson New Britain skaters will have the opportunity of ice skating under conditions of perfect safety and mu- nicipal supervision this winter, if plans of the park department now under consideration materialize. Al- though these plans have not been discussed at meetings of the park board they ha\') been discussed n- formally by members of the com- mission in conference with Superin- tendent Clyde Ellingwood and have the unanimous approval of the board. % The plan is to build a temporary curbing around Memorial Field in Willow Brook park, using plank or heavy timbers for the purpose, and flood the ground with water, pers mitting the enclosed space to freeze to a depth of several inches. This, it is pointed out, will make an ideal place for skating, a place which is perfectly level, with no danger of anyone breaking through the ice, and make skating in safety podsible when ice on ponds is too thin for winter &ports. CLYDE ELLINGWOOD This plan is just one of many new projects now under way in the am- bition of the park commissioners and the superintendent to give New Britain the fincst collection of mu- nicipal parks possible, 1f one were to make the rounds of New Britain's parks, stopping at each park long enough to go over the entire ground, the journcy would cover a distance of approximately 20 miles and would require a large part of the day, ulthough ft ik no un. usual thing for Superintendent Ell- ingwood to make the journey three times a day, even on days when' it is necessary to stop and pay each man on the job. 6,000 Acres of Parks New Britain has a total of ap- proximately 6,000 acres of munici- pal parks, totalling in estimated value nearly $3,000,000. They in- clude Walnut Hill, Willow Brook and Stanley Quarter parks, and 17 smaller parks scattered at intervals throughout the cify and including the greens at Franklin square and Central park, formerly the Village | Green. The visitor will sce more than a | beauty spot at any of these parks. | Signs of activities arc found every day. The newest purk, now under construction, in the rear of the new Washington school, has an area of between four and five acres. This site, until quite recently an unimproved rocky hillside, has been started on its way to scenic attrac- tiveness. Already more than 6,000 cubic yards of dirt have been re- moved from the top of a knoll and used to level a low spot. A full sized clay bottom baseball diamond has been opened, the home plate located in the shadow of an overhanging bank, which turns the diamond into a natural ampitheater. On this bank more than 2.000° people recently sat and witched a ball game. Almost 1,000 fect of drain pipe with sewer caten busing have been installed and mud holes haye entirely disappear- | s include the planting s and flower beds in the ed. The In the rear of the Stanley Quarter park, one mnot familiar With this section meets a surpris down Farmington avenuc, over Eddy-Glover boulevard and turnin | left onto McClintock road will bring which and forest miles the sightseer into’a suggests strongly the S———e——— ANNOUNCEMENT! in addition to our Licauty Parlor and Ladiex' Barber Shop Service we now have @ fiest claws Manicurist. STRAND THEATEN Tel. 1313 for Appointment PILAIS ROYAL 900 Wethersficld Ave. Hartford DANCING TONIGHT BATTLE OF MUSIC Ed Curley's Syncopators vs. Masked Mervels miles of endless evergreen wood of Maine. Pine trees, full grown, not so tall but with beautiful wide spreads | of bright green needles, spread out their branches to the sunlight as far as one can see. In one year therei were 22,000 planted. If a visitor is fortunate enough to have as an escort someone who knows the park thoroughly, he may be invited to stop where McClintock and Blake roads meet and stroll through the woods in the rear of the park. Tost In Waoods Through a natural gateway be- | tween pine trees one walks, until | there comes a dizzy feeling of Leing | lost in the woods. Trees, trees and | trees. The heavy, pungent but not | unpleasant odor of pines fills the air. Pine needles, ranging from brilllant green to rusty brown make | a soft but slippery carpet on the | ground. | As he strolls along, pinning his faith entirely in the ability of the guide to find a way out of the forest, the visitor's nostrils catch with an odor not quite so pleasant. He re- | cognizes it as smoke. Workmen are | found raking dried leaves onto large piles and burning them in a clear- | ing. “The create a fire hazard if | they are not burned,” explalng the | guide, who adds that several years | ago 2,000 pine trees were lost by | tire, The attention of the visitor now is | drawn to the view. A panorama of rolling farm land, houses, forests, roadways and moving traffic extends across the valley to the hills in the | distance, fading into a misty horizon | cver the hill tops. ¥rom the spot where the visitor | and guide now stand, it is planned | {in the near future to run a roadway or graveled walk, winding through | the trees to the open portion of the I park fronting on Stanley street, | This roadway was the dream of for- | mer Park Superintendent Ralph B. | ! Wainright. It is an ideal site for a | log cabin or some rustic building. This would be the place for a tour- {ist camp sitc and there is no doubt | |in the mind of the superintendent of , parks that New Britain is losing out | | every day by not affording a wel- | come spot for rest and recreation of | motor campers, On Blake road toward Stanley | street, the scene gradually changes. | i From an open road flunked on the park side with the dense pine trees, | the visitor and guide now find them- | selves in a woodland with tall white | birches and tall pine trees vying | with cach other to join branches across the highway. Autymn leaves | flutter down and rustle along the | ditch beside the road. The roadway | ! undergoes a change. The dusty high- | way takes on the appearance of a | gravel road, ruts do not seem quite ‘xlnnl careful thought-producing Eventually it will be seeded in grass and will blossom forth inio flower beds. The man-eating insect has Leen banished. On t outh end of the park the old, unsightly. unfm- proved bank skirting the edge of Eddy-Glover boulevard as it emerg- es into the Belvidere or Stanley Quarter Manor sections is gone. its place is developing a gr race. Several men with a gasoline tractor are busy removing the tank, leveling the dirt in places where it belongs, removing dead or dying trees and opening a view of the pariglfrom the street on the south. At one spot, where a ine Iy ended by bumping s this unsightly bank, an opening will Le made into this ravine, so that Eddy-Glover boulevard will be enabled to have unob- structed view along its gr y sides throughout the entirc length of the park. The road back to the city leads past Andrews’ park, just opposite the triangle at Hillcrest avenue. Here again has been enacted a scenic transformation. A small tri- angle, now known as Andrews' park, formerly nothing but a mud hole and at its best doing duty as a duck pond, has broken out with the su den epidemic of ambition manifest- ed by the other parks. Here the superintendent has had installed several lines of sewey pipe and few catch b . The mud hole has disappeared, buried under tous and tons of fertile carth. and a grassy lawn covers the spot. Ilower beds will mark the spot where the ducks were wont to kick the stagnant wa- ter, and mosquitoes once disported in the fog. This park is on the cor- an | ner of Stanley street and Roxbury road. North Street Improvement A vrief trip over North street to the head of Main street and again are found evidences of much work re- sults. The bank where North street s the fire new d runs into Broad as it pas house, has taken on a o longer docs it turn it v, un- washed face to the business section of the city. Washouts, which fo merly brought down tons of dirt and scatterede it about in an unsightly mess have hoen thwarted. The slopes of the bank now are adorned with heavy sod, open catch basins take the overflow of water from storms and only the green front of a terraced hillside shows where once was the rugged bank. McCabe park, the at the intersection of three streets, has di- vested itself of a mass of half wild, tangled shrubbery and exhibits a | velvety green surface with a stately dress. triangle In v ter- | former- | harply against | csidents | ai ugly | 80 decp, foliage is thicker and the grove of tall timber in one corner. sky sometimes seems almost lost to | Mounted on a concrete base and sight. The bright autumn sun fs | overshadowing Main street as a shaded and a comfortable woodland | grim reminder of the close of the coolness is f=lt. The road growe |world's most terrible conflict, stands more crooked. It climbs up and|a captured German howitzer, re- down and winds around. Now fit| crosscs a brook. One can imagine | B mmmm———————— squirrels and chipmunks scampering | through the underbrush or dodging from the branches of birch trees to the background of oak and myrtle. Suddenly one comes to the brick tool | house, the fish pond bursts into view, the travelers again are back | on the paved highway and the visit | to the forest is over. | Home of Mosquitoes Drained But here one finds more action. | North of the pool where the boys of | New Britain sat and fished during the past summer, was a large swampy spongy section, affording an ideal breeding place for mosquitoes. This has been drained and filled. — PICK O' THE PICTURES! TWICE SUNDAY § 6:30, 8:30 MON. TUES WED, Continuous TO-NITE at the RIALTO BALLROOM Music By | Imperial Orch. |d e r—r————————T 001w 2uson eSS e L asay TOUR TO l0ld Newgate Prison . | ST | s AWLUBITSCH Newgate Tavern PRODUCTION || EAST GRANBY, CONN. | Chicken Dinner $1.25 PARSONS' THEATER Hartford Monday, Tuesdny, We OCTOBER 15-1 Semson's A trip | NEIL HAMILTON Q Qaramount Picture it Ml-;\ fight his tyran; seck his favor. Fea picion, hate, grovell cation fill est of Jannings' g ROD LA ROCQUY SUE —in— APTAIN SWA | | splendent in a shiny new coat ef | olive drab paint. | From McCabe pgrk to the tep of Grand street where workmen. are | constructing a crescent shaped rock garden, rose arbors and tlower beds on the side of Walnut Hil park where they can be seen by patients in New Britain General hospital; up West Main street to where two new parks are being constructed west of Corbin avenue, and the journey for one day is ended. Only a small por- tion of the city's parks have been {visited, but enough has been seen to show that with a small, almost vanishing appropriation, a land- scaping job of no small consequence is going on at all times. Directing this work, quietly, un- obtrusively, and with a distaste for personal publicity, is Superintendent Clyde Ellingwood. Born in Poland, Me., Ellingwood grew up to the beauty of the field and forest and learned his early A, B, C's to the music of the birds and association with the denizens of the wildwood. He is a grandson of Isaac Elling- wood, the first wihte settler in that section of the state, and has never had his claim of being a genuine, full blooded Yankee disputed. He spent almost all his life and received all his early education in | Maine, coming to New Britaln with the Miller Construction C which built Willow Brook park, and for whom he was superintendent. He left that concern to become assistant park superintendent under Mr. ‘uinright, and upon the latte resig ion, succeeded him to hi: present position. He is a practical man and a landscape builder with vision and [to whom is given great praise by {Judge William ¥. Mangan, chair- | man of the p board, and other members. H horticulturist insotar as theory goes. “I know where to get the flowers trees or shrubbery 1 want, 1 know what their names are in English, how they grown, where they should be for them,” know ,the d i are he admits. Latin name of a gonned blade of grass.” Mr. Ellingwood's greatest ambi- tion right now is to get that extra appropriation of $3.000 Po continue the work now in progress and ob- viate the necessily of laying off a gang of workmen who are support ing families. single Add a tablespoonful of paraffin to the water when wasbiag linoleun: Tkis removes stains wid helps to preserve the linoloumn is not a professional | planted and how to care | “But 1 don't | PARIS WORKER HAS 364 BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS - Ouce Underwent Two Operations in One Day—National Award Suggested. Paris, Oct. 13.—(UP)—Two hun. dred and sixty-four persons who have never met one another owe [thelr lives to Raymond Bries, em~ i ploye in the Paris fruit market, known to Parisians as ‘“savieur of his fellow-men" because of his hero. {ism in submitting to blood-transfue | sion operationa. | The operations have cost Bries |exactly 22 liters of his blood, but, | such is his stamina and blood-mak« |ing qualities, that he is the pieture |of health. Recently he underwent two operations for trunsfusion in ene | day, one at 11 o'clock in the morn. {ing and the other at four in the | afternoon. | *“Briez* Dblood is particularly.. adaptable to transfusion,” declares Dr. Becart, well known Parisian surgeon who “discovered” this physi. cal wond It has been marvelo to see the vigor which, by his wil ing sacrifice. he has imparted to the frail, enfeebled people. Rich folks and poor have received a new lease of life from him.” During last July, Briez submitted to transfusions. For each opers ation he had to ask time off from his work, which occupies him from 3 a. m. to midday. The Parls newspaper justly ree marks that Briez is probably unique in the world and the suggestion has been made that his sacrifices should be rewarded by the bestowal of the l.egion of Honor, CAMEO—BRISTOL Sunday, the: Cameo _theater in Bristol is offering another .of its big |time Sunday concerts, featuring five ‘all star acts in addition to a splen- | did photoplay feature, “The Way of the Strong.” Starting at 2:30 and running & | continuous performance all day Sunday, the Cameo offers a vaslety of acts that are outstanding. | Bobby O'Neil and his company of merry makers in a comedy offering “Rolling Stones™ is one of the fea- | ture acts. Sabre & Mclntyre in their nutty bits; Karle & Rovein in & | comedy bit up in the ar entitled, | “Banana OiL.” p | Tonight, . the Garrick, Players, | Connecticut’s finest dra ic stock | company are offering the comeay | farce, “Flere Comes the Bride.”. [STRAND Man Against W A Blonde Golddiggg,l' And a “Straying Papa Would Not S TWICE SUNDAY 6:30—8:30 MON., TUES., WED. oman! vs. Wife! Who Simply tay At Home! It's a Page From Life Itself! & 5 Ib; VAUDEVILLE >y 5 with DAVE That Inimitable GIRLS HARRIS Broadway Comedisn His Peter Kostrewski broyght action | CAMEO today against Wincenty Fetps ioe | BRISTOL $350 on a promiasory note. through | - Att M. 8. Gordon, B Feters promised to pay the sum at i — N — the rate of $7 per week to the Com- mercial Trust Co. on a note on|l “Here Comes the Bride” SUNDAY which he (Kostrewski) was the en- dorser. On July 25, 1927. the now: Continuous From 2:30 5— ACTS—5 was protested by the Trust company And Photoplays ‘COMING SOON Rummage Sale Benefit of the Children’s Home To Be Held at 507 Main St. Clark’s Block Tuesday and Wednesday Oct. 16 and 17 Tomorrow Dancing 7:30 1o 11 P. M. In a Sparkling Bevee 1 ENSEMBLE OF CXCELLENT VOICES | COMPANY OF #0 TEOPLE Mail orders with check and seif ad-| dresved stamped envelope will receive at- | tention first. Prices: Eves., Orch.. $3: Dale., $2.50, §2. $1.50: Fam. Cir, $1. Wed. Mat., Orch. 1985 Bale, §139, §1; Fam. Cir, e l Special Direct Trolley leaves New Britain Central Square for Palais Royal Saturdays at 7:15. Sandays at 7:30 — Fare for round trip 25¢. Return dircet from Palats Royal immediately after dance. Take advantage of this Conn. Co. Service. JEROME & RYAN “Those Red Hot Boys' HARRIS & FRANKIE in “Legerdemain LEON & MAY J “The Cyclists” PEARL LEE & 0O, “All tn Faa” and payment was demanded of| Kostrewski, who as endorser wax ~hl'zed to pay $301. Coanstable John 8. Recor served the papers. in “BEGGARS OF LIFE®. “BEGGARS OF LIFE®

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