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(= T IR T (AT | sl lll- l & 0 Duliee ethorwies indicated. theatrive) OTn W srem sgemsier for tBe LILLIAN GISH AT CAPITOL The Capitel for today and Friday only is offering a double feature pro- gram headed by Lillian Gish in “Wind," a glorious epic of the not. so-golden west and with Lars Han- son in'the supporting cast. The ca. feature offers those funny chaps, Chester Conklin and W. C. Fields in “Twe Flaming Youths." Beginning Saturday at noon, nd with continuous shows, the Cap- ital will inaugurate to the theatep- goers of New Rritain and vicinity, those unequalled devices that give the motion picture natural sound, voice, and musical accompaniment. They are known as Vitaphone and Movietone. The photoplay selected for the introduction of these mar- vels will offer “The Btreet Angel” with Charles Farrell and Janet Gay- nor. It is on the Movietone which means that the musical accompani- ment will be played by the Roxy theater orchestra of 110 pieces. There will also be Vitaphone vaudeville acts on the program, of- foring Conlin and Glass in “Sharps and Flats,” and “Miss Information” & skit with Lols Wilson and Everett Horton featured. o 12 CAMEO, BRISTOL In presenting the recent New York comedy drama success ‘“What Anne Brought Home" at the Cameo theater this week, Manager Stevens and the Garrick players are offering a play that has an appeal for both men and women regardless of age. It s a big, human story bullt around two young people in search of last- ing happiness and more than one newly marrled couple find them- sclves face to face with the prob- lems and tribulations that Anne and her husband have to overcome be- fore they reach what they are seck- ing. Hatficld Seems to Be Victor Over Neely Charleston, W. Va., Nov. 8 (UP) —Almost completo reiurns today indicated that Henry Hatfield, re- publican candidate for United Btates scnator, had defeated Benator Mat- thew Neely, democrat, incumbent. Returns from 2,171 of the state's 2,310 precinets gave Hatfield 304,- Neely 399,219, a majority of The precincts remaining to be heard from are strongly republican and political leaders were conced- ing Hatficld's election. 4 » day" buz that!” It's exasperating when men don't understand—and embarrassing when they do. Women who have learned of Midol don’t have painful periodw Midol is not a narcotic. It acts only on the organs affected. Ter- fectly safe, but swift; It brings com- plete comfort in five to weven min- utes! No matter how hard a time you've alw had, Midol will dis- pel every particle of pain. Tt is only common sense to yse it, for it does nothing to hinder the normal, na- tural process of menstruation; but makes it palnless, Get Midol in the trim little case of aluminum, for purse or pocket; fifty cents, at any drugstors. —PALACE— TODAY Gene Stratton Vorter in “THE HARVEST The First 350 Ladies Coming This Evening Will Receive One Plece of 9 Inch Dinner Plate. Starts o Give Away at 0:00 TOMORROW GEORGE K. ARTHUR “THE BLACK AC 3ave 01 Your Ho:ixry Bills “No Run Too Difficult” Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention THE EXPERT HOSIERY REPAIR SHOP Mclen Cunninghiam Proj 308 Main St. Room 200 Over United Cigar Store rgllrlm hesll SR =N S = ] i YT | ) ’ 3 wetiess 888 reviews 19 this selwma are Tespeeiive smusement company. GOOD BILL AT STRAND Jack Holt and Baclanova, the talented Kussian actress, give such a spirited and convincing perform- ance In the new Zane Grey picture, “Avalanche,” which opened at the Strand theater today for four days, that moving picture audiences are certain to demand more pictures using tbls combination, Pack Holt alone has won univer- sal favor with motion picture audi- ences in the western roles which he rlays so well. In “Avalanche” he cutdoes his best and creates a char- acter with & rare sympathetic ap- peal, The vaudeville bill offers five en- tertaining acts headed by Jimmy Burchill and his Blondes of 1929, in a miniature revuetto. Emgett O'Meara, the golden-voiced tenor of- fers a song presentation in wonder- ful volce; the Flores Girls are phy- sical culture beauties and offer a novel act; Moore and Charland “Two Daftydils” present an original come- ly oftering; and “The College Flirt” is an offering with a cast of 8 fine entertalnera, Beginning Sunday for four days the Strand will offer Corinne Griffith and Edmund Lowe in *“Outcast.” Hungary to Have Jazz Music Chair Regularly Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 8 (®— Succumbing to the invasion of Amer- ican fazz which is displacing Hun- estublish a regular chair for music. It s probably that to instruct the students. of Hungary's musicians, recently pe- titioned the government to suppress Jazz on the ground that it left them jobless but the government confessed of syncopated music sweeping across the Atlantic from America, Canadians Take 4,000 Windsor, Ont.,, Nov. 8 P—Agents of the Canadian customs preventive service seized 4,000 gallons of dena- tured alcohol at La Salle, near here, which they belicved was destined for distribution in New York through bootleg chann Although W. A. Jacques, customs service chief for western Ontario, refused to comment, it was sald at local lquor export docks that the selzure was the result of an investi- kation started after numcrous deaths from poison liquor in New York city a month ago. MINERS KILLED Belgrade, Jugoslavia, Nov, 8 (P— An cxplosion in a coul mine at Ka- Kkana, Bosnla, took the lives today of an undetermincd number of min- ers. Twelve men, seriously injured, were taken from the mine. PARSONS HARTFORD Friday afid Saturday Only Nov. 9-10—Matinee Naturday Messmore Kendull and Gilbert Miller rewent “The Sacred Flame” By W. Somersct Maugham wuthor of Ethel Barrymore's “The Constant Wit Ina Claire’s “Our Belters® deanne Engle's “Hain" Staged by WORLD PREMIER OF IMPORTANT DRAMA Neats NOW . $1.50; Bale. 82, . Mat. Cir. Mondny—Tuewdn; OV, 1§ FOP. MAT. WEDNENDAY Witliam A. Brady, Jr., and Dwight Decre Wiman Present JANE COWL A ROMANTIC COMEDY The Jealous Moon With PHILIP MERRIVALE GUY STANDING SEATS BY MAIL NOW ves, Oreh. $3: Bale. $2.50, n $1. Wed M $1.00, $1; Fam. STRAND Begins SUNDAY One of the Year's Biggest Hite From the Orchid of the Screen CORInme Lecture With Motion Piztures By DONALD 8. M PFriday, Not DBulkeley High Kehool, Auspives, Hartford Tickets $1.00 at Crowell garian folklore musle, the state con- | the servatory of music declded today to | have agreed to sacrifice the Bruing® % | offense if it threatens fo weaken the an|{cam's defensive strength. American expert will be vmplo)mj‘( that it was helpless to stem the ide | Gallons of Alcohol | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1928, BOSTON HOGKEY TEAN 15 STRONG Bruin Combination One of Strongest in National League Boston, Nov. 8 (#—~The Boston Bruing have the best looking heckey squad in the National league, in the opinion of Manager Art Ross, who has started his fifth year in charge of the team. Dave Gill of Ottawa is the only manager in the league whe has been located in the same ecity and with the same club for a longer period than IRoss. The Bruins have a nucleus of eight veterans from last year's team which won the Prince of Wales cup and the American division cham- pionship, only to lose out in its fight with the New York Rangers to enter the play for the Stanley cup and the world’s title. The Ross team's defense, with Eddie\Shore, Captain I'red Hitch- man and Goalie Hal Winkler, looms Winkler had more shutouts than any other netman in the circuit last season and Ross, to protect the team more fully in the cage, purthased Cecil Thompson of Minneapolis, the best goalie in the American associa- tion last season, to act as Winkler's understudy. > The team's defcnse spares, Dit Clapper and Lloyd K appear top- grade. Clapper, a 20-year-old youth, is a veteran at the ring game and can play forward 6r defense equally well. The Bruins got by last year with minimum of scoring, probably™ be- cause the team's best scorers were playing in hard luck most of the scason. Ross and his,assistant, Cy [ Denneney, intend to drive the Bruins hard this season to improve puck-caging. Both, however, Though Ross has but a few more | days to develop a scoring punch Gypsics who constitute 80 per cent | before the Bruins open the scason with Pittsburgh, he has a wide sc- lection of 11 forwards to build his first line. The team has been prac- ticing on a Providence rink because the Bruins' new home, the Boston Madison Square Garden, has not been completed. During most of the sesslons Ross seemed to favor his last year's forward line, Percy Gal- braith, left wing; Frank Frederick- son, center, and Harry Oliver, right wing. 'J‘fmsc reliables were expected to start the season as the regular for- wards, but Itoss, who was greatly impressed by Mis new material, would not predict just how long this trio would retain thelr first string classification. The combination of Erik Pettin- ger, Norman Gainor and “Red Green worked well and the spares, (‘ooney Welland, a small but fast centet; Ed Rodden, FKred Gordon and Martin Lauder, have been flashing so impressively that Ross has been pretty much up in the air about their status on the team. RIS HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Pick o’ the Pictures! CAPITOL TODAY and FRI. ONLY Double Features! LILIAN GISH —in— “WIND" with LARS HANSON | An Epie of the Not-So- Golden West! and Those Funny Chaps CHESTER CONKLIN with W. C. FIELDS i n— “TWO FLAMIN YOUTH LOGES RESERVED STRAND Gripping the Heart—Test AND “BLONDES - EMMETT O'MEARA “The Golden Volced Tenor” MOORE and CHARLAND “Wire Frolks” NUNDAY a2bout the strongest in the league.! scs VAUDEVILLE gy JIMMY BURCHELL m NeNbAY Corinne Griffith, Edmund Lowe in “OUTCAST” OF SON FROM WIFE Married . Granddaughter of Senator Lodge in Washing- ton in 1924, Sulem, Mass, Nov. 8 UP—Mr. and Mrs. W. Gordon Means of Pride's Crossing, Beverly, both secially prominent and the latter a grand- daughter of the lato Senator Hepry Cabot Lodge, have separated, ac cording to a petition filed here in the Essex county probate court by Mr. Means asking custody of their three year-old son, Augustus Gardner Means. Mrs. Means, who is believed to be living in Philadelphia, has not yet replied to the petition. She was for- merly the wife of Grafton W. Miat of Boston and New York city, by whom she had two children. Mr. Means’ first wife was Mrs. Marjorle Rice Means, whom he married in 1907, They had three children. ns married his present wife in Washington in 1924. Senator Lodge gave his granddaughter in mar- riage. Wallace Must Return Ta Michigan for Trial | Boston, Nov. 8 (®—The ftull | bench of the state supreme court has decided that I¥rank Wallace, alias Gustin, of South Boston, must return to Michigan to stand trial for the murder of a peliceman during a payroll robbfry in the office of the Detroit News. The court yesterday heard argu- ments on an appeal from the decree of Justice Crosby of the supreme court dismissing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Previously Governor Alvan T. Kuller had sign- | ed an exccutive warrant ordering | ‘Wallace surrendered to Michigan authorities, but the application for the writ of habeas corpus had hait- ed extradition. Cou 1 for Wallace contended at | a hearing before the governor that Wallace was in Boston at the time the crime was committed, but wit- nesses from Detroit identificd him as an alleged participant. Late Tries to Impersonate Brother at the Polls Doston, Nov. 8§ (#—An attempt to impersonate his brother at the polis may cost James Bringola, 20,0f Isast Boston, a year in the House of Correction. He was sentenced after a policeman told Judge Barnes that the youth had given the name of his brother, Thomas, who is now serving a sentence at the Concord reformatory. Bringola appealed and was held in $1,000 bail. | | A comparison of the percentage of forcign born and native born pris- oners at Sing Sing shows that for- cigners are not, on the whole, more criminal than natives. T con BRISTOL THURS,, FRI., SAT. Matinee On Sat. At The Garrick Players —it— |WHAT ANN BROUGHT HOME A Delightful Story of Home Folks A Howling Success Rescrved Scats On Sale Now Call Bristol 1860 SPECIAL Ncalp Treatments and Facialy BOSCO’S LAD! BARBER SHOP AND BEAUTY P, Ntrand Theater B For Appointments Cal TODAY FRL, SAT. ting the Courage of Man GROWING COLDER Police Balled by Slaying of Noted Gambler New Yor . to the myslerious Rothstein, millionaire gambler, grew cold today as police continued their fruitless search for the little group of men who sat drinking in a Park Central Hotel room the night of the shooting. The famed Broadway plunger was buried with guict, simple rites yes- terday. A small group of friends, several of them known as lesser satellites in New York night life, stood beside the grave as Roth- stein's $25.000 bronze casket was lowered. While a Rabbi said the last rites, the gambler's widow collapsed. George McManus, friend and gambling colleaguc of Rothstein, s the principal ohject of the police search for witnesses to the slaying. McManus, detectives believed, w one of the group with whom Roth- stein was supposed to have been talking and drinking just before he stuggered down the service stairway of the hotel, mortally wounded, to ask for a taxi. Hope for Names Although police belicve McManus' part in the scene was only that of horrified spectator, they hope to get from him the names of others in the room. The latter, in the opinion of detectives, are persons whae. held I. 0. U.s which Rothstein refused to pay. The zambler, several weeks ago, was “taken” for nearly a quar- ter of a million dollars in a stud poker game which he charged was crooked. Examination of finger prints on the whiskey room of the notel so far have failed to yicld {angible clues. And &l though the shooting is perhaps the most-discusscd happenings of the vear among habitues of Broadway, none of them seem able to give the police a lead which might reveal the killer. With investigators baflled, the Rothstein case promised to par- allel the s-year-old mystery murder of Joseph Elwell, king of Wwhist players. (UP)—Clues ing of Arnold Havre, George Knight, France's first minister to Canada, i8 en route for New York aboard the steamer Ile De France. He expects to take up his duties in Ottawa about Nov.16. THE HOUSE | HIS OF 1929” DIAZ and POWE “Two Daffydils” “THE COLLEGE FLIRT” 6 Great Entertainers onized The Wondroiis M ayed by the Roxy Thedter of 110 Pleces! Mia"—Our Screen Nings It! This Beautiful St Ll ith Heaven.” VITAPHONE MISS INFORMATION with Lois Wilson and Everett Horton st Week Qur First Talkie! Thurs. glasses found in the | ve That Surpasses Even Their Noted Suctess in FOR NEW POREIGN POLICY Travel Abroad Leads Belief Hoover Will Have AS PROSECUTOR { Goolidge Accepls Resignation of Philadelphian Oil Prober Washington, Nov, s (UP)— President Coolidge today accepted the resignation of Owen J. Roberts of Philadelphia, special federal oil prosecutor. Esperience and More Understanding. Paris, Nov. 8 P—The long resi- dence of Merbert Hoover abroad, | his wide travel and experience led 8 few of the morning papers today | to express a belief that his foreign | policy would Dbe inspired by much {broader and more understanding jviews than any of his predecessors. | “This, these papers said, augured well| In a letter addressed to Roberts| for France. |in Philadelphia the president said Pertinax in the Nationalist Egho|in part:— De Paris. however, insisted that Mr.| ] want to express my gratitude | Hoover is too inclined to regard to you on behalf of the government | Europe as & badly made continent | for the fidelity and energy with| and its national divisions as a per- | which you have prosecuted these manent economic scandal. | cases, which have returned to the| 1'Ocuvre, organ of the radicals, | United States all the property in led by Edouard Herriott, was even ' question and many millions of more pessimistic. The paper sald | dollars in money. that Mr. Hoover's policy would be | President’s Letter even more American than Mr. Cool-| The president’s letter also stated: idge's, if that was possible. Europe, “I understand your reluctance to {the paper predicted, would appear | rctire, which i8 made necessary by more and more as a distant colony your being disqualitied from accept- for the disposel of merchapdise and |ing employment from any clients| as a place for the investment of cap- | having matters which must be tak-! ital, |en up with any of the various de- partments of the government, and your feeling that as there is little to be done at the present time you | Pennsylvania Vote Is Two to One for Hoover . Philadelphia, Nov. 8 (UP)— With returns all but 266 precincts out of 8,553 election districts in Pennsyl- vania tabulated the vote stood nearly two to one in favor of Herbert Hoo- ver today 968,931; Smith 1,026, 793. s majority, 942,138. The total vote already recorded of 2,995,724 surpasses the previous rec- ords for the number of Pennsylvania voters to voice their decision at the polls. Hoover's final majority will be near that of President Coolidge | who had slightly less than a million | votes more than John W. Davis in 1924, | NOTE—It would be illegal to publish Lis if not true. Getting Up Nights Is 3 . Nature’s Danger Signal il. Dunham, age 88, Brownfield, wih sl e ils abouthens ' suffering with Lithiated Buchu (Keller Formula). Was hothered 4 to & times cach night.” It acts on bladder as acidity. This relleves the irritation that caus getting up nights, The tablets S0k 30 sach atiqlllianie wioten HENet Lahoratory, Mechanicsburg, Oblio, or lo- (ally at the Falr Company; excessive OF TALKIES! BEGINS Saturday AT 12:00 NOON that will never Salt! running. Continuous Shows For 3 Days Parkker New Britain JANET GAYNOR FARRELL fellow Musical Accompaniment as Pick Your Wife ory of the Rosy UDEVILLE CONLI ACTS and GLASS —in— “Sharps and Flats” “STATE STREET SADIE” which hampers you in the active practice of the law.” Atlee Pomerene, former demo- cratic Ohlo senator, will continue as special oll councel until disposal of remaining oil cases. NEANS SIS GUSTODY TR OTHSTEIN CLEWS _[FRENcH phess Hopss IROBERTS THRODGH 1555 S & e BANK OF ENGLAND London, Nov. 8 (M—The weekly statement of the Bank of England shows the following changes in pounds: Total reserve Increased 000; circulation decreased 566.- 000; bullion increased 00; other securities decreased 2.872,000; pub. lic deposits in -cased $,606.000; other deposits decreased 3,934,000 notes reserve increased $54,000; government securities increased 1, 000. The proportion of the bank's reserve to labllity this week 43.30 per cent compared with last week. Rate of discount 4 1-2 per cent. 1s READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS S Thousands of years ago salt was al- most as scarce and as precious as gold. But science steadily reduced its price. And now science gives us still another improvement. A salt cake. International Guaranteed never to harden or become lumpy. Clean, pure and free- In large cartons, cents. At your grocer’s. For five £ o5 Parker Ve Gonnecticut At the Seashore— —See What You're Getting PERKINS & CO. GRAND OPENING SATURDAY