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GREAT BILL An excellent vaudeville and a wonderful 1 talking play is now heing shown Strand tods nd day, cne which met the approval of the large audiences who saw the show yester- AT STRAND prograin photo- marry a man she hated and teared—or a4 handsome and attrac- tive young fellow accused mur- der? That was the heroine's dilem- | na in one of the many highly dra- atic parts of “The Isle of Lost Ships,” First National's big all talk- | ing sea picture at the Strand thea- ter, ason Robards and atured at the head ndid cast. In addition to a long list of well-known principals, 52 of the hardest-looking broken- | nosed, caulifiower-cared gentry in Hollywood enact colorful bits in the Sargasso Sea episodes which play so thrilling & part in the story Beginning day for fou the Strand will present Rick in his new all talkie, Doctor.” FRENCH DISTURBED BY AMERICAN BARS Many Households Adopt Fad— “Slow Suicide” Is Predicted (UP)—French lead- dis- Paris, Nov, ers and educators age deeply turbed over the incursions made in French homes by the newest fad — | the houschold bar. In recent years France s sub- mitted to many Americanisms, i Frenchmen are smoking American cigarettes, despite the high duty on foreign tobacco: American au- tomeobiles are rolling about in in- creasing number; advertising, sal manship, high speed real estate de- velopment; American plumbing, | outdoor sign boards, housetop elec- | tric signs, wearing apparel, sporting | actlvities, and even language have | an American touch. And Frenchmen are beginning to get a bit hgnsive, even resentful American invasion. The most insidlous propaganda, they claim, is through the inaugura- tion in Paris of the American bar and the American drinks. The old | fashioned aperitit hour, when every- one sat leisure on cafe terraces and dallied over French vermouth or even absinthe, is now giving away to the cocktail hour. Frenchmen are | appre- | at this drinking these tough American | Qrinks and liking them, and that's why the opinions of doctors and philosophers and influential people | are being aired in the French press | on the subject of probable decline of French tradition, Charge of “Snobbism"” They claim that a certain ‘“snob- | biem” has gripped the, youth of France and that no seiide resort | is now complete without its Amer- | ican bar, its white boated barman | shaking freezing drinks, and its roses, and side cars and gin fizzes and Martinis. And no country road, likewise is complete with- out its automebile parties, which | are really cocktail pariies, and no week-end gathering is possible without the insidious shaker, and | the more insidious gin concoc- tions, which corrode the veins and | dull the brains of the youth Dr. Georges Guillain, a noted | nerve speclalist, insists that cock- talls are definitely undermining the health of those who drink | them. “The Household bar is a| new kind of hoishevism which has deserted the working classes and now sits on the hearths of the wealthy. “The new rich and com- fort loving generations commit- ting slow suicide,” says Dr. Guil- | lain. “It marks the end of our| five o'clock teas, of the salons, of con it is the end of beau- lectures and bright ervations, in a word, tiful manners, and of our culture.” De Fouquieres' Opinion Andre de Fouqui termed the best dressed and dictator of French r Parisian nners be- lieves that the cocktail craze will pass like other fads. Fouquiere LENE the American bar microbe after aill has attacked onl minor! It appears in the people tirst, y them at the a just another of those habi from the Yankees which we ad badly and are inclined to exagger- ate. “The Amerlcan bar in the s, ot course, one of the results of prohibition. On the other side of the ocean it has its reason for be- ing, but here it seems unnecessary. The Americans do not drink home Fine with their meals, and can there- fore support two or three of t pleasant aperitifs, but sever: cocktails a day, as we often sec here in our friénd’s homes. appear somewhat of an exaggeration. Wi must simply wait until this but meanwhile reason will prevail the good manners and depor of our fathers will not be seriously menaced.” BETHANY CHURCH MEN MEET The Brotherhood of the Swedish Bethany church will meet this e ning at 7:45 o'clock. Alexander Ol son, former councilman, who, his family toured the west, will talk on “Yellowstone Park.” Rev. C. J Fredeen will speak briefly on “Gus tat Adolphus, Defender of Protes- tantism.” Singing will be furnished by a male quartet. Refreshments will be served with Most white cats are deaf if they are bred from white stock. '- Presents .fll | l'hd- [ l'l nll u llll R Tia e t'"d\\ I 7 < f | Stanley Bell \ L o 2 =N N F o {Captain Hardy Francls Compton = . Osborne Henry Stephenson Unless otherwiee indicated. theatrical Rotlices and reviews M this colums Wre ®%en by prem agencies for the Tespective amusememt compamy. in Stanhope Richard Bird Liaut. Trotter Norman Pierce [2nd. Lieut. Hivbert .. G. P. Huntley, Jr X Company Sergeant Maj : MORAN AND MACK AT CAPITOL | wr - Stenning Imagine, every place you go hear- secre; Thorpe NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1929. =] ‘” Theater ReviewJJ GILBERT MILLER Mason eut. Raleigh Dan Booker Frederick Catling ate en Krans | ing yourself. That is the predica- N ea e ment Moran and Mack, the two ate Vernon Downing | Black Crows are facing. When they (B iHerala; Raviewes) E0 out to lunch someone puts on British playwrights, it scems, their phonograph records. Charlie | L o e Chaplin even entertained them that | Manufacture less noise znd whoop and executing way overnor ler of Massa- | hurrah when plotting chusetts did the same. And all this because they are the team whose record sales have broken all existing figures for the disc sales. | The total number sold would make an adding machine dizzy a war drama than contemporaries. Audiences in these United States have established war play standards on the basis of their | experiences with the boisterous and their American Noniiiihev: avvdaeiact thovh it profane “What Price Glory” and the of by ey Shudder as they think | cqually as bolsterous and slangy N e SRl eis | sie e UM o g an ax own. The outiok 1s that thes | éme is “Journeys 1ind,” which js © e et LY playing at Parsons' theater, Hart- never will live down their comical ndaraiteat o | ford, a relief from the sickly sweet Moran and Mack now greet their | 1oV Stories with happy endings friends from the screen in “Wny| R C. Sherlff, the creator of this Bring That Up?* a Paramount ai | Auiet front line drama, has used a talking comedy at the Capitol thea- | Proad brush in the drawing of his ter tuday ina Siturdes ouis: | characters and has suppressed any Bieinalnels for four days | desire for action which he might the Capitol will offer Gloria Swan- | have had in favor of a chronicle son in her first all talking picture, | revealing the emotions an 1 reactions “The #respasser.” to warfare of several individuals cooped up in a dugout on the fringe |of No Man's Land. There are no ! mock heroics, no spirited_appeal to | patriotism and none of th. dramatic [from conventional conceptions of New York Has More Rain Than | war dramas it is, can be judged by the fact t there isn't a single cuss word in the dialoguc from be- don or Paris in slightly less regard to fogs, has rain than London each year but it is spread over just as ums for his superior. eight at the point Not until Ral- | of “going west | the place of pleasant English land- | never drives the mercury up to the | Lieutenant Trotter -~ whose century mark as it does in New |thought seems to be of food. York and Berlin. In England a | Booker should be included in this | temperature of 80 is a “heat wave.” [ hall of fame for his handling of the The worst European fog on rec- ord was in the winter of 1927-28 and it covered 770,000 square miles the group. C. P. Huntley, Jr., | a8 Second Licut:nant Hibbert, is cast | including France, Belgium, Holland, | goes craven under. the stress or} Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, Ger- |trench lite | many, Latvia, Estonia, Austria, | “Journey's End” will remain at| Czechoslovakia, Finland and the | Parsons' LIONS ON HIGHWAY Make Life at feast Exciting for Na- | with a matinee tomorrow. sented by a company appearances in the east. It is pre- The |its thirty-third week at the limeater Miller | PENN l‘l ills APK AL ATTACK Absecom, , Nov. 1 (A—Navy has beaten I'Mmh}'lvflma two years tives of Nairobi, East Africa— Submit to Cameramen. plai fow rule the | wort and A display the new long skirted evening | gowns to best advantage selling end of the dressmaking pro- in succession by forward passes, £o Nairobi, East Africa, Nov. 1 0P— |o" tuo. day rest for the Penn players | Herds of gentle and playful lons|qaesn't mean freedom from work- have been making life interesting [jng on their aerial defense. The on the roads leading to Nairobl. [Quakers were out for an hour yes- | The beasts come from the Jungle |torday, using a fairway of a golt | and on several occasions have | course for their football eld as they | red along the main WRNWAY |iried to diagnose 5 miles from the city. They Pust one no damage, contenting | HOLMES OUTPOINTS HURLIHY | lves with gamboling on the | “xorth Adams, Mass., Nov. 1 (UP) sphalt pavement —REddie Holmes of Providence, R. | have gone to the p ouipointed Frankie Hurlihy of | grounds in automobiles, |y \nn in a 10-round bout here last | res of the beasts, and | night. | eir antics of natives attempted to hunting with spears, themselves sur- Warncr Bros. Several Euro- | the side of the saw difficulty and drove | into the center of the ri The lions scattered and the natives safet STRAND the ran to Wheat grows wild nowhere world in the AUDITORIUM Terryville, Conn. Sunday Nov.3 McEnelly’s Victor Recording Orchestra Dancing 9 to 1 RICHARD DIX loUe Doctor With June Collyer ALL TALKING! lcaPITOL Nola f medium e sges | Dan | With even or conservatively dipped | In hemli N materials | character of Private Magon, cook for | lace to the stiffer taffetas, molre, of who | flared or trained frocks are made. A‘ |has won the gathered for | While the Green scrubs are imper- ori- | Sonating a Yale | ginal New York company is now in |he 18 cast as two Booths. The | ed the part of | | the diminutive Yale back in yester- | day's | enough to pound e i S B s b‘“eniamr a raid, does Stanhope reveal | The Dianas slim and slinky com- lw | 3 | his true feelings toward him. | mand the b laries, while the | rainfall ingduly in the midst of the 2 5 Ry = “half- | I) | holiday season.while London's rain | ‘“Journey's End” cannot be said to | flappers of yester-year, the “half-| ALAC E: | Texeelyaiholie ot untlOgtobers (1123 05s iRIDt MNFENE aceonted senne i imiitai Aol MR CemaT T iE o | S e equa”y‘n is simply a picture of what occurs | It was the fashion (o look hoyish, | TODAY and TOMORROW | wet months, June and October. during the six day period up where |&re plying their dles in the “THE MAN 1 LOVE" ! New York has twice as much rain { barbed wire and racked carth take | Workrooms, or have gone info the with MARY BRIAN | as London although it has féwer | e _ Co-Feature | wet days. It averages also 1§ dense | Scapes. pLon. | “THE WALLOP! KIp” | fogs annually but the American| Richard Bird gives a sincere in- The plaint of the short legged Wi KIT CARNON fogs are mostly water fogs and are | terpretation of the character of | mannequins is echoed by many nlso Short Subjects and i va | : s | 3 ho complain that they . not so disagreeable as London's |Captain Stanhope and Frederick Cat- [ women W they | A fV d “ 3 S |ling shows fine understanding of | cannot wear the long skinied | 3 Acts o audeville [ In the matter of sunshine London | What Raleigh would be and does | models with success. The fact that Direet from New York | s at the bottom of the list. The |under the circumstances. Henry |French women are small on the| HarryCarlin presents E Mar- fptal B rs v . | average v be a deciding factor ||| tin, singing and dancing; Evans & ||| British capital only averages 33 |Stephenson reveals sympathetic ap- | verage may Wilson, comedy sin 1 i < o , ol ) ging and talking; | hours of brilliant sunshine in each | preciation of the role of Lieut. Os- | in bringing skirts back to a higher ||fj, =" el SoEng e 1 100 hours of daylight as against 37 | borne, a former English school- |level next season. | | hours for hoth Paris and Berlin, On | master. Norman Pierce contributes | Small French women, on the AY ONLY | the other hand British sunshine |the levity of the play as Second | whdle, are sticking doggedly to | length evening They prefer like chiffon, v es. which most o YOUNGSTROM P! Hanover, N. JAYS H., Nov. role team -guard play practice and did make some against the regulars. HERALD L \SSH :——1‘—1 —DANCE— in NORDEN BUNG! Tomorrow night, Nov. Music by Carlson Bohman orch. Admission—50c 1 (P—Swede for the rest of the week | Youngstrom, Dartmouth line coach, | of Albie Or perhaps | | Ohio road in 1895 at Baltimore. dresses the soft elvet and faille and | f the long | “The Woman From Hell” Co-Feature 1.EO. MALONEY in “DON DESPERADO” Serlal—Comedy—Comic BOOTH Booth it well | long gains ‘Warner Bros, ll D ADS | Begins SUNDAY at 4:00 For 4 Days Her Greatest Triumph! ALOW 2 at 8 ‘Warner Bros. Today and 2 Days More! See Them!—Hear \ Sat. Them! child kind; neys. Sark, ance She’s Moanin’ Low for Broadway JW[]MAN R”LES ISLE | IN FEUDAL STYLE! No Crime on Tiny Land Locatedj in English Channel London, Nov. Sark, who rules a crimeless-island, came to London to visit her do a little | Dudley | recount her problems. e dame of iren, n Mrs. surviving r in church of to whom taxes are paid and about sanitation. Some of Elizabethian times instance, 13 paid in poultry by each house ac- cording to the number of its chim- Only the dame keep a female dog, no property may be bought or sold without her consent there is no island There was use for today it is just a building. ries for 1though the population of about HALLOWE'EN SOCIALS 1 Masquerade Parties Feature Obsery- Sisters Planning Party. Newington Grange | TONIGHT Original IMPERIAL ORCHESTRA modern the t of Annual Model Heiress 1. (A—The dame ot srand- shopping as Beaumont, and of the feudal ark s one examyles 0° a jurope. She owns Sark, and it is she she who schools roads ard to paid in tax which xes dale and a the herself may | or pigeons, and | crime on | has a prison. | it long ago, but.| Sark, in the English channel hionable fashion mannequin is seven miles east of the island of ePretty Jacqueline Switt, pictured Guernsey, is three miles lcng and above. Southern society belle and a mile amd half wide, and has g daughter of a wealthy manufacturer {of of in Atlanta, she deserted a life luxury to take a job as a model a women's shop in Washington. 500 Judd ickson, Young Katherine Geraldin: and Evsz- Gretor Jane Page, Bhirley Casperson, Fgrn Iy Blews. Supper was servaqd at 5.30 o'clock after which games were played and stories and fortune-telling enjoyed Event—Pythian 5 Associated Press Photo | A Hallowe'en social was given by ginning to end. Nobody is even a 1 ST S ’ > el ML S o s Anna | Katherine Page won the prize in a 5 . | blighter. __Tawny Libby Holman, who hails from ( ineinnati, is New 5’&‘_}‘01_"3( i S r_;“h*omv‘“’f:‘" aaleRlion sar al Evelva Blaw EHgllSh Gapltfll Captain Stanhope, commander of | LOTK'S reigning blues singer. Her moanin’ number in the | Aipany avenue, last night. Abour | Was Eiven the award for the pretti- | e | a company which has dug in seventy | Little Show is still, after six months, the popular tune about |20 guests were present from Haet. oSt costume, while Betty Curtiss re- : ] | yards away from the Boche front|town. ford ‘and fhis cify. The évening|Celved tha for ths. funniest - cosy) London, Nov. 1. (P)—The story of | line, has become embittercd by three was spent in playing games, danc- |tume. | London's peasoup fogs has gone |years of life in the mud. He finds | = {ing and fortune telling. Miss Smith | A Hallowe'en party was given | around the world but as a matter of | escApe from his emotions b; too | R favored with vocal selections and an |last night by Miss Anna Marsh at toipalatis) roebier han T ondont |t it | IR SV BV COR S IAGROUND "r“lnhmun of fancy dancing was|the home of her parents, Mr. and | New York is wetter and. Berlin has | coincidence, Second Lieutenant Ral- | Boston. Nov. 1 (R—The steam |given by Miss Mary and Miss Mar- | Mrs. William Marsh of 50 Griswold | wet holidays. Here are the yearly | eigh, who had worshipped Stanhope | rawler Boston College of this port |garet Conway. A buffet lunch was | street. ‘ averages for the four cities. |when the latter starred on their | | went aground in the harbor today on [served. | The home was decorated in Hal- | Total Wet ¥og |school's crickot and football teams, 1 southeast side of Gallup's island | Miss Lenore Lrickson.~ daughter |lowe'cn colors and 12 guests attend- | “ Raln Days Days | is assigned to the company. He ar- | as she was outward bound for the |Of MF- and Mrs. Oscar IXickson of |ed. Refreshments were served and || | ll.cndon B :n. 16 :; ;m,,d bubbling over with enthusiasm i t e R b »]wi J’?rl’_\' street, entertained a num- | dancing enjoyed during the evening. 1 | e e 2 in, 16 e e sl e o Cas A aten shing grounds he trawler was ber of friends last evening at 4| Worthy Temple Pythian Sister | Berlin 810/ In W1 s M el o s o ‘nmcm, tamil Slinnore New Evel]]]]g GOW[]S Sl](]w Bes able fo gel off again under her oWl | Hallowe'en costume party at her|will entertain members and friends | New York R LI (B8 R S e D i e e power on the incoming tide, appar-nome. The guests were Norma|at a masquerade socisl and dance | | Thus, Parisians grope about in | especially Raleigh's sister—might on Slende[‘ Flg“les "‘“'" oA ’",",“5“' \’“!’v{”k; here was | Chamberlain, Betty Curtiss, Verna|at Judd's hall this evening. fogs on flve more days each year | near of his addiction to liquor, be- s >\'(m‘\'-"d.‘:"b',m Lom el than do the Londoners. Other sta- | comes more embittered at the new ‘h]m”.“]' Ga il R T qu‘m that foggy November | gituation, He bullies the lad and | Paris, Nov. 1. (P—Lonz legged | 'OWF 417 1N arriving. affects London and Paris equally, | maye, e O : g PESTAE | | e o o e 1x'::itnrlrh:r;;iil;Iglsafi::tea;{!l‘(;ci‘:;he\‘;r;‘ mannequins of 5 feet )4 ar}(l mrrl The first use of cleciric motive | | erage of nine days each November. | oot hostible: (Tt RAICIER 18 ® fare the pets of the Parisian cou-|power on the rilroads in this | Berlin, more fortunate than Lon- | pome contain nothing but encomi. | turiers this season, for they can |country was on the Baititore and | | At the At the Rialto Ballroom SAT. NIGHT | New York, Allen Dunlap, ‘ Dunlap Leaves Fortune To His Estranged Wife Nov. son 1 (UP)—William of Robert Dun- lap, hat manufacturer, attempted at his death to atone of hi Dunlap’s here, wido of N ment that he wished atone for the s wife. for estate will, filed left his entire w, Mrs. Ora M. York with thereby ew city, for his treatment probat to his Hinson Dunlap the state- to wrong he had done her in cutting her off in an earlier will made when they separated three years ago. The will explained that Mrs. Dun- lap had been ‘the only one been need Dunlap's trust it wa Thy | ica, any good to me in my and illness.” estate. fund, s estimated. , university in North o first state University of who has time of once a $500,000 has dwindled to $1,000, Amer- Carolina, has celebrated its 136th anniversa | | ; | \ | | \ | | | WARNER BROS. STRAND TODAY and SATURDAY Exceptionally Fine Entertainment! With VIRGINIA VALLI NOAH BEERY JASON ROBARD: —ALL TALKING— Vaudeville A WONDER PROGRAM 1 PHILLIPS in “Perfection” LOWE—DUX SISTERS A Miniature Revue NAOMI in “Hey Taxi” PAUL, MORTON | Startling Drama! And the strangest romance ever \‘ | DEMAREST and DELAND | “A Cuckoo Concert” DUNN—WEST REVUE Stars of Syncopation THE HERALD 'S THE DEALFR>” CONTEST ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT All Replies Must Be In The Herald Offlce Before Six o'Clock Monday