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mous | for s . traction. WY 20; 20&. 30¢, 500 . Growell’s ‘alm(\st stubborn per: GIRLS er Week ord—Their s, and Sal.. i News for T. heatre Gaers and Women Readers PASS PRIVILEGE, LYCEUM TONIGHT The attraction at the Lyceum evening will be * His Wife.” In connection attraction the management pass privilege to patrons to convince with this ! formances in the first half of the, week. A limited number of have been distributed and any one ‘h'l\xn‘f a pass will' be given a ticket | for the performance Monday Tuesday night when presenting with a ticket purchased in the regu- lar advance sale. The restrictions placed on the special privilege is that | the exchange must be made Tuesday evenings. Love With His of character- to make wonderful at- The foremost essential of | )a great play is a deep. human note ! which touches a responsive chord in the hecart of the audience, and W hu note can be deeper or more hums: than that of a genuine love shrmr'm;. up gradually between a man and a woman, who are both in honor h(\\lnll { to deny this very fact to themselves? i James Holcrof hts with manly and stency .to re- main true to his first wife and Alida Armstrong mak a brave anly effort to ment she practically swore before en- tering her human marriage with Hol- crof. Man and the world over and as the play pro- gresses a strong sympathy grows in the audience Ior ihe principals. Alida discovers her true love just at the for Monday or i “He Fell in ! contains a vast amount | istic qualities and they the success of this go a second time to wreck her happiness. Tate and the alertness ‘of Holerof balk Ferguson. The audience is car- ried through some rather uncertain and most exciting moments and the thrilling action and drawn suspense holds the audience inténsely inter- ested. { BIG ADVANCE SALE this | offers a | Wife” | | and wom- | up to the agree- | woman are the same | time when Henry Ferguson seeks for | [Housecleamng Revolutionized by ‘He Fell in Love With | { “{.them of - the excellence of the Dorck passes or i it olutionized housecleaning. | ! installation of “ecl before | “;30 in the evening and is good only ! | Instailation of Modern Only Temporarily Out of Season Articles Remain to Be Dusted—Vaccuum Cleaner Wagon Does the Business Carefully and Expeditiously. at last Since week” Modern methods have rev- an-u cellars garrets and store-rooms and the are up their antiquated treasures, and only out of season articles main to be dusted. Discarded finery ha charitable institutions, toys and gz to the poor settlements and the old linen to the war. As quickly as the closets are cleaned and blankets laun- dered the vacuum cleaner wagon drives up to the door. the dust air hose are rushed through vs and the fray Every speck of dust sucked from the house, all upholstery i to the last button receives attentio Draperies, curtains, r and ma tresses are gone over. and pillows all that re- gone to tha is on. is literally ugs | after being cleared seem double their as light and fluffy | usual size and are as when they were new Vacuum Squad Conducts Cleaning. This whirlwind cleaning takes but few hours, and is conducted by competent men whose business it is. They rapidly detach and attach the various hosc nozzles for different branches of the work. While this is going on, windows are being washed, brasses polished, bric-a-brac is being cleaned, floor polished and as fast as the men finish in one room it is set to rights. In a wonderfully short time it is all over and at a surprisingly small cost. BY dinner time evervthing has as- sumed its normal appearances minus the pile of dust and dirt the men have Whirlwind tho | have given | dilapidated | temporarilv | fos | and conven- | i their { cleaned carefully until fashion supplies and encourages | , carried away in their wagon. And the man of the house has not only escaped mfort, not real that anything has pened during his absence. Our mother ht look with suspicion on this kind of housecleaning, doubting | its thoroughness, but we know that from every point of view it is far more thorough and sanitary than their more laborious method One sccret of this present day house- cleaning is the general use of rugs in vlace of the old-fashioned heavy car- pets and the daily use of modern cleaning apvliances. These special wall bruhes, stair brushes. dustless dusters that polish as they go, du les mops, waxed floor polishers an the improvements in all branches o housework keep the home always clean. The pantries and kitchen receive weekly cleaning much as in the olden days. Here, perhaps, science has done less to reduce labor than in other parts of the house, for as long s we use dishes they must be washed silver must be polished and glassware and perfectly. and the use of table fittings that may he destroyed after each meal the dish- pan must be reckoned with in the round of each day's duti . The housekeeper who would keep up to date should make a tour frequently of large household shops ore depa ments in the larger stores and get ac- quainted with the many conveniences offered for her consideration. should acquire the time saving vices that make for efficiency kitchen, just as a man seeks for cient office and shop devices. in the effi- Methods | A Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast. I"ruit. Cereal. Sugar and Cream. Scrambled Eggs. Potatoes Saute. Corn Muffins. Coffee. Launch. Corn Chowder. Brod Torte. Dinner. but in most cases does | 'is cold and beginning to thicken, | one ! fourth cupful de- | Vermicelli Soup. Salmi of Turkey Rice Croquette Mashed Potatoes. String Cola Slaw. Imperial Rice Brod Torte.—Put and one-quarter crumbs. one-quarter citron, one-half cupful and chopped almonds, ful powdered cinnamon, one-half .spoonful of allspice, grated rind of one-half lemon and mix well. DBeat together the yoiks and three-fourths of a cupful of sugar. Whip the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth with one-half cupful of powdered sugar. Stir the beaten yolks and sug- ar with the dry mixture, then cut in lightly the beaten whites. Add two tablespoonfuls of fine brandy anad pour into a well buttered tin. Bake three-guarters of an hour in a mod- erate oven When cold, ice with chocolate icing. Imperial Rice. Beans Coffee bowl one bread chopped blanched spoon- tea- into a cupfuls cupful of one ten -Into a double boiler put three cupfuls of milk, one- fourth teaspoonful of salt and one- half cupful of well washed rice. Cook until the milk has been entirely ab- sorbed, then add one-third box of ge- altine soaked in cold water and dis- solved over heat. When the mixture add sugar, one- lastly, to a one-half cupful of powdered teaspoonful of vanilia, of sherry, and one-balf pint cream whipped stiff froth. and set away ready to use. “THE GILDED FOOL” in a cool place until | Lace-covered stray Turn in a wetted mold gecorated with big Gray or long—are in great request HARTFORD’S MOET HELPFUL STORE Lower Prices and ngh Qua: mes /\lwayu MARK DOWNS Every depsoiment in tore tiat sells for men. women i hilc n s of ih> < thing raty you a reduction that amounts (o © value, EXTRA SP.GAL L Bits SERGE 07.55-5, 104 $3 One-piee $5.88, with corded pop THE (AESAR Xl1SCH QTORE 687—-695 MAIN STREET HARTYORD $5.00 98 special ¢ silk vesice, we trimoned \\h. llar, also at dar < cn cufis and o poll great checit the Toula will “be spring and deal hats will a-aot single roses rd used a frocks. for velvet mocha gloves—short Natiy doz. Russell Bros, —advt e eggs 33 AT POLI'S THEATER Buy the Ham and eggs for breakfast, your ham where you will, but get Russell Bros.—advt AT FOX'S TWO DAYS with A 'Playhouse. There arae straw turbans vet crowns vels eggs at t Surprise.” Dynamic. 'ARNUM be Spoilers” ‘in a comedy ) FOOL” ‘the William played by f NEWS. fom the thea- o€ ORGAN 5% avo |04 BONS’ Hartford y and Wednesday tinees) 'BEDS" to $1.60; Matinees, on. sale. ay, :Feb. pIn’s Birthday) awn. in IWTANTE.” 26¢c to $2: lats Tuesday. 1112 Mats., “Tae Blindness of Virtue” is the play in which the Poli Players will appear twice daily all this week in Hartford. The advance sale for the twelve productions has been large. The play is endorsed by Dr. Park- hurst of New York, Rev. Madison C. Peters of Brooklyn, Rev. Allyn K. Foster of Worcester, as well as Mrs. Kathryn Houghton Hepburn of this | city. Although “The Blindness of Virtue” does teach’ a lesson that every mother and daughter should know, it is not a religious'play in'any sense of the word. It is a comedy drama’ in which the master hand of Cosmo Hamilton has woven. a story that of itself shows the shortcomings of some fathers and mothers. It is an everyday story of real people meeting real problems and yet it does not become a Preachy sermon. The play, as a play, is entertaining, being a happy combination of com- edy and dramatic incidents that hold the undivided attention. The story of the play centers about a young couple who love each other. The lad, sent to the home of a vicar to be curbed in his rather questionable mode of living, falls in love with the vicar's daughter. “WHIRLY-GIGS” IS ON KEENEY'S BILL “Whirly Gigs,” a condensed version | of “The Girl Behind the Counter,” the big musical comedy success, is to | be the offering of the Fields Brothers | Stock company as Keeney's headliner | this week. This will be the fqurth week of the company’s stay in this city and the leaders announce that the play they are to offer is absolute- ly the best number in the series which they have secured from Weber and Fields. Rehearsals have been most successful and it is expected that the piece will make a big hit. The Fields hrothers, Harry Jackson, the Three Shaws and the other entertainers in the company, will remain here during the week. The management announced today that four. other high class acts have been secured for the entertainment of the patrons and the show this week will compare with anything offered here in a long time. The Hearst-Selig weekly will top the Keeneyscope program tonight. Several other high class pictures will be shown. HE POPULAR SHOE STORE™ GAITER TOP BOOTS We are showing the popular style of novelty shoes for women in Patent and Gun Metal calf, with Fawn, Grey and Black Cloth Tops, new Louis Cuban heels and medium having the short vamp. Come in and sec them. Prices: $3.50 and $4 THE SHOEMAN, 941 MainSt., HARTFORD K THE GLERK FOR S. & H. GREEN STAMPS | open its The Frown BY RUTH CAMERON. Oh heart of mine we should What we’ve missed of calm, What we’ve met of stormy p And of sorrow’s driving rain We can better meet again If it blow.” . The other day as I was passing t tion was attracted by a woman. with two children. cbstreperous little mites, and one of them was tugging at her trying to get away. A whistle shriek them, they had to pass close to the en ing forth steam, in the alarming, just- The little girl was frightened and w was fascinated and wanted to get nearer. all that tumult and excitement that &and sweet as a June morning. When in a shrill voice, and not once did I n't worry so, we couldn’t have, you know. ain ‘hrough the railroad station my atten- They were energetic, hand and ed; a big baggage truck rattled by gine which at that moment was belch- about-to-explode way engines have. anted to shrink away. The little boy And will you believe it, through mother was as calm and serene she spoke to the children it was neve, see her brow wrinkle up, The Shrill Voice and the Nervous Frown, Now I know another mother who seldom appears on a city street with her two children without a frown o They make her so nervous, she says. gcing to try to pat a cross dog, or B under an automobile. And in her vo is a shrill note which is the echo of t Whenever I see her I feel I must say: worry so."” Of course there was as much fo the second, nay more, but she wasn’t Some of us are born the frowning people who aren’t, should bless the f and the people who are should make u serenity of heart and pass it on to th that made them otherwise. How to Smooth I often see that frown on one fa want to say: “Oh heart of mine, we sh something in the rhythm and sugges frcwns. You see I have reason to know, I feel it. I'm trying to type somethin that won't thicken; and the car doesn't move fast enough; on my brow and that tight sensation i “Oh heart of mine, we shouldn't worr smooth out and the tightness relaxes. Do you ever feel that frown as well as see it? specific. GOOD ATTRACTIONS AT PARSONS’ THEATER Selwyn & Co.'s production of “Twin Beds” will be given at the Parsons theater, Hartford, tomorrow and Wednesday, with matinees both da The indications are that playgoers will crowd the Parsons tomorrow af- ternoon, when the famous farce will Jimited engagement of four performances. There will be two performances on Wednesday, when the engagement will close. Hazel Dawn, the blonde beauty and star of “The Debutante,” which comes 10 the Parsons theater Thursday and Friday, with special Lincoln’s birth- day matinee on Friday, believes it to be a veritable fallacy for actresses to permit a love of their art to prevent them from being good cooks. She fayvs it’ makes no difference whether or not they expect to ever preside over a home in which they will be obliged to do the cooking, all actresses should be versed in how to prepare edible dishe: xcuse Me,” a farce the incidents of a journey by rail from Chicago to Reno, will be pre- sented by the S. T. King Amusement company, incorporated, at the Par- sons theater Saturday, matinee and night, with the cast that was in that sets forth on f anxious concentration on her brow. You never can tell when Louise is enny is going to elude her and get ice, as she speaks to you or to them, hat nervous frown. ““Oh heart of mine we shouldn’t r the first woman to frown about as the frowning kind. kind, and some of us aren’'t, and the ates that madc them serene hearted, p their minds that they will. attain eir descendants in spite of the fates Away That Frown. ce or another, and whenever I do I ouldn’t worry so.” For to me there is tion of that sentence that smooths out for sometimes I don’t see the frown. g just right; I'm fussing over a sauce I'm searching for a word that eludes me; I'm In a hurry ; and all at once I feel those n my brain. v so0.” wrinkles And then I say to myself: and gradually the wrinkles Next time try my T Lo the eight months’ run at the Gaiety theater in New York. ‘Excuse Me™ is one of the biggest force hits of the time. It is the limit of laughter on a limited express train; a delightfully merry entertainment which is doubly interesting from being a clever play as well as a merry comedy. Diverting action is combined with amusing episode. Miss Ryan has an excellent showing of spring suits today, at her shop, 79 FPratt St., Hartford, many new ones baving come in on Saturday. There are smart checks with their quiet or brilliant linings as you choose. coats, handsome gabardines in ncvelty materials in the most equ colorings, blues, smart mixtures—a splendid assortment to open the season with. And at the waist depart- ment are just the right shades in crepe de chine to wear with them. —advt. New laid from nearby Bros.—advt. POLI’'S THEATRE Hartford. All This Week, Twice Daily. The_ Poli_Players, VIRTUE Y 20, 30, 50c. Connecticut eggs right arms, 33c¢ doz. Russell It is indeed difficult to imagine Wil- liam Farnum, the dynamic and force- ful actor, star of many big successes and remembered here derful work in Rex Beach’'s ers” and Henri Bernstein's “Sam- son,” to play the part of comedian, and yet this is just what he does in the William Fox production of “The gilded fool, who spends his days in success as played by Nat Goodwin, which holds the headline honors on the motion picture bill at Fox's to- day and tomorrow. by Henry Guy Carlton, is a powerfully appealing photo-play with a compell- ing combination of love, high finance and the life of the Gay White Way. The plot deals with the progress of young Chauncey Short, a typical gilded gool, who' spends his days in idleness and is nights in frivolity. How he meets the only girl and through love of her is aroused.to a realization of his many shortcomings is a story that strikes home to the hardest 'heart. The climax comes when, after a flercely fought battle of finance, the erstwhile Gilded fool” thwarts the contrivings of the thieving rascal and saves his fiancee’s father from ruin. Maude Gilbert, leading woman with both Robert Hil- liard and William Gillette in their greatest successes, gives charming support to Mr. Farnum, while the balance of the cast includes Charles Guthrie, Harry Spingler and the initial showing of Margaret Vale, a niece of President Wilson, and many other players of undoubted ability. Also on today’s program is the much looked forward to periodical “The Pathe News,” which depicts the “Spoil- most important happenings our coun- | I try over and the very latest news from | the theater of war. The balance of the quality photo-plays are excellent single reel comedies and dramas and two solid hours of refined and diversi- fled entertainment that will please the most fastidious. TOO BUSY TO WED. Selected One Minute After Midnight, (New York World.) New Haven, Conn.—The night: To the average notion the actor is not a very busy person. The fact that his day’s work consists of a few hours on the stage seems to In- dicate that he has almost unlimited leisure, But here is a stage pair that couldn’t find time to marry except at midnight, after the close of a per- formance. The trouble was they were in stock, and the stock actor and actress are, between matinee ;mdi night performances, rehearsals and Finally other for his won- | “The Gilded Fool,” | preparations for new productions, rea- sonably occupied. Mr Adelaide Frances Hibbard Fogart s the bride, The hushand | is Frank Wright and both are mem- bers of the Russwin Stock company | of New Britain, Conn. Mrs. Fogart Wright is a daughter of the late George Albee Hibbard, once mayor of Boston, and her mother is the head i of the stock company. Mrs. Fogarty, that was, ‘has been playing in her mother’s company since the death of | her first husban The couple had married some literally too busy. a motor car drew up at Hartford, and the stage couple, with their seconds and witnesses, got a license and were | | be 1 married at one minute after midnight. | are been to time, A few nights ago trying for but they Within half an ‘hour they were on their way back to New Britain. The next afternoon they were at their the- ater rehearsing the next week's play. Such are the exigencies of romance. WE GIVE RGYAL 60LD TR:LING STAMPE——ASK FOR THEM To Be Given Away to the Boys and Girls hlso 2,000 Gold Watchss nc 2,000 Cameras ASK THE CLERK FOR FULL PARTICULARS OR A CIRCULAR 0 STAMPS FR Boys and girls may use this coupon as an to buy coffee this week. A wond CCUPON Cut out this Coupon, present it at our Store this week, and buying $1.00 WORTH or morc of TEAS, COFFEES, SPICES, E TRACTS and A&P BAKING POWDER, you will receive 50 Trading Stamps Free REGULAR AND EXTRA STAMPS GIVEN ON SALES| Feb, 8 to Sat Feb 13, This coupon not good after Feb, inducement to people to al chance, by BESID. From Mon. 30 Stamps with 1 1b El Coffee 25 Stamps Coftee 20 Stamps with Coffec ... 15 Stamps with Tona Coffee 25¢ h Fancy 700 New 60c Fline 500 100 Stamps with 1 3 Crop with 1 1b Ambosa s with 1 1 1 1b Sultana [ L 1 30¢ Y 1-2 1b India Ceylon Sweet and Ten‘er IOfla COf n This Week at . can 7C A&P EVAPORATED | NOT-A-SEED FAT NORWAY MILK RAISINS | MA(KEREL o 7c ‘Pau:age loc Eacy 5c Can Pacific Toilet Paper """ 7rolls25¢ WeeK SPECIAL CUT 11 FRICES THIS Double Tip Matches 7 boxes Soria Poirs No. 8 \ppic Sauce ART Pumpkin AL Jam Tona String s Cider Tona cars No. 10¢ 2 jars 2 can b can 8¢ « can Sawveet tothes LAncs cach e —————— T —————— 15 Stamps witih i-ib phg A&P Washing Powder 16¢ e e ee—————————— 10 Stamps Free With Any of the Following 1) 1 can Suitana Spice Oats 106 1 bottle A&P Vine: 10¢ 1 can B&M Fish Flakes 10 1 pkes A&P Tee Cream 8c Jelly Powder . 1 8¢ Grandmother Quuker Corn M Quaker Hominy A&P Chloride of ART Lyc 1or 1 opkg 100 1 pke 10 1 pkg 1 can Lime can Free Delivery Free Delivery Tel. 135 NEW BRITAIN Tel. 135 184-186 MAIN ST.