Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
" News for Theatre Goers FROM HOME” | : .0 [ TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED HATS FOR EASTER THE EASTERN MILLINERY SHOW ROOMS contain the largest anld best collection of Hats and Trimmings in the city. NO MONEY DOWN THERE’S STYLE and SATISFACTION HERE We do not select our stock blindly! We select with the thought _of your purse before us and that is securing the best we could at ‘prices that prove satisfactory and pleasing to all PAY EACH WEEK Bm Home,” now play- Pum, adds another big edit of 'the Lyceum ,,"1- eompany ‘is cast 8 are found in most Bnes and they bring out the f of comedy and handle the tuations with all the t Wwould be expected from Py specially cast for the pro- . he ability of those com- ‘the company is again reflected vehicle. C. Russell Sage., who th the Players previously, is an engagcment this week and friends are pleased to see him in. " There will be a matinec per- fformance Thursday afternoon. The patronage at the presentations thus ff Tar has been large and it is pleasing gl to overhear the very favorable com- ments as the audience leaves the thea- ter. For Easter week the management offers Catherine Calvert’s great suc- cess, “The Escape.” Like the pres- ent attraction it is one of of the very latest of releases. It is a powerfully dramatic production with a gripping story which points to a strong moral. The vitally interesting subject is care- fully handled. Because of the popu- larity of this attraction and on ac- 7 count the holidays patrons will do NO CHARGE FOR TRIMMING. 183 MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN MILLINERY HEADQUARTERS STYLE- who can say that this uptto-the.min- is also another factor and Our Trimmed Hats are correct repro- ductions of the sea- son’s best and new- est styles. OQur showing is most complete. . You will find it easy to get a hat to suit your .tastein any color desired. Our whole- sale prices are a guaranfee of the values. ute store with its fascinating stock i« outdone in Hartford? With Our Large Assortment of Un- trimmed Hats and Trimmings it is a - pleasire for any one to come here and select a becom- ing shape. vourself and remember these two littie CHARGE IT. They will the owner of anything you find here Here's a Slight Price Idea Ladies’ Suits, from $9.98 up Ladies’ Coats from $7.98 up Millinery from .... $2.98 up Ladies’ Shoes from $2.50 up COMPLETE STOCKS OF WEARIN APPAREL FOR MEN AND CHIL- DREN. Come and sce for vords—— make You VARIETY IS KEYNOTE OF KEENEY'S BILL Upstairs Showrooms Upstairs Showrooms 687—693 MAIN STREET HARTFORD Orislnhmy and varfety form the keynote in the making up . of the bill at Keeney's this week and the patrons of the popular playhouse seemingly are well pleased with the show. It is a vaudeville menu, un- usval in many respects, and highly entertaining and it well merits the patronage of an amusement-seeking public. For the feature wmumber, Captain Betts and his troupe of trained seals are offered. This admittedly one of the greatest attractions to play in New Britain. There has been con- siderable favorable comment through- out the city concerning the act. There / ‘are six large seals in the troupe. Every one of them is highly educated In the early spring day, when the and the tritks they perform are really | weather turns suddenly very mild or astounding. .They do a lot of juggling | _. < and balancing, ' besides & etobutia warm, the appetite craves something stunts. They respond to the lnstruc-|“°1da crisp and green. This is per- Spinach Most Wholesome of Greens; Should Be Eaten Twice a Week in Lent b el b e 0% Breakfast, Fruit Cereal Sugar and Cream Cream Dried Beef Potato Straws Fruit Muffing Physicians Say “It Is the Broom of the Stomach”—Dande- lions Are Also Delicious, Delightful and ¢ Inexpensi Coffee Lunch String Bean Salad Pcanut Cookies Things We Do Without Trying may also be cooked in several attrac- tive forms, and the lettuce may form the basis of a cream of lettuce soup, or may be boiled and chapped like spinach and enriched with a highly Cocoa On a grey discouragéd day a basket of yellow flowers came nto a sick- room where the atmosphere was a little fireyer and more discouraged than outside. The homemade nurse whose duties were superadded to the routine of an already overworked housemother was very tired, but her facn lit cp at the sight of the flowers. What the Flowers Did to the Homemade Nurse. When she had hung the basket in the window by a bit of yellow ribbon, she stood back to get the effect. The flowers looked lovely but the shade hchind them was crooked; she straightened it and then passed about the room picking up a soiled glass, straightening a crooked picture, smooth- ing out a disorderly pile of newspapers and magazines, and putting a fresh towel on the bureamu. In a few minutes she had the room looking like quite another place. The patient, responding to the flowers and to the new sense of order in the room, roused herself from her listless indifference to appearances to ask for a comb and mirror and other toflet appurtenances. Half an hour after the flowers entered the room they looked down upon a patient who was taking an interest in her personal appearance for the first time since her illness, a. smijing homemade nurse who had for- gotten how tired she was, and a tidy, pleasant looking room. What a Vittle Courtesy Accomplished. And they had done it all! 1 was standing on a street corner the other day near a group of young Nehs o ge K | boys who were slouching about in the manner of the boy who 1g at that % 4 4 | his hands in his pockets, water until tender. Drain, chop nno,‘\ A fine looking broad shouldered Young men drew near. The bovs PR >of ook changed suddenly to interest and attention when he greeted two or three .q Wi idh) S E . of their number apd greeted them not curtly or patronizingly but with the Serve very hot. eame cordiality and courtesy he would have exténded to a friend of his CcWn age. He passed on, but the group did Dinner Noodle” Soup Beef Croquettes Mashed T Creamed Spinacn Watercress French Dressing Wafe Cheecse Orange Sherbet Coffee e LIZATION ‘eossTER 3 Sleks With its scene laid in a typical small town, “Way Down East,” the pastoral drama in which the Hartford Poli Players are appearing with un- usual success this week, is regarded as one of the best New Englgnd piays ever written, having been a favorite with all classes. of tHeatergoers for a number of years and interest in' the play never fails.. Anna Moor€e enters, | into the home of a squie—a big-heart- ed, but extremely careful man, whose sympathies are warm for those who prove themselves worthy and whose not go back to its former slouching An electric change seemed to have passed through them They stood more erect; several of them took their hands out of their pockets one half smoked cigarette was thrown awav; even the conversation took on a rather different tone, “BOB” HILLIARD IS AT FOX'S TODAY REVUE ENTIRE WEEK MONDAY, MARCH 29, Matinees—Wednesday, Friday, Satur. day. tions of their trainer with remarkable | fectly natural, for in the first green | seagoned sauce. without any hesitation whatever, The {is small, there is a tonic quality that|ine tonic properties of the act deserves much credit. !is invigoratirnig and healthful. « salads, and some variety of salad | good, dancing and a wealth of amus- [ Wholesome. A famous physician hus | cvery well planned Lenten menu. This ing patter are introduced in the act {declared that “it is the broom of the | jad should be simple, and clever entertainers and tney give a |at least twice a week during the Len- ‘sel\'es, although a combination of two Peanut Cookies—Shell sufficient creditable performance. -~ The young |ten season. Its value, however, €an | o, three vegetables is permissible. | reasted peanuts to give one pint of the tastefully gowned. Use a very small qu_anuty of water, | gregsings, and substitute a well made | and chop very fine or pat through a The Great Celest may have peers as | just enough to keep it from bWrning, | yrench dressing that is both refresh- | meat cutter. Cream together two cver played in. New Britam. This | fifteen or twenty minutes. Be sure ful of sugar; add three eggs. two clever fellow is so far superior to |that the water is actually boiling be- tableshboonfuls of butter and one cup- NEW ENGLAND PLAY | peared here that their work is not to {is' most important, not only wih spin- tablespoonfuls of milk, one-fourth of be compared. He performs a serles|ach, but with all other spring greens, IS GOOD AT POLI’S =« teaspoonful of salt. the chopped | midair. 5 Early home grown vegetables are . soft Hough. Roll out, cat in circles Other good acts are given by Har- |secarce in our northern climate, and snd bake in a moderate oven. beth teams having song and conversa- | costly. Dandelion greens, however, tion sketches. are not only delicious and healthful. equal to any given in Connecticut. valuable propertics of potash and salts. In cooking the -water should be Yuu“ HEAB mn STUMAGH baking soda added to the first wa- 5 ter, to eliminate a possible bitter taste tion is nearly nlwags accompanied by Jlion greens are very quickly cooked, pain in the stomach, belching of gas, | requiring only ten minutes’ active sort of headache is generally located in Dandelion Salad. the forehead and 1s not constant but 1t does not come on immediately after | licious salad. Place the greens in eating but after the food has had time to | 2 large pan of cold water as soon tive fluids that should take care of it are | wash them thoroughly. = Then shake insufficient, because the glands that se- | off all the moisture and set in a very blood is failing to nourish these glands [ make the salad, place the leaves in properly. a chilled salad bowl, cover with proper digestion and_the digestive JIg | ings of voung white onjons, and cess cannot go on withoutit. ~When lack | ;oisten with a good French dress- o \ and poisons are absorbed from the diges- | \yatercress may be used as a salad, tive tract, the pain in your head advises and, unlike many other greens, it give the blood just the elements they | ;r nany dishes. Tt is deliclous and need to correct this condition and, with |, ti;ing for a sandwich filling in ggfitmen@ for the headaches c'.i indiges- dress a watercress salad, mix together you two little books on the diet and the | sSpoonful of white pepper, a pinch of proper use of a laxative. Address: Dr. | cavenne, half a teaspoonful of salt N. Y. Your own druggist sells Dr. Wil- | Then stir in gradually three table- liame’ Pink Pills. spoonfuls of olive oil and two more thoroughly and season with a tea- spoonful of chopped chives and an leaves. THEATRE Har'ford Small Green Omions, Creamed and in TONIGHT Prices 25¢ to $1.50. When the tiny green onions appear, try cooking and serving them as you tle in bunches, drop in boiling salted water and cook for ten minutes. This ON TRIAT, vegetables, about the size of lead peu- Night Prices: 25, 35, 50, 75, $1 and cils. Drain, place on toast and pour $1.00. Seat Sale Friday. vored with chopped parsley. There will be found delicious, as they do P 9 oLl HEA‘]‘ER so many persons ohject. Young Hartford. onions are excellent in almost all The . Poll Pi; WAY DOWN o> o : N EAST Lettuce, endive and romaine are =i} alertness and they do all their tricks Vegetables, although the nutritive value |. Hvery housekeeper should re Lively and tuneful songs, some Of all the greens, spinach is the most | should appear at least once daily in cf the Milton trio. These people are [stomach.” Spinach should he eaten |paceq mainly of the greens ladies in the trio are pretty and are | only be obtained by proper Cooking.| aAvojd all rich mayonnaise or boiled : meats. 2ub - off all the iner skin wire artists but none of them have |and caok in an uncovered kettle for |ing ang healthful. r tablespoonfuls of butter and one cup- cther wire performers who have ap- |fore placing the greens in it, as that ;rui of sugar; add three eggs, two of brilliant feats on a wire swaying in |guch as dandelions, mustard, etc. i peanuts and fleur enough to make a vey and Smith and Lucere and Lucere, | thoge that came from the south are The motion picture program isfy,¢ fnaxpensive. They contain the changed onhce, and a tiny pinch of Headache caused by a disturbed diges- [ that they sometimes have. Dande- vomitingand often by constipation. This | boiling. comes and goes. Fresh dandelion leaves make a de_ ferment which it does because the diges- | 23 they come from the market, and crete these fluids are weak, because. the | cold place until ready to serve. To Rich, red blood is the first essential to [ chopped hard boiled egg, a few shav- of nourishing blood causes fermentation | jng you of the fact. Dr. Williame’ Pink Pills | 1))’ gerve as an attractive garnish a laxative, when required, form a perfect Thae othehs sl tastuce lea e Mention this paper and ‘we will send|a teaspoonful of celery salt, a salt- \Yill_iaml Medicine Co., Schenectady, |and one tablespoonful of lime juicc. i s . tablespoonfuls of lime juice. Blena PARSONS’ equal amount of fresh tarragon ROYAL LILLIPUTIANS' Salad. would asparagus. Wash them wel, time allowance is for very young $1.50.—Matinee Prices: 25, 35, 50, 75, | OVer them a hot cream sauce, fla- not retain the onion flavor, to which All This Week, Twice Dally. L~ - o0 ore especially gund lfl.au. 10, 20c. Eve. 10, 20, 30, 60c,|good egiad greens. The two latter with! fresh tomatoes, cucumbers and 4 wrath is so great when he finds a de- ceiver. Anna Moore is a stranger, but she is taken into the home and the squire’'s son falls desperately in lova, with her. Later events show that the girl has been the victim of a mock marriage and the father of her dead child is a wealthy young man of the town who is a welcome guest at the squire's home. at the squire’s a number of months before the typical village gossip hears of the girl's part, which she imme- diately tells to the squire and his wife. Anna is driven from the house mto a blinding snow storm, but the son fol- lows her and finds her in a snow drift near the pond where she is about to end all her troubles. Manager James Thatcher’s original song, “Way Down Bast,” is one of the numbers sung by the guartet and it proves exceedingly popular. Miss Skirvin has the role or Anna Moore, Harry Hollingsworth is the squire’s son, and John Ellis is the squire. Next week the Players will present Robert Edleson’s great success, "“The Call of the North.” Miss Ryan has separate skirts in a great variety of stylish designs in golfine, checks, tweeds, serges, taf- fetas, etc., at her shop, Pratt street, Hartford, also separate coats of tweeds and checks that show tae very latest style touches. This to be a big season for ‘'separate” gar- ments,—waists, skirts and coats, and you can depend upoh finding smart styles in them all at her shop.—advt. CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Miss Moore has been 4 mentioned Catherine Countiss, remembered here for her excellent work in “The Idler” the Fox production extraordi- nary, will again be seen in another photo-drama of sterling qualities in the screen dramatization of “The Avalanche,” by Robert Hilliard and W. A. Tremayne, which will be shown | at Fox's today and tomorrow. Miss Count in this production gives a most finished portrayval of the char- acter, being supported by a well i chosen cast of screen favorites among them, William H. Tooker and Caroline French, “The Avalanche” is a simple straight forward story that grips yvou ut very start. The many intrigues, diabolical s:cnes to arouse the ousy of the wife, whose husband is in love with, make interesting view- ing, and when she is confronted with and proof of the various machina- tions, she finally admits the true situation and her own Hespicable ac- tions, but not until she had rased havoc with the tranquil and happy | home. Wife and husband are recon- ciled and the “Vampire” is left to pur- | sue her way in the world, rejected and | alone. The action of the play is well sustained. it holds one interested straight through and the reconciliation is a feasible climax which leaves a pleasant taste to the observer. The thirteenth chapter of “The I9x- ploits of Elaine” dealing with “The Devil Wershippers” will also be shown. It will suffice to say that this chapter is doubly as interesting as its predeces- sors meaning, plenty of thrills, mys- tery, action and suspense. In conjunction with the two above attractions several single reel comedies will augment the interesting program. s methoaically kept possible to do with If the house clean, as it is vacuum cleaners for the neryve-racking times of old. housecleaning When his nursemaid scolds him in herhigh pitched, nervous voice he to grow more stubborn and more ugly. and frets and often has to be sent to of the family Le never seems to be naughty when she is near. sweet low pitched voice and he talks pleasantly to her and, fret or whine scold or discipline him. serenity, sweetness of character-—how move us with their silent eloguence, done not by deliberate effort but by the and the beautiful, there is Nno nec ’I\'l Forgets to Whine, who difficult to When the Little Boy Once more. I know a little boy is very manage seems His own voice 'risés and he snarls bed Now there is a dear old friend n spite of his naughtiness. In fact She talks to him in her forgetting ‘o And yet she never has 1o who loves this little boy plays about happily and quitely. The power of suggestion is a mighty force, isn't it? Btauty, courtesy, powerfully such qualities as these How much of the good in the world « uijconscious influence of the good e, Time and Trial Prove the unequalled value of Beecham’s Pills as the best corrective of ailments of the digestive organs so common—and the best preventive of lasting and serious sickness so often resulting from defective or irregular action of the stomach, liver or bowels. Beecham’s Pills they have been used with few doses will prove to have a great record. For over half a centu entire satisfaction in thousands of homes. you that you can find prompt relief from the headaches, depression of spirits and general HO:fiOOd eelings caused by indigestion or biliousness. ry them, and you will know what it is to have at your command such An Invaluable Aid to Health The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 28e.