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Y LITTLE GIRL TERRIBLE SICHT Rash on Back and Arms. Also er Face, Very Red. Formed Eruptions. ltched Badly. —_— ALED BY CUTICURA DAP AND OINTMENT el e ¥ little girl was five years old when a broke out on her back and arms and il over her face. When it first came out very red and then it began to form pruptions like smallpox, and her faca o full of the eruptions that you could 1t a pin head between them, and her ere closed. She was a terrible sight. ed night and day tho eruptions itched Iy, and I had to tie her hands so that ould not scratck. She also had a hnd was sick. he rash was very bad for three weeks. 1 got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a Cuticura Ointment and the eruption to heal and after using three cakes of ira Soap and two boxes of Ointment as healed.” (Signed) Mrs. Watson , Garnerville, N. Y., Oct . 1913 ple Each Free by Mail -p. Skin Doclc on request. Ad- ost-card “*Cuticura, Dept. T, Bos= Sold throughout the world. h 22 1-:§ OF THE REV. W. A, PRTY BRANCH, A. O. H. hleen Mathew styled the “Irish in dramatic circles, the SWIN LYCEUM ay Evening, June4 a Pictorial Review of UTIFUL IRELAND fo part, each part consisting blogue, poems, wit, humor, anecdotes, legends, imper- s and dances. Il be assisted by A LARGE STRA and many well known i and local singers and will ap- TONIGHT [Virginia Pearson, in E HUNTED WOMAN’ Ben Wilson n HE GENTLE VOLU TEER. Frank Daniels, in R. JACK, HIS DUKE- SHIP” Class ARSONS’ CLATRE—Hartford SHOW FOR 75 CENTS Week—DMat. Wed. and Il Matince Decoration Day Z OPERA PLAYERS | Strauss’ Delightful .Opera | Bouffe. CHOCOLATE SOLDIER” Nights, 75c to 10c, (500 seats at 25c) 50c and t. i1 10c, bt June 5—“ROBIN HOOD” | POLP’S HARTFORD This Week, Twice Daily iE STORY OF HE ROSARY big jar. for the Week nees—10c, 20c. ings—10c¢, 20¢, 30c, massive melodrama on 50c. p CONCERT EV NDAY AFTERNOON. RY Bathing, g, Bowling, -ds, Fishing and Dancing Popular Picnic Ground Dinners Regular Picture Theater. ving “E & NORTON, PROPS. r Sluggish? ned by a sallow skin, dull sness, and that grouchy ct promptly. Stimulate your we the clogging wastes digestive organs are ght and—when needed—take ‘ CHAM’S Bern- | Sale. | "COMPOUNGE R ! News fo NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1916. r Theater Goers and Wo men Readers A STORY YOU CAN How Cora and David Temple By ZOE Her Side-- BEGIN AT ANY TIME d His Solved Their Marital Problems BECKLEY candy in He favorite his lips. box of Cora's forgiven on sentment. hisp was hot plied, echoing David's waited for you. You “And T thought in our There 1w turned their heads to look laugh. “So see I had I had learned scholarship,” David min liant at them in if you two keep on Wanda's voice sounded behind them. “It isn't being done and I'm jeal-ou ded with a touch of wistfulness in hervo “Well then, come home with ns fo ly. “David shall make a great fuss o determined to laugh her out of her A Lesson Learned Too Well her shopping bag at one of the counters. “Stay here, honey, ana I'll it for vou in two jumps: before some one walks off with the treasur David cheerfully volunteered, dived back into the store, Cora, with a smiling remembrance of her recent lesson, permitted n ocket and a lugubrious petition Then it lesson we're my But and wa both of prepared e. us too br replied. such relief and comradship in their laughter that people eny “Cora, T've learned about women from you,” David paraphrased smil- ingly as he embraced his wife after the three-days’ silence between them. “I shall know hereafter that if ever I miss you from my side for a mo- ment you will conclude that I am lost forever and yowll fly to your nest like a homing pigeon. But I shall he prepared and head you off, you woman!” “And I have learned about he-creatures from you,” Cora replied. T shall know that if ever vou leave my side I am to stay planted foreve: and a day on the spot where you left me. And I shall be prepared and take root there.” Both laughed joyfully in reaction from their recent misunderstanding | But little they dreamed that they would be called upon to apply their newly learned lesson so soon. Such things do happen—such exact dupli- cation of circumstances as they experienced the next time they went shop- ping. As they left the department store Cora remembered that she had left get ther the jostling of the shopping crowds nor David's prolonged absence to move her from the spot where she had agreed to wait David, to whom dcpartment siores were little more understandabic than madhouses, had recovered Cora’s shopping bag, but left the store hy { another exit, which he mistook for the one at which Cora was waiting for him. Conseauently Cora was nowhere to he seen “Oh, Lord, she’s made tracks for home a he groaned with, hu- morous tolerence for woman's instability. I suppose T'll find her there pouting like Queen Elizabeth.” He arrived home, therefore with & huge bouquet in his hands, a great cor | To his surprise she was not at home. occurred to him to g0 back to the store and look for her there. At the exit where he had lefi her stood Cora, somewhat tired, but patiently waiting for him to come out of the store. “Why, T thought vou'd grown impatient like last time and gonc home,” David exclaimed laughing with relief, “So I chased home after Fou “And T thought vou were still in the store for some reason vou would Texplain when you came out, learned Cora re- il “I don’t know how any one expects me to break up your happy home laughing that way ten months after mar s and terribly lonesome,” she ad ice. r dinner,” Cora laughed consoling- ver vou. And I shall help him.” Menu for Tomorrow | Breakfast Fruit Egg Vermicelli Latticed Potatoes Rolls French Coffee Dinner Tomato Soup Roast Mutton Brown Browned Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes with Okra Lettuce Salad Prune’ Whip Coffee Gravy Supper Toast with Cheese Sauce Caramel Cake IWhite Custard Coffee l Prune Whip—Pick half over and thor- oughly wash a pound drain, cover with fresh of prunes; cold water and soak over night. Cook in a double boiler until very tender, then set aside to cool. Remove the pits and rub the Beat them a half cupful of sugar and stir over the fire for five minutes, beating vigorously, then set aside until ’ Whip the whites of five eggs to a stiff prunes through a sieve. with cor dry froth, mix thoroughly but lightly with the prunes, add one teaspoonful of vanilla anq heap in a slightly but- tered baking dish. Bake twenty min- utes in a moderate oven, set aside and serve very cold with a custard sauce. White Custard—The whites of three eges well beaten with a pinch of salt and one pint of sweet milk. Bake in cups like caramel custards. When cold, serve with shaved maple sugar and whipped cream SUNDAY CONCERT. Program At Lake Compounce To Be Given By Meriden Military Band. The Meriden Military Band will play the concert program at Take Compounce on Sunday afternoon, June 4. The following program will be given under the direction of Lco Sturmer, Leader: 1. March, N, Y. Hippodrome,...... - . John P. Sousa Overture, Pique Dame,. z von Suppe ©1) .Fran Colombe, Ariette from T.a Gounod Concert Waltz. Sphir A eRaY R .Francis Pop; 4. Medley, Bits of Remick’s Hits, I SR arr. by Lampe 5. Duet, Cornet—Trombone, A Night In Venice. ... Lucantani 6. The Melting Pot, introducing Ladder of Roses, Sunshine of Your Smile, Here Comes Tootsi Memories, Sweet (fider Time, Auf Wiedersehn, Babes in the Wood, | America I Love You........ | Compiled by Remruts 7. Selection, Alone At Last - ! o . Branz Dahar 8. Finale, March of the Nation, compiled by Lensberz. | Star Spangled Banner. The usual Sunday dinners will be | served at the Casino PERFECTLY 1ZED MILK SEIBERT AND SON, PASTEUR- | Park Street, Near Stanley 6 teams. Tel. connecticn. i | | i k |SUMMER TOGS J ON THE COURTS Worsted, plain and striped, light weight, develops this short and slip-on coat, which is triramed to picturesque advanwge with the stripe. Two pearl buttons close the coat, and the pocket lids are con- structed to hold tennis balls. The colors are deep cream and sage green, the hat matching. of skirt | .I\xl, DRAMA AND COMEDY ON KEENEY’S SCREEN Three hig features, two Keeney's tonight. The the best offered and it should draw a capacity There are also threc vaudeville acts, all of clude their W ments tonight, and lovers of variety who have not attended an the performances, should take vantage of the opportunity which be afforded this evening Especially attractive graph blue ribboner, Woman,” played by and a capable cast. the tallk of the city’s photopl tees today and it deserves house tonight. Miss Pearson is Vitagraph's best emotional actr Every picture in which she is here in many Britain the The a powerful dramas and an excellent comedy, have been secured for the photoplay bill at management pronounces the program to be one of weeks house. entertaining which will con- engage- the of ad- will Vita- Hunted Virginia Pearson This picture was devo- full the ress. cast POWDER Absolutely Pure’ Made from Cream of Tartar NOALUM—-NO PHOSPHATE | proves a winner and from the box of- a fice viewpoint she is one of the coun- try’s leading screen star. “The Gentle Volunteer attraction, is favor. The comedy Mr. Jack, His Frank Daniels, the popular musical comedy star, introduced. This is one of a series of comedies, designat- ed as “The Iscapades of Mr. Jack.” There will be some other single and double reel numbers. a Univer- sal feature of Dukeship,” the bill is in which is OFFICE BOY SLEUTH ‘THE DUMMY’ FEATURE The Poli Player: present “The Dummy O'Higgins Hartford, will next week. The miscreants Ford this time are a band of kidnappers. The stealing of Charley Ross wasn't a circum- stance to the cruel purloining of little Beryl from her not very happy homic. Be parents being estranged to make the case little harder for the crafty gum-$hoe Walter Babbing Little Beryl might never have been found if it hadn't been for Barney Cook, the messenger, who applies for a job to be offica boy to what he calis a “real detectuf.” He got the job, too, and an hour later, dressed as an girl and wins a reward of $10,000 A picturization of Alfred Sutro's play, “John Glayde's Honour,” will be the feature picture of the photo- play concert tomorrow evening, fea- turing O. Aubrey Smith, Mary Lawton and a specially selected cast. MISS RUSSELL WITH "PHONE CO. 24 YEARS New Chief Operator at Local Exchange Jlas Won Her Way Up From the Ranks. relephone users in the New Brit- ain exchange will be greatly inter- ested to learn of the appointment of Miss Annie Russell, formerly in charge of the Meriden exchange, to the position of chief operator in New Britain. Miss Russell has already taken up her duties at the local office Miss Russell entered the employ of the Southern New England Telephor company, as an operator in the Me den office, on May 10, 1892, and ha been with the company continuously since that time. This gives her a rec- ord for continuous service that is one of the longest in the operating depart- ment of the telephone company. After serving eleven lo- cal operator in the Meriden office, Miss Rtussell was promoted to toll line and long distance work in the same ex- change, and in 1906 assumed the du- ties of supervisor, For the past tt vear: has further demonstrated her efficiency in the capacity of chief operator in Meriden. years a she Miss Russell's record with the outhern New England is an excep- tionally brilliant one, her association with the work having established her in the, top rank of the operating de- partment. Her fair manner in deal- ing with the members of the operat- ing force has won the loyalty and en- thusiastic cooperation of all who have served under her. At the same time, the appreciation of the value of d cipline and a thorough knowledge of the business have combined to give her those characteristics absolutely cssential to the person who to make a success of this difficult side of is the telephone husiness. Twenty-four vears experience has also given Miss Russell an appreciation of the sub- seribers’ side of the telephone ser- vice that is invaluable. W. A. Semple, exchange manager, in speaking of Miss Russell's appoint- ment said, “We are extremely grati- fied in having been able to secure so experienced and efficient a chief oper- ator as Miss Russell, and we are con- be duplicated in our larger exchange here in New Britain, | vet also expected to find | “I3ton collar kid" and primed to pre- | How Madge's Happy Retrospect tend he is ‘“deaf and dumb,’ he him-| Inded in an Amazing Surprise. sclf. is being kidnapped in the Grand Hitebvent atia jos-trof withimertor Central sl!‘:l\mn by 1]:3“\.12311;1_:;3;_‘1 t« long time after the departure for suppose they are acting ers | =L g - sent by a code letter from one of | I'rance of the Braithwaites and Miss their pals. From the moment he is | Sonnot. . ] ) stolen Barney is on the job. Being My mother-in-law missed her himself for the sake of poetic ardl | daughter, Mrs. Braithwaite, sorely. pursuing justice a kidnapped kid, | 1 believe if it had not been for her little Beryl is never out of reach | pride in her famous son-in-law she of his strong right arm. After many | Would have become actually {ll with startling complications he rescues the | fretting. T found my hands full in devising ways to divert her mind and fldent that her success in Meriden will | “This “Cheer up.” said the Authorman to Molly, the little stenographer lady; “five years from now youll look baclk on all this quite calmly.” “That's cold comfort,” “besides, 1 know I never wa ch a foolish, unnece take to take that apartment might have waited and got liked ever so much better. 1 never shall be able 10 thinik my dving day without hating and feeling perfectly wild,” Poor Molly, of course but of course she can't realize it now! She isn’t old enough to know how time softens and changes the | aspect of many things. he May it Wasn't At AlL may come a day i will realize that the taking of the less | attractive apartment wasn't a mis- | take at all. Her present location may | | | { Molly; it mis- | when we one we know I of it mys said shall. she will, } ¥ind a Mistake There when she bring her friendships that may mean infinitely more than the possession of a few extra comforts. Or, even if she still regards a mistake, there will be none of poignant regret she now feels. will see whatever good came of her choice, she will know that her mis- take taught her to be less hasty in her decisions, and she will realize that it was all a part of the pattern of her life Not Many of Us Could Quite Say This it as that She “I would scarce now have any of these untoward accidents and events of my life reversed. I would no more alter them than the incidents of some well-contrived novel,” says Charles Lamb. “Methinks it is bet- ter that I should have pined away seven of my fairest yvears when I was thrall to the fair hair and fairer eyes Too-" of Alice W—— than that so passion- ate a love adventure should be lost. It is better that.our family should have missed that legacy which Dorrel cheated us of, than that I should have at this moment two thousand pounds ‘in banco’ and be without the idea of that specious old rogue'” The Older One (¢ Regrets, s0 ws the Less On The older one grows, the less regrets. Time, who takes away one hand the passionate long youth and its intense capacity for joyment, gives with the other a broader view of life, a more philoso- phic sense of its import Everything that has taught us something one with of en- ings happened has Happiness has come from unexpected quarters: even that greatest evil, the death of some beloved one, has not come utterly empty handed—'more homelike seems the vast unknown since they have en- tered there.” And all the time the pattern is weaving, and beautiful and ugly experiences, sad days and glad days wise choices and what seem to us mistakes are being woven into a whole whose symmetry we begin dimly to perceive. With My Lett Priends, 1t dre % X I will Z..will send me her to send her some ad- in- formation along the line she desires. Scveral letter friends have asked me to print poetry, original or other- wise, in my column. While I may and often do, greatly enjoy the poetry myself, I cannot always find room for it, because it may not fit in with any subject 1 feel capable of discussing. 1 hope they will understand that I thank them, even though I cannot use the poetry. el By ADELE 1R SVELATIONSOF A WIFE, GARRIGON planning dishes to tempt her delicate “ppetite. Because of her frailty and conse- quent inability to do much sightsee- ing, or, indeed, to go far from the house, Dicky and spent a very quiet winter. Our evenings away from home to- sether did not average one a week And Dicky very rarely went an where without me. “What a Dayrby getting to be!” night as we sat on each side of the jibrary table, reading. His mother, was her custom, had to bed carly in the evening, “Yes! Isn't it nice smiling at him Ripping!” Dicky fastically. Then, reflectively, riest thing about it is the cotton to this domesic stunt. body had told me before 1 met you that I should ever stand for this isband-reading-to-knitting-wife-sort f thing I should have bought him a ticket to Matteawan, pronto.” He stopped and frowned heavily at me, in mimic disapproval. “Picture all spoiled,” he «ighing. “You are not \Why, oh, why are you not knitting?’” “Because I never shall knit,” T re- (urned, laughing, “at least not in the evening while you are reading. That of thing never did appeal to me. Bither the wife who has to knit or cew or darn in the evening is too inefficient to get all her work done in daylight, or she has too much work ta do, In the first her husbhand ought to teach her efficiency in the second place, he ought to help I and Joan we he remarked a are one 2" 1 returned, enthus “Fun- way I If any- agreed declared, knitting. sort do the sewing or the darning. Then they could both read.” “Listen ta the feminist?" carolled Dicky; then with mock severity: “Of | ccurse, T am to infer, madam, that my stockings are all properly darned 2 | ‘Your inference is eminently cor- | rect,” demurely. Your mother rned them toda and Comf. What T had told him was true. 1lis mother had seen me looking over | tne stockings after they were washed, { the on earth.” He put his arms around bent his face to mine. me true, this quiet damestic cove which our marital bark had The storms we had weathered far past. Dicky’s jealousy brother-cousin, Jack Bickett, happiness over Lillian those tempestuous days surely vears ago instead of months. Now Jack, was ‘somewhere in France,” and I had a queer little pre- monition that somewhere, somehow, his path would cross that of Mi Sennat, the little nurse, who had gone with Dr. Braithwaite's expedi- | tion, and who for years had cherished ideal intc drifted. seemed of tess she had cut the Gordian knot of our misunderstanding by g n telling me, against Dicky's protest , all about the old secret which her past and that of my husband shared. After her stery, with all that it revealed of her acrifice and her fidelity to her own ideals, there never again would be a doubt of her in my mind. 1 was proud of her friendship, although, be- cause of my mother-in-law’s preju- dice against them, Dicky and T could not have the Underwoods at Lome. Our meetings, therefore, But 1 had an odd little sufety and security thought of her. I rible trouble ever came should fly to her as if she ter. My work at the Lotus Study Club going along smoothly. At home much more satisfactory than the maids I had seen in cstablishments that I shut my eyes to little things about which T my mother-in-law would have most captious, “Miss Dr But my mother-in-law’s acerbity softened by her weakness. We grew quite companionable in the winter days when Dicky's absence at studio left us together. Alto- I felt that life had been very to me. the winter before we me our were few. feeling of whenever T if any ter to me were knew I my - Katic was so other many knew bheen per—- was gether good so t rolled knew stealing bringing to brown earth aw it and al- the spring in from the me their urgent and sprouting mos « South call of things 1 was not the anly one who listened to the message of spring. Graham grew restless and her meagre strength in parks and walks to a nearby square where the crocuses were just hegin- ning to wave their brave greeting to the city. The warmer days c Mother used all of drives to the affected Dicky snd had insited on darning Dicks 1 saw that she longed to do some little personal service far her bo ©nd willingly handed them over. | Dicky threw back his head and | i laughed heartily. Then his face | sobered, and he camc round to my side of the tahle a 1 sat down on the arm of my ch: | | “Speaking of o e et | humpling my il Lenosingly, i | want to tell ven \Gart thail | you've mad with me | the way yvou 1 ¢ of her Nohody know: b than 1 how trying she can be, and vou've been | Just as sweet and Kind to her as if | SAlitha-ma 3 adversely. He seemed a bit distrait, displayed a trifle of his earlier irri- tability, and complained a great deal about the warmth of the apartment. “I tell you I can’t stand this any longer,” he said one particularly warm evening in April, as he sank mto a chair, flinging his collar in one direction and his necktie in another, “I'd rather be in the city in August and “Pretty nice, indeed,” I agreed, nestling closer to him, My heart echoed the words. In iact, it seemed almost too good to be > my my un- Underwood— were* & romantic of my brother- cousin, although she had never met him Lillian Underwood was my sworn friend With characteristic direct- writ by them exclusive- ten crring. What do you say to moving into the country for the summer? Our month is up here the first any- way, and I am perfectly willing to lose any part of the month's rent if we only can get away But Dicky,” 1 protested inless we board, which I don’t think any f us would like to do, how & we coing to find a house, to say nothing of getting settled in so short a time?* To my surprise, Dicky hesitated & racment hefore answering Then 1ushing, he uttered the words which rought my little castle of content- ment crumbling about mc na warned me that my marital prot s were not vet all solved ‘Why, vou see, there won't he an lother about a house. Miss Draper has found a perfectly bully place not far from her sister's home s Before retir- ing, use with warm water and insure a 8 restfulnight. It In the Ba th Glenn’s Sulphur Soap Refreshes . (Al Dn Contains 30% gists.) Pre Sulphur, HIii’e Hair & Whisks