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ern Steamsmp Lmes All-the-W: e-Way-By- ~Water it Wunderful Maine Or the Provinces a trip on pmfortable or Line, Kennebec Line Portland Line International Line Yarmouth Line ELLENT DINING SERVICE IFORTABLE STATEROOM Always Lower Than By Rail. h tickets and full information Railroad Offices, or address ger Traffic Department, India Boston. the Popular Steamers of the and Bk Nh CBEEINCY All This Week Charlic Chaplin “POLICE” The Great In e Come- sers. 0 Advance In Admission sual Fhotopiay Dramas High Class Vaudeville last chance tonight to CLEO RIDGELY and allace Reid, that ipping production of the ifornia gold fields. E LOVE MASK” in drama IAN GISH, in a a stupendous moral LD FOR MARRIAGE” ARBUCKLE comedy- 'y in ring a Coming Tomorrow HYPOCRISY” matic expose of the ms of society with the owned Southern beauty GINIA PEARSON LIP SHEFFIELD bompletely new arrange- t of popular song ads. ARSONS’ ATRE—Hartford AL THIS WEEK Wednesday and Saturday) HOW FOR 5 CENTS : OPERA PLAYERS ption’s Funniest and Most Tuneful Opera “ROBINHOOD" by Reginald DeKoven Nights, to 10c. (500 Seats at 25¢); Matinees, d 1o0c. bt June 12—“NAUGHTY HARTFORD This Week, Twice Daily he Poli Players In HE DUMMY” Greatest “Detectuf” omedy Ever Staged he Authors of ““The Ar- gvle o hees—10c, 20c. ngs—10c, 20c, 30c, 50c. COMPOUNGE CONC NDAY AFT Bathing, Bowling. fis, Fishing and Dancing Popular Picnic Grouna Regular Dinners. ving Picture Theater E & NORTON, PROPS. Your Wants in The | | News NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDA Y, JUNE 6, 1916. *‘or Theater Goers and Women Readers A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His overgrown children as they are? Surely you are not conservative, people of the studio and the stage! shut your doors and even your ey of interest or character or talent sharing the hoary Because s to every human being who has a spark How Cora and David Temple Solved Their Marital Problems By ZOE BECKLEY What He Sees In His Friends I wish it had been mere anger, Cora, that sent us apart last night and made you shut your door upon me. Anger pa: But the feeling be- tween us now is not so simply overcome What is there in my friends, in such gatherings a we went to last night, that makes me revel in them and makes you ate and loathe them,” as vou said in your strange outburst? And which one of us must change, you or I, if we are not to bruise ourselves on the rock of incompatibility. In married life friend and en- tertainment play a big part, my dear. Our difference t night troubles me. I love these friends of mine—these ga talented bohemians whose freedom is so free from hypocricy, whose hearts are so light and so kind. They are infinitelr more interesting to me than the humdrum world that is only too glad to pay money to see my friends show the very talents they entertained us with last night My friends have their faults—what human being has not? But surely they are not so bad that meeting them in some merry studio or bohemian restaurant should cause any one to hate and loathe them! I don’t ask vou to give up vour friends for mine. All 1 ask is that you take mine in, too Yet every time I ask you to meet any of them I have a guilty feeling that T am imposing some sort of cruelty on you. Oh, you go with me all right; and you really try to feign a liking for the crowd. But I always feel you are suffering and it takes all the pleasure out of it for me. And why should I feel guilty and why should you feel miserable over such a kindly and harmless—to us, at any rate—lot of prejudice against if you do you will have to ful of this pulp, rubbed through a sieve, add a teacupful sugar, half cup- ful melted butter, juice and rind of a lemon, cupful milk and three eggs and 2 half nutmeg. Beat all together and bake in pastry shel Chicken Salad—One cupful cooked chicken, one cupful cucumber, one cupful celery cut into neat pieces. Mix and marinate with French dressing. Chill, drain and mix with one-hall cupful mayonnaise. Arrange in a sal- ad bowl; garnish with hard boiled eggs and mayonnaise. CHARLIE “CHAP” IN “pOLICE” AT KEENEY'S With Charlie Chaplin in his funniest comedy, “Police,” leading the photo- play program and LaFoela, the pre- mier Japanese dancer, topping the vaudeville bill, Keeney's offers this week a series of film and variety at- tractions that should make the house exceedingly popular during the entire week. The big feature above men- tioned will be given during the cur- rent week and the management has decided to charge no extra admis- sion fee. The advent of the warm weather invariably affects theater at- tendance to a large extent and to counteract the usual humidity results, the management has secured an ex- ceptionally fine show. Chaplin, the $676,000 a vear star, is seen during the week as an Es- sanay actor. ‘“Police’” serves to again E——————————————————————————— NOT DUE TO SEX ALONE ain Women Have Learned : Cause of Many Mysterious Pains and Aches. to know all back- women have come sn't the reason for aches, dizzy headaches and urinary disorders: Men have these troubl too, and often they come from kidney Many that sex weakn To live simply, eat spar- ingly, take better care of one's self and to use Doan's Kidney Pills, is bound to help bad kidneys get better. There is no other remedy so well-rec- mended by New Britain people. Read this case: Mrs. J. A. McGrail, 423 Church street, New Britain, “I have used Doan's Kidney Pills off and on for quite awhile when ever my back has ached or has felt weak. This trouble seems to be brought on by continual standing and exertion Mornings my back sometimes feels lame and stiff and when I stoop over ’'s Want Coiumns. lcO the pain seems to catch me. Doan’s Kidney Pills have never failed to re- leve thix trouble.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for u kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. J- A. McGrail had Foster-Mil- , Props., Buffalo, N, Y. sensation in the European m It made a pronounced the “first nighters.” The other vaudeville turns th week are Hurleys, acrobatic marvel Besides the Chaplin feature there Will be sixteen reels released daily by the Universal company in addition to the Frank Danicls, “Peg Of The Ring” and “Mysteries of Myra’ rials. ¢ halls impression on se- “SUNBONNET SUE” AS SHE IS TODAY Cleverness is often dangerous. The , faults in public, of sar iments vleverness; for instance, that does | on his part and nagging on he | things so easily that it never learns to Too Many a Truc Word Spoken In do them thoroughly. A great art teacher once said to a Jest . . young pupil whose work he was sece- Many of the things were said ap- S SRR o | ins for the first time. ‘“How clever , Parently in jest but the sting within Efi*" ON THE L|NKS¢2?, You are!” anq then, “And how I can | the jest went home for all that. 1ift You cut of your cleverness!"” No, there was no other man nor Worn with a checkered silk sweat- | BUt it is another sort of clever- | Woman in the cahe; but for all that i Tl > ness whose dangers I am thinking of | they weren't heart whole, far from it er is this peanut straw faced with pale | ' oo CATEeES O D o for the heart of each was pierced green crape and banded with padded | artee among housemates, and especial- | With a hundred little pin pricks of fruits in natural tones and glo | 1y among married folks. taunt and complaint and sm. | Halr Jesti 5 Little Di I shall never foryet one miserable leaves: All sport hats seem to be | Hall Jesting, Halt Serious Little Digs. | oo 5 5 oy et there toward the taking on huge circumferences, which | Y0u know what I mean: You must | jast. The ducl of pin pricks went on 18 BoDd for Humimen freciies | have sometime been in a home where | 4 usyal until suddenly, after some- | the housemates made a habit of giv- | thing nhis wife had ‘said, the hushband Ing each other half jesting, half ser turned on her in open rage. She was | ous little digs, and where all the rest | thunderstruck. “*What have I said to GOOGODOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOSSS | Were quick 1o laugh at the expense | geserve that?” she protested. And in- ? of the onc defeated in this duel of | Geaq her last speech had been nothing Rubbing Eases Pain | pin prics. particularly outrageous. It was sim- | Perhaps you've even lived in such a | ;)¢ that each prick had gone a little | home without thinking much about it. [ geeper and left the surface of the When a child is hurt, mother rubs | But come, now, think of it, and te heart more sensitive and the last prick the spot. This is one of the principles | me—after all, is this sort of cleve had proved unendurable. of cure. Rubbing is an | ness worth “hm’v Isn't it, in fact, Can’t Be Happy With Or Without effective method of eas- | quite the reverse? on3 % ing pain. Many suffer! I once knew two people who start Each Other. from lumbago, stiffness, ed out in wedded life by loving eac They are divorced now, poor, fool- lameness, backache, sci- | other very dearly And 1 use the ish folks, and as unhappy apart as atica and all rheumatic great word ‘“lov advisedly for their | they were together. And they might pains when by rubbing | feeling for each other was not founded [ be so happy if they hadn't been so with Minard’s Liniment | on the firm basis of congeniality, and | clever. almost instant relief is at hand and | ;.de up of mutual respect and friend- | If you want to be clever, why not with this delightful, creamy lini- { gi;, ana tenderness all welded to- | turn your cleverness into graceful ment, pain of every kind is sure to g0.. | ,oiher ana fused into love by sex at- | kindly repartee? Anyone can say sharp Why suffer the awful pains of lumbago’ | |\ .tion. They had a wonderful | things that are amusing. It takes an und backache when at a friflies | (. .. of being happy, and for a time | infinite deal of cleverness to make 4 cost Minard’s Liniment can be used 50 | ;. o But by and by something | gracious, witty speech. And the flush easily and so very effectively? | crept between them. It wasn't an- | of pleasure and gratitude is far pleas Physicians have recommended and © ;.. \oman, it was just this infernal | anter to see than the flush of resent druggists advised that the always de- ! habit of saving sharp things to each | ment and hurt. 1If you don’t believe pendable Minard’s Liniment be Kebt | ;.\ . “ciiticising each other's little ' me try it and see. in every home ready for instant use. It is absolutely pure, stains neither flesh nor clothing and cannot burn or blister. Ask your druggist. pd wife of “Man of film life in “Hypocri goes through with unhappy result of these stages. Her husband lover are money mad, and she has a failing for bridge which leads her to debt. Her love of,dress brings her deeper into that indebtedness which the poor not know. The picture shows the in the tradespeople axiom “It the poor who Ao basis of the play | son, as the the world” in her ; all and dn truth only The is was taken from New York life, where probably America’s mad and social climbing race complete- ly accentuated to the town of social ¢ But it applies as well unwritten any histories of every to those stories of ce which are whispered | ar to ear among the city's upper class and which are known but never printed in every newspaper office of the land. Only seldom, when a dijvorce from suit or sudden crime brings them into courts, do the common folk of every day life realize how lucky they are to possess the virtues of poverty and homely simplicity. In “Hypocri all will have a chance to see society as it really not all bad. for is human, but not as its pose and sham | 'and bluff lead: many to think it is. 1a Wallace Reid will last time tonight in he Love N Lillian Gish, in | Cleo Ridgely be seen for the ‘Sold For Marriage” and Fatty Ar- buckle in a roaring comedy. or touch of the bohemfan in them. ror | “HYPQOCRISY,” STRONG all these people follow the same unconventional ideals. 2 And do vou suppose the respective pillars of society whom we know are more righteous in their lives? I prefer a thousand times people who SOCIETY DRAMA bring their life’s mistakes in the open rather than those who lead doubl o . e e lives and have not the courage to let the light in on themselves, henamsio h Ellpoc hiiare ex I am not asking you to live with these people if you don’t want to. |POSed in the latest William Fox pro- All I ask is that they shall not feel you are going to take me away from [ duction “Hypocrisy” starring Virginia them. Indeed, I ask you myself not to make me give my friends up. | Pearson and Alfred Swanson, which For, of course, if it came to a choice between giving up my friends and | opens at the local Fox theater tomor. causing estrangement bet-veen vou and me, I should give up my friends. | row. Owing {o the rental of the thea. But Cora, I shall not feel happy ahout it. ter to the United Swedish Singing And it is not only friendship I would lose. Business, personal growth. | society for Thursday and Friday & And of the latter not only mine but yours, teo. For you know that to | pocrisy” will be shown tomorrbw and Erow one must meet, above all, human beings. Shall we shut the door | Saturday only. : on human beings outside our own little circle, Cora, or shall we broaden Everybody familiar with this social ' our circlejto/include: others of every type? I feel that the answer lies |iife of every city from the Atlantic fo with you. the Pacific knows the social shams which come of false standards usually M : 3 introduce him in the funny old shoes | 2550¢iated with wealth and ambition. enu for Tomorrow | | and trousers which made him famous, | BUf Probably never has this familiar [ Mt Shcls It is in this make-up that he is at ?N,(;‘] of l”‘” ‘\‘lmf"” ‘]',1.1”“ PR £ St enthusiastlcfoverSnimiTaRtst aliivos | Ba2s B0 RO Ae L0 BIBECCH A g e TTine ¢ part comedy and it is bound to draw 2 . e = Broiled Brains Delmonico Potatoes | heavily on the city's Chaplin devotees, | FeAT50N: “Hypocrisy™ tells with force- Pop Overs Coffee Other theaters have advanced the | LUl Moral just what makes so-called i price for this film but Keeney's will | [iE" society teal '”1')(‘],"(‘.‘,;‘", nanyr stick to the usual figures. S » v & VG Chicken Salad LaFoela is a wonderful dancer. She { 50¢ial ambition, ‘marriage for —any- Marlboro Tart Cocoa has appeared before the crowned | 1iR€ but love, men's business race — heads of Europe on several occasions | [0F 80ld women's climb to social Dinner and has danced before royalty in many | 5101Y; and all the dangers of gambling Split Pea Soup | countries. She is graceful of fizure | “hether in l'"l”\",.l’ 2ncMbonds or it BrolloataTout Potatoss | and shows remarkable skill as g | the fashionable “bridge” Miss Pear- Hibe Balls fdancer. Her most interesting num- Tomato Jelly Salad Strawberries der is the Japanese arm dance, which o B I'she learned during her girthood days | DIME NOVEL PLAY Cons |in Java, her native land. She also O T Ioro! Taxtaiey axter anafstew]| Litroduceatinadiani o sl i 2oad AT POLI'S THEATER SWElie tavt upnled T Saen feacut- Eilia Bvench or diion hat aioid It is a play that tells a story boy iream about-——one that makes middle ed men hark back to,the days when they read rter in the ayloft of the barn. Distinctly a man’s play,” the offering of the Poli Players, in Hartford, this week. The Dummy,” tell gripping a de- tective story as ever came from the pages of a dime novel, and, most wonderful of all, the hero is your Barney (0o} metamorphosed me senger boy, Who gets his fill of ad- > | ward offered by the millionaire father rescues a beautiful child kidnappers. taken by the older subordinated ably from wicked The parts | this week | ney Cook { Dilson, { drop of people to Bar- by John | | venty and | | are a part taken who mar to wring every humor from it. By following | Walter Babbing, a great detective, | his office, he succeeds in getting a job |as office boy. One minor commission |leads the detective to send the boy {into the gang of kidnappers as a deal land dumb boy, How he sticks to {them through their flight with little | Beryl Merideth into the Catskills, how I ne ge < to New York with the Dlittle girl after the two are abandon- ed by the fleeing kidnappers, and {how he finally wins the $10,000 re- to Imt the main incidents of the plot. o Pin Prick Duels =L T, society | ” Exact Copy of Wrapper. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ; AVegetable PreparationforAs- similating IhekomlandRequla ting e Stomachs and Bowels of INFANTS Promotes DigestionCheerfut ness and Rest Contalns neitter § Opium Morphine nor Mineral NO'I‘ NARCOTIC. erfect Remedy for Corsitpe: | ‘&;I:Ie' Sour Smm%cl\ Dtat Worras Corvulsions.Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEER: TacSinile Signature of m THE cmvmm CoMPANY, § For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature In Use For Over irty Years thoea NEWYOK At6 months - At6 months old i 35 DosES —35Cmms‘ rantee und rt -m ‘A‘ THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK GITY. . PIAN ITAL, Watchman’s Song .. Gri PLEASING PIANO RECITAL. et ; ettt AR . Edith Lynn Pupils of Theron W. Hart Entertain' = 0 (05 rom songs with- at Center Church. out words) ..F. Mendelssot ¢ . b. Barcarolle in D flat . Bende Before a large gathering of parents - Bl Rt : ALl iiohaith. pupilslofimhcron Wk oo Meditation Eror oy Hart gave a very pleasing piano re- ey cital last evening in the Center church | T ot ~Athont chapel. During the course of the & el e ronAelasony evening Mr. Hart played the {Trium- i WOFGE) ~oocio i o) phal March” (Greiz) by request and P © g e it was thoroughly enjoyed Dby all} S BESacht) ' a “h of the Arche Following is the program of the en- & March L AT l1’*’1“““1“‘”1“”“ Waltz song. . .A. L. Brawn' D Murmuring Zephyrs (transerip e tixios s mmans o o g Jensen-Niemanr Howard Fenn Stephenson [ m“. ‘1\1‘”\ i a. The Pixies' Gavotte .A. L. Brown € HOHRLE X e ey b. The Pixies’ Good-night <nlnzi il Hinder Dareon B S TRreul a. To a Wild Rose, An Old Trysting ¥ : nk Smith Vander S ML i ] Pastoral ....... i 2 ! L aser i Woodland Sketches . Marjorie Elizabeth Foiren 0 B e S f‘ IHM”“'”’G % :':"'::}:n b. Walther's Preislied from *Dic h. Barcarolle é A. sa Meistersinger’ Wagner- . Angela Mary Curtin | e e Dancing Spirits ....... C. Bohm Walter August Macristy i e a. Song of June F. Williams | Rev. John T. Wiaters is planning tc b. Les Sylphes 5 Bachmann open the new St. Mary's playground: Norma Esther Williams on or about July 4 Dishes For Coupons No matter how many dishes you have, you wiil want to own this beautiful set, too. You can obtain it for 25 coupons and only $2.75 in cash. One coupon with each pound of Wedgwood Creamery Butter We want you to taste Wedgwood Creamery Butter and see what a fine butter modern creameries and pasteurization can produce. In dust-tight, odor-proof pack- ages—never sold in bulk Parksdale This handsome 50- piece set of fine Saxon China has an attract- ive, exclusive design and is decorated in the soft shades of gray, green, pink, yellow and blue with a gold line around the rim. Coupons, also, with Farm guaranteed Fancy Eggs. P. BERRY & SONS, Hartford, Conn. Distributors for England States. Note: As we now offer a 50-piece instead of 2 42-piece set, we have been obliged to increase the required number of coupons from INC., Sole New