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DAM USES SHOE BUTTON TRIM Frenchwoman used put 2 piquaintly pe buttons could brewnish parading from toe tips in this costume. The brown taffeta contrasted with buttons being applied ra. Please study the Bessie Eyton in OXYOLE OF FATE” ED. AND THURS. Feather Feature. HEART OF A CHILD.” d [FRIDAY AND SAT. Ethel Clayton in LLARS and CENTS” TODAY ONLY ngle Plays, Present uglas Fairbanks w Good Bad Man” mount Plays, Present t Irish Singer with pli Players in THE ISLE 'DREAMS” Star at Poli Prices _ GOMPOUNCE \';NTCERT \?ER.\‘ ! t g, " s, Tishing %, : Popular Pieafancing VERY OON. Bowling, “xound. Regular Dinners.i ving Picture 'Theateh OE & NORTON, PRO in pic-~ ! . News for NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1916. ?heé ter A STORY YOU CAN How Cora and David Temple By ZOE BECKLEY BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His Solved Their Marital Problema ‘ him at this time. could I You do that I are the am nearest thing to a Cora's: you should see the woman! all in one! For some reason she has ch and protege and doe: her much of the time and with Cora Nor is that the worst of it, deal! of a woman, as I've said. me and her. And five years. slon; and is using it in that direction But she won't have it purely b flatteries, the attention, the recognitic that I am a man. Oh, it nothing dence—it's too subtle for that. can give and satisty the letter of tho as a scoundrel. attention, gallant service, etcetera. not feel one bit disloval to Cora. 1 of us, as I begin to believe, mo: For, frankly, Tom, I am play me to. have to be gullty of—If it is disloyalty. much materially if I refuse Mrs. Brett cur her devilishly effective enmity. me {n the future. Cora’s sake as well as mine, tell me! David Seeks Counsel That David Temple, largely through his own plan of having Cor himself write out their sides of every controversy hetween them, knew what Cora was going through, he showed in the letter Tom Woodward got from I did what I could to help her solve her problem and mine. now writing you myself for advice. brother of Cora’s to talk to just now. A Valkyrie, sen to pick not notice Cora though I've tried to very profitable business taught me more of my own work in a month than I've learned in the last he has the power to raise me to the very top of my brof iness. that would count But she demands the sort of thing a n Now, mnderstand, no woman comes before Cora with me. self that I can throw Mrs. Brett the sop her woman vanity wan - and Dear Tom Woodford: Several weeks ago Cora, in the str of situ. tion you will unde from this letter, wrote out for the advice and the comfort of an old friend. At the last moment she sent it to me instead, But so little And I need my situation ha. is brother Here Cora briefly, a and I have given up all business in New York to plunge in with the Colony Park Realty Company. I have a splendid opening with the outfit as their architect and I have sunk in all my savings with them. The real boss here is M Brett, wife of the owner, She is the mov- ing genius of the whole project and a good deal of a genius in her own right. Unfortunately she is a good deal of woman, too. By jove, Tom, Diana, an Amazon and a Venus me as her closest co-worker a at all. That means that I am with very little of the time. it's bad enough. She is a good malke it all business between it is for me, too. She has too. She is a woman and wants the »n from me that she is a woman and in a court of evi- n and yet feel as mean law of decenc T tell my- —flattery, tell myself I can do all this and yet But can I, Tom; can I? You are a married man of expericnce, Tom. gerous a game-—dangerous, I mean, for Cora and my: or less polygamous? ng the game much as Mrs. There is too much to gain for the little dislovalty to Cora I dan- 1 Am 1 playing too elf? Are we men, & Brett wants Nz And both Cora and I will iose too the sop to her romanticism and in- I don't know what that thing I am doing will lead to for Cora and If you, who have been through the fire, can tell me, for A Good Classifying the people of one's ac- quaintance is always a favorite di- ‘version. “People who like olives and peaple who don’t,” is one quoted by Gelett Burgess, “People who like Charles Lamb and Barrie and people who don't,” is my favorite. A friend of mine advanced anin- teresting one the other day. “There are just two classes of peo- ple in the world,” she said; “people | who are courteous enough to answer invitations to subscription affairs, and people who are not.” A Hall Mark of Breeding. It is a hall mark of breeding isn’t it, to attend to these botherSome Ilit- tle matters There are some things that etiquette absolutely requires that we do. No one but an utter boor would@ think of ignoring a personal and private invitation. Above and beyond these rigid & obligations are the amenities that those who have the truest courtesy in their hearts ob- serve. The finest lady (in its best sense) that I know is absolutely punctil- ious about these things. She has many interests and her mail is full of ap- peals and invitations of one sort or another. And she never fails to at- tend to one of them. She courteously refuses the invitation to the subscrip- tion dance, she conscientjously records her vote for the college trustee, she indicates her hope of being present at the concert. And She Answers Them The Day They Arrive, And, most wonderful of all, she LUBIN PICTURIZES BIG TERHUNE STORY Two of Filmland’s most popular eglars, Bessie Eyton and Ethel Clay ton, are numbered amang the talent shown on the screen in the photo- play features at Keeney's this week. Miss Eyton will be seen tonight in To all those that suffer terribly with Citizen does each thing promptly, the day the letter arrives. “They take no more time then than later,” she ex- plains. I asked her once why she was attentive to these matters, for people for whom she cares nothing, and she said simply, “isn’t that part of being a good citizen?” And I agreed that it was. “Good breeding,” someone has said, “is a combination of much sense, some good-nature and a little self-denial for the sake of others, with a view to obtaining the same in- dulgence from them.” Now what are laws but agreements founded on the same ideal of “self- denial for the sake of others with a view to obtaining the same indulgence from them?” So good breeding and good citizen- ship are twins. Are you a good citizen? With My Letter Friends. Question—Ts it necessary to wait for an imvitation before you go to visit friends in a distant city Answer—Would you like to have those friends visit you without an invitation. Unless a very great de- gree of intimacy exists, I cannot imagine doing such a thing, and even then I should rather be madé abso- lutely sure of my welcome by a defi- nite Invitation. Of course where a general invitation exists, it is allow- able to write and ask if a specific date is convenient, the Selig Red Sealer, “The Cycle of five-part drama of the city and the sea which tops the pragram. Shown with it will be the Biograph feature, “The Unwelcome Guest.” Among the other big films booked for the week is the Red Feather human interest drama, “The Heart of a Child,” in which an all-star cast will be seen Wednesday and Thurs- day. The eighth episade in the “Mysteries of Myra” is promised for Wednesday and on the same day the Broadway Star company will con- tribute the three-reel drama, “Ash with Corrine Griffith and Jack Mower in the leading roles. Ethel Clayton will bow before Keeney patrons on Friday and Satur- day when she will be seen in the Lubin company’s picturization of the Tt Ny ey great sto “Dollars and Cents.” With her will be Tom Moore and some other noted stars. Warda Howard will make her New Britain debut Friday in “The Regeneration of Margaret.” George Russell, the blind muslcian, is one of the biggest applause getters cn the vaudeville rogram. The sightless player renders a number of difficult selections an the cornet, piano and banjo. Murphy and Del- mar have a song and conversation sore, tired, aching feet, the least jar £ or misstep causes untold s agony—but immediate relief /Ek is at hand lf]or tl;lere is one O remedy that has never K >- 7~ tailed to help sore feet. ‘\]fi No matter how long you / have suffered, just get from é any drug store a bottle of Minard’s reliable, creamy liniment and use as directed—for instantly you will find that nothing is as effective for your peor, sore, tired, aching, per- spiring feet—and you will wonder at its magic. It never burns or blisters and stains neither flesh nor clothing. t is clean and economical to use—and ‘U surely help you. of clever character people entertain with a sketch which they bill | hana | powdered sugar, add one teaspoonful REVELATIONSOF A WIFL By ADELE GARRIGON { How Dicky’s Mother Liked the New Housc. “Richard! Margaret!” My mother- in-law’s voice rose high and sharp as | she faced us. “You cannot mean that th th —she hesitated for a | word—"miserable shanty is going to Le our home this summer!” | Dicky squirmed uneasily, while T tried to slip quietly out of the l'umn,l But my mather-in-law forestalled me. | “Don’'t run away, Margaret,” she ¢aid acidly. “although I should (hink‘ you would want to if you had any | in selecting this. ~Why, it's a perfect hovel!” We were all standing in the living | room af the Brennan house, to which | the sole Marvin taxicab had brought | Dicky and his mother. Katie and 1| had come out early in the morning in order to have fires built and a| warm meal ready for the elder Mrs. Graham’s comfort. But her first look ! «t the inside of the house had drawn f1 impatient protest from her 1 had not shared Dicky en- thusiasm for the place at first, but I defy any woman to spend hours in arranging the furniture and draperie of a house without acquiring a liking for her handiwork. By the time I had hung the last curtain I was genuinely fond of the old house, The long living room appeared most attractive to my eves as we stood looking at it. The fireplaces in it and the large dining room were inexpen but good, of red brick mellowed by time. In both I had wood fires going. Mother Graham's mahogany gate-legged table w. drawn up at one side of the fireplace. Upon it, in the identical earthen pot in which Dicky had once so success- fully arranged flowers, were some branches of yellow forsythia, which I had found in the dooryard. The wall paper had touches of yel- ! low and olive in it, and I had tried to keep that fact in mind in my choice of rugs, which were Treally rather creditable imitations of the oriental patterns, and in my window draperies, which were of the thinnest cream fabric with tiny vellaw roses and buds running riot over them. i All three of us, Dicky, his mother and I had bookcases, numbers of them of all sizes, kinds and degrees | of repair. The best of these I had ' put in the living raom, and from the top of each glowed the forsythia in different receptacles. A comfortable | ccuch in brown leather, which had | come with Mother Graham’s fur- niture, was piled high with pillaws in | gay cretonne coverings, a number of chairs, some of them Mother Gra- ham’s, and some new, stood inviting- | Iy near the low windaws. A small up ght piano which I had rented in the village occupied a niche which ap-| peared made for it, and completed | the furnishings of the room. What Madge Did. ! I had seen Dicky’s e light up with admiration at his first sight of the reom, but his mother's dis- approval of the place had given him no chance to say anything about it. He turned to her protestingly. “What do you expect for $35 a mionth with these grounds? A modern honse with new decorations? for my pay‘ I thinki this room s wonderfull:;” attractive. Madge, vou certainly have done wonders with it.” He turned to me enthusiastically, and T suddenly fe¥ morc ‘han paid for all my work and worry “I am not critic Iabors,” my mother tartly, “but the whole rossible. You can’t | | ing Margaret's -law returned house is im- make a silk | Menu for Tomgirrow | » " Breakta¥t BiE Fruit, Créamed Potatoes Coffee Broiled Chops English Muffins Dinner Clear Soup Chicken Pie Mashed Potatoes Green Peas Tomato Mayonnaise Wafers Cheese French Charlotte Coffee Supper Creamcd Sweetbreads Lettuce Sandwiche Fruit Butter Cake Coffee Chicken Pie—Disjoint and clean the fowl as for a fricassee, removing as much skin as can be easily pulled off. Cover with boiling water, add a scant teaspoonful of salt and simmer gently until the meat sufficiently tender to remove the larger bones, then set aside until cool. Some like to mix with the chicken meat a little boiled lean ham finely diced but this is optional. Make a rich biscuit or pie crust and with it line a deep dish. Arrange the meat in this, moistening with some of the chicken gravy, then cover with a top crust. Bake in a moderate oven, French Charlotte—Take a thick loaf of sponge cake and scoop out the center, leaving the sides and bottom an inch in thickness. Dip some stale macaroons in orange juice or sher- ang@ with them line the bottom and spreading over them a thick cer of apricot or peach jam. Take a quarter of a box of gelatine, soak in one-quarter of a cupful of cold water and set over hot water until dissolved. Sweeten one pint of thick cream with four tablespoonfuls of specialty that finds favor and a pair as of vanilla and the dissolved gelatine, and Whip to a solid froth. Pour this | vest of the i place was | telt so into the cake mold and garnish with purse out of a nothing pig’s to start with and there is here. The ) cutside of the house is all right, but | the inside! Look the very cheapest at that wal] paper! “That wall paper £0od,” returned Dicky, at that woodwork, ind of stuff! Look It's atrocious!” is so bad 1It's gaod humor- edly It's almost futuristic that stuff. It could be safely worshipfed ac- ing to the Bible rule,” she said “for it certainly resembles nothing abave, on, or under the earth cr the waters of the deep.” Dicky threw back his head and laughed good-humoredly, “Have it your own way, mother,” Le said easily. “Come an and see the hack.” He escorted her to the dining room, v long room which had matched roards painted green instead of the usual plaster sides and ceiling. Built in at the side of the red brick fir a cupboard with glass coors, in- which I had arranged my little store of china and glass. The big fall-leaf mahogany table of Mother Graham's was covered with a white cloth and spread for The square piano, Mr. Brennan ful- filling Mrs. Burchell’s prediction, had reglected to take away. I had rcom, where it comfortably filled an immense vacant space at one side of the big room. Over it 1 had spread a runner of creamy Japanese cloth with a green vine wandering over it, which set off the palished copper sur- faces of the chafing dish and coffee machine. Sprays of yellow forsythia in green vases and bottles were upon the dining table, and the old piana and the draperies at the windows were also of the thin green-vined Japanese cloth. Dicky drew a long breath as he looked around the room. “You Darling Brick!" “I didn’t think you had it in you, Madge,” he said, patting my shoulder. “I wouldn't have known this old room.” “It is a hideous room announced, with the ai that makes her so times. “Ugh. That awful green! Tc think of taking one's meals to that color accampaniment!" “Perhaps we can eat many meals on the veranda the dining room,” fully. “Anywhere, mother-in-law Dicky Take Richard. horrors T know T shall be ilL" I followed them up the genuinely sorry for Dicky. much boyish the house I knew approval hurt him. While her room did not the condemnation she had given the library and dining room—and, in- deed, it was the prettiest room in the hou tennis court and lawn—vet she did not cease here criticisms upon every- thing she saw. The bathroom with old-style tub and fixtures, the hall paper of a hideous blue, " his mother af finali irritating some- of I suggested hope- except. returned, me to here,” my and then to my room, stairs, He had enthusiasm for his mather’s dis- call forth vhich I admitted to myself was ap- | palling the their lac her censure. “You haven't sensé enough to rent a coop for chickens, let alone a house,” she said to Dicky into a chair out of breath. turned on me. “I thaught you she said doors, the windows with of screening—all shared Then she :ad a little common sense,”” in a tone that im- plied that what judgment I did have was necessarily very limited. ““Wh pos 1 you to consent ta ti barn ?” “Why! I agree with Dicky that it is decidec worth while,” I re- turned spirited “I wash my hands of both of you,” 1id my mother-in-law. ‘“Please leave me alone for a few minutes. The shock of seeing this place has upset me i 1 have to lie down before I eat anything.” Dicky and I scurried out of the room like two frightened children, and went swiftly down the to our discredited living room, Dicky caught me in his arm “You darling brick!” he said, k ing me. “I'm awfully obliged to vou for bracing the matter like that.” As I returned his kiss, I felt as if the vague shadows I had felt hover- ing over the new ho had vanished, There i at least temporarily did nat know what the new home might bring to nie; the thought of Grace Draper was alw in the back of my mind, but for a little while at lea 1 was genuinely happy. “PREPAREDNESS” AS 101 RANCH SHOWS IT The combined Buffalo Bill and 101 Ranch shows will exhibit in New B: n, Wednesday, July 12 and the event is one that is sure to arouse a great deal of local interest, not among those who enjoy an tion of this kind purely from standpoint of recreation, but among the thousands who believe in military preparedness as a safeguard against possible foreign aggression at the close of the great European con- flict. The big feature of the Buffalo Bill- 101 Ranch shows this season is a new military spectacle with the sug- gestive title, “Preparedness” and those who have seen it declare that it is a most effective plea for the American people to arouse themselve to th Cos & only exhibi- the dinner. | in | desperation moved it into the dining' e, with a pretty outlook upon the | as she sank | our | opening from | If it is like the rest of these ! | next installment of the "Iron Claw,” the Bray Cartoon and a Mu- tual comedy will complete the bill for these two days. This is the last day to witness Doug- las Fairbanks, the Triangle star in the greatest comedy drama that has ever plaved in New Britain, “The = Good Bad Man.” The settings and outdoor nery of this picture are the greatest that have ever been sBunERLO S B filmed. In addition the Paramount Coming July 12th. { plays present winsome entine | the management by the United States [ Grant in an ifteresting rveien War Department. It is this genuine- :A:“qu'tl Phe mavstons BiAvah Bare ness that gives the display one of its | 2% USH&T bbbty e chief charms, although from a purely ““(;‘r‘mp = e Baramaunt Biay gpectachiangstandpolni e 55‘5 lanto ;n‘zrn]fl'\ shows interesting scenes of leave nothing to the imagination. The | 4iye ent subjects, of universal in- for Flet N The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa= ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to_deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢ Just-as-zood’’ are but experiments, and endanger the health of 6hfldren—Expcrience against Experiment. hat is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare= oric, Drops and Soothing Syrup: It contains neither pium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de= stroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in co use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou= bles and Diarrheea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought - Bears the Signature of In Use For ‘Over 30 Yea J THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. ranted attack. spectacle, moreover, The ‘‘Preparednes: has a far deeper BERTHA KALISH IN meaning than is usually the case ~ith ) big tent exhibitions, for it has the FEATURE AT FOX'S anction of the government, and the soldiers who participate in 1t have o been given furloughs and loaned to| rne attraction at Fox's for Wednes- e X day and Thursday will be the Fox masterpiece ‘“‘Ambition,” with the great emotional tragedienne, Bertha Kalish, in the leading role. This is a drama of political intrigue, that in typical American life. It shows the husband, ambitious to get ahead®’ at any cost willing to sacrifice his wife, to zain his end. How this good woman is able to keep her name clear is told in five reels of wonderful act- ing. Miss Kalih will be remember- ed for her striking acting in the former Fox feature, “Slander.” In her present vehicle, “Ambition,” she is surrounded by a strong supporting various departments of the service are terest. adequately represented. This handsome 50- piece set of fine Saxon China has an attractive, exclusive design and is deco- rated in the soft shades of gray, green, pink, yellow and blue with a gold line around the rim. The Chance You Have Been Looking For Here is an opportunity to own this beautiful set of dishes for 25 coupons and only $2.75 in cash. One coupon is packed with each dozen Parksdale Farm Eggs If you have had trouble obtaining fresk eggs at reasonable prices, try Parksdale Farm guaran- teed Fancy Eggs. They are sure to please you. Coupons, also, with Wedgwood Creamery Butter. P. BERRY & SONS, INC,, Hartford, Conn. Sole Distributors for New g. States Note: As we now offer a 50-piece instead of a 42-piece set, we have been obliged to increase the required number of coupons from 15 to 25,