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o e fllenu for Tomorrow Breakfast Fruit Panned Tomatoes Hashed Potatoes Pop Overs Coftee Tunch Chicken Salad Wafers Cocoa Dinner Rice Soup Corned Beef Summer Cabbage New Potatoes French Cherry Float Coffee Lettuce Dre: Panned hould be Tomatoes—The tomatoes firm and halved or cut in jhick slices They are floured, laid ut side downward In hot butter, losely covered and cooked slowly un- il brown; the butter remaining in the an formers the basis of the cr ravy which is poured around them phen in the serving dish. Chicken Salad—Strip all bits om skin and fat and cut fine. This th mayonnaise, lettuce and a ish of radis will make a sh for luncheon. ook hiropractic Hints—Chiropractors vs. Chiropractoids. A chiropractor is one who by paipa- n of the spine locates the subluxat- verterbra causing an impinged brve; tifen by a peculiar thrust ed- |sts that vertebra. This method ugless healing does not make us y adjuncts whatsoever. And _the bn who uses other methods is NOT ing you true chiropractic. 1In this ofession s in all others we meet oa and bad. A good “Chiro” uses DTHING but true chiropractic hods. Watch out for the ‘“chir- ractoid When a chiropractor ows his business he has NO NEED adjuncts such as vibrator, stretch- machine, ultra-violet rays, baths, . W. Vanlstyne, D. C. grad- s Palmer School of Chiropraciic, w Britain, Conn. Telephone 1732, e Barnes,” 131 Main street. Office rs, 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 5 p. M., eve- of 5 gs 'till 8 o’clock.—advt. Tonight “The Mysteries of Myra” Other Big Films Friday and Saturday, Virginia Pearson and All Star Cast In “The Vital Question” Don’t Miss Prelle’s Circus It’s a Great Act All This Week TODAY ONLY atinec and Evening _ Mr. William Fox Presents Harry Hilliard and June Caprice N “Caprice of the Moun- P tains” CLAW—Latest Install- ment. Cals Pathe Latest War B SJERRY'S ELOPEME NT” “Seeing 5t.77 Matinee 5 Tomorrow W. S. HART, “THE PRIN “‘, SUND. HT ONLY ALICE BRADY IN “LA BOH 1E” $2 ars at Poli Prices Sccond Big Week of JULIA DEAN In Her Greatest Triumph “BOUGHT AND 3 PAID FOR’ America’s Greatest Play Matinee 10c, 20c; Eve., 10c, 20c, 30c, 50c. KE COMPOUNCE p IAND CONCERT EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON oating, Bathing, Bowling, lliards, Fishing and Dancing. The Popular Picnic Ground. Regular Dinners. Moving Picture 'Theater. & NORTON, PROPS. of | eeat from a carcass of chicken; free | | of What Madge IFound in Dicky’s Pocket. | planning to elope. = | had been swept away in Dicky's arms § | miserable certainty NEW. RRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 19 16. News for Thearer Goers A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY Her Side---and His How Cora and David Temple Solved Their Marital Problems By ZOE BECKLEY 1TIME “Diana,” the Woman. Rose Brett, prepared either for surrender or war from Cora and David Temple, waited for him to declare which it was to be. David handed her Cora’s letter, in which she refused to back down into oblivion and become the nonentity Mrs. Brett desired her to be, vet promising not to use wom- an’s keenest weapon—sex—in keeping Carter Brett's sympathy and business support. Rose read the letter imperturbably and returned it to David. “That means,” she said quietly, “that it will be—difficult for you to re- main with u rchitect. I'm sorry, David.” David walked over, holding Rose's attention manner. “You surprise me and—" he hesitated “Y-e-s—go on,” challenged Mrs. Brett. “—and disappoint me—disillusion me,” he finished firmly. “Really! Oh, David Temple, what an ordinary thing to s “It is you who are ordinary in this situation, Rose,” he answered g ly. “Here you are, a woman exceptional in ability and forc at your command. Yet the first moment an opponent confronts you, you do the commonplace thing, the ordinary thing, the most disappointing thing. You use your power not to face the fight but to have the opponent removed. And how? By an appeal to vour husband to dismiss me chitect because my wife insists on managing her own life and having a hand in the develop- ment plans of the place we all live in. 1 thought you a woman who needed no man to come to her rescue. That is why I am disappointed.” Rose Brett, for all her executive force, was very much a woman. It was hard to have a man she liked express disappointment in her. She flushed and walked'to the window. “Spare yourself and me your disappointment,” she said. “Whatever I do to combat your wife's interference I shall do my- | self, not through my husband “Then you will have to retract what you said—that Cora must yield to vou or I must resign my place here,” David challenged. “Cora will not re- treat and I-—I, Rose, will not resign unless your husband orders me to do | e by the sternne little. of a ave- and in the power Mrs. Brett was silent a moment. David took advantage of her indecision. “You're too big a woman, Rose, to fight in a petty way,” he said in a lower, more intimate tone. “It is not retreat for you to take back your ultimatum. It is advance. You abandon a smaller field of battle for a larger one. You will fight, not through your husband but through your own strength.” “I notice your wife does not stoop to flght through my husband,” Rose said, delicato scorn in her voice, which did not disguise the toucH of concern in it. It was David’s turn to feel flicked. ‘She has promised she will not fight through him,” he said. as—-a woman.” “Let her use whatever weapons she has,” said Rose proudly, “she will find me an interesting opponent.” “There!” David exclaimed in a tone of ardent, spontaneous admiration which surprised them both. “‘There speaks the woman I took you to be— big, able, courageous, creative and—'" “And very much a woman!” Rose added softly, giving back look for look. And the duologue that spoke through their eves could be the prologue to any drama that a man and a woman dared enact. REVELATIONSOF A WIFE By ADELE GARRISON “That 1s, had passed I felt a curious apathy. 1 wondered if I really loved Dicky as _I had at first, for the prospect of iife without him did not affect me as it would have in the wonderful weeks of the summer, I did not give Mrs. Hoch, officious neighbor, a chance to finish the miserable gossip she was uttering | about my husband and Grace Draper. With my eyes flashing, my cheeks blazing, I sprang to my feet when she told me that Dicky and his beautiful model and protege took the same train to work in the morning and the same train home at night, and that village gossip had -said they were my I got up, wiped my eyes, and going to the bathroom bathed my face until there was trace of tears upon it. I felt as if I wanted action, any- thing to occupy my mind. I took out all my gowns and looked them over to see if there was anything I could do to them, s I am naturally very arderly and take good care of my clothing I finished them in an hour or two. “Mrs. Hoch,” I snapped out, “if T had known what you were going to say T would not have allowed you to speak. Your words are an insult to my husband and to myself. You wil | please to remember never to say any- thing like this to me again.” Mrs. Hoch rose to her feet, her face unbecoming brick red. Her ughter’s black eyes snapped with anger. “Come, Celie,” the elder woman | said. “T don’t stay nowhere to be in- sulted, when all I've tried to do is to give a little friendly warning to | neighbor.” Mother and daughter hurried down the path, chattering to each other like | two angry squirrels. “Horrid stuck-up thing,” I heard | Celie say spitefully as they went | through the fence, “I hape Grace | | Draper does take him away from her. | She's got a nerve, T must say, to us like that. I don’t believe | cares anything about her husband | anywa An Innocent Letter, Then 1 remembered household accounts and letters which I had not attended to for two long financial my weeks. For a after Dicky had put his affairs in my hands I haa been at my wits' end to know how to keep track of the things which he bought or of any bills which came | into his hands. I had letter files, but it Dicky happened to be the one to g0 after the mail—for the village of Marvin has no delivery system—he stuck any bill belonging to him his pocket and promptly forgot about it. Finally, in desperation, I had sked him if he minded m} through his pockets occasionally in order that I might be able to get the bills and letters together for filing. “Go as far as vou like, my dear.” he had said gaod-humoredly. “You'll She might have changed her mind | never find any incriminating evidence | had she seen me fly to my room as!on me.’ | scon as she was safely out of sight,| Dicky had many suits of clothing, | lock the door, and bury my face in the | and I found bills and letters in cvers | pillows that neither my mother-in-law | one, some of them things which | nor Katie should hear the sobs I|should have been attended to. | could not repres: of them had never been apened, al- “Dicky! Dicky! Dicky!” though they were almost all addressed “Have I really lost you?” tc Dicky. Of course I knew better than to| But there eve the statement of :the elope-|to Mrs. Richard Graham, in an en- | ment. I had seen and heard enough |velope without identifying mark of | of village life to realize how the|any kind. It had once been secaled, | slightest circumstance was magnified | but the flap was open. It hore a post- | by the community loafers. That|mark of two weeks before. T took | Dicky ard the girl took the same |out the inclosure hastily, indignant at trains going and coming from the city | Dicky for opening a letter of mine, was a fact borne out by my own ob- | and wandering who my correspondent scrvations. I had remarked Dicky’s | was. | regularity in catching the 8:21 in the| But as I turned to the signature, in mornings, something so opposed to his | firm, beautiful characters, “Herbert | usual unpunctual habits, and won- ! Pettit,” I knew what the letter was, | dered why. Now T had the solution.|&nd my anger against Dicky was Ghs Shos b mixed with a curlosity as to why he T e, o it T wems moe | 12Q ket the letter after reading it. | surprised, that I had really known an | It Was & most innocent little epistle. | along something like this was com- | \ ccks before, when looking over my [ e © My thoughts went back to rme | accounts, I had discovered that I had iht & fov weoks befors whem T Lan|Tecelved nol biil from Dr. Petit for | cuffered a similar paroxysm of grief | {“]“ all ;;’)’”f : h&“ i attecldofitons overRDickyisNEvlionty interent Miniithc i iR SRS I Deliad e ERtio | girl. Then all my doubts and fears | 'lll to the apartment, not knowing | that we had moved, T wrote asking him to send it to me at Marvin. With the remembrance of his tenderness of voice and manner at the time of my iliness, I made the note a model of brevity, and couched it in the most like terms possible. This must be the answer to my request for the bill. o time | I moaned. s one letter addressed | cn the moonlit veranda. breath as I realized in all its the impossibili scene now. Dicky and T seemed as far apart emotional- v as the poles. But the determination I reached that other night before Dicky's | voice and caresses dispelled my doubtg 1 made my own again. There was | nothing for me to do but to wait | quitely, with dignity, until T was ab- | colutely certain that Dicky no longer | loved me. Then I would go out of his life withou scenes or recrimina- | tions, I would not lift a finger to hold | him, | After the first shock of my grief I caught | my | of any such tender | ¢ | 13 | | eptive disease— thousands have it and KIDNEY TROUBLE it S50 romuis Sou can make no mistake by using Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy. At druggists in fifty cent and dollar sizes. Sam- ple size bottle -l Post, also_pamph- let telling you about it. _Address Dr. Kil- mer & Co., Binghamton, Y., and enclose ten cents, also mention New Britain Is a de N, the i man in | going | | 1 Most | MISS ANN T. BOOZE WILL LEAD THE DRYS HERE S MISS ANN T BOOZE St. Paul, July 13.—Features of the parade in St. Paul July 20 as a part of the nation here July 1¢-21 were outlined at con- More than 10,- 000 porsons are expected to take part parade. Headed by Miss T. Booze, who naturally refrair drink and who will pad the down- town streets as a living symbol of the party-—the camel—the procession will be composed, according to tenta- tive plans, of 1,254 delegates to the convention, representing every state and territory in the union, hundreds of women detailed by civie, political and humanitarian association through- out the country, Federal and Confed- erate veterans of the civil war, scouts, Sunday school children, young people’s societies anda other religious organizations. Of the many floats that from Syracuse, New York, will depict the hanging of “John Barley cern.”” The “body” will be exhumed at Syracuse, displayed on the way to the convention and perhaps reinterred here. “The emblem House for the next four vears won't be a donkey or an elephant. Le a camel,” said a leading prohibi- tionist, referring to Miss Ann T. Booze. ! prohibition convention vention headquarters. in the Ann from STRONGEST FACE IN WORLD OF THE FILM The great Triangle star, the with the strongest face in pictures, W. S. Hart, in will be the star man “The Primal Lure,” attraction for tomorrow and Saturday at Fo This is story of a woman who is faisely cused and publicly humiliated by the she loves. This man goes on hating, the woman working out the proof of her innocence in her way. When she does prove to I she i to admit woman fights his veins for the woman whom he had fals accused. There are some won- derful snowstorm scenes, an attack by Indians on a border post and a fight under water, with knives, between an Indian and Hart. Hart is known hroughout the screen world for his wonderful work as a man with a re- vengeful nature and has been seen at Fox's in such film masterpieces as “Hell's Hinges,”, “The Ayran,” etc. In addition to the above the Para- mount Plays will offer the Broadway favorite. M v, in “Sweet Kitty sellairs. is taken from the play by David Belasco, the dramatic genius of the twentieth century. The play is the most popular historical ro- mance in theatrical history and is story of lovely womanhood and chiv alrous men. A two-reel Keystone comedy, titled “A Love Comet” and the B ton Holmes Travelogue will fill out the bill. Twa capacity the he his gets wrong, but when into serious trouble, en- udiences enjoyed the William Fox Feature, “Caprice of the Mountains,” “The Iron Claw,” and the other equally meritorious film yester- day and the same program will be re- peated today. CONVINCING TESTIMONY Given by Many New Britain People. Experiences told by New Britain people— Those who have had weak kidneys— ‘Who used Doan’s Kidney Pills— Who found the remedy effective— Such statements prove merit. You might doubt an utter stranger. You must believe New Britain peo- ple. Here's New Britain proof. Verify it. Read. Investigate. Be convinced. Youwll find why New Britain folks believe in Doan’s. Wm. A Sadd, 100 Seymour St., New Britain, st “Doan’s Kidney Pills served me good when I used them eight years ago for an attack of kid- ney trouble. The cure has been last- ing, as I haven't had to take them since. I gladly recommend them.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Sadd had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y, 1 boy | over the White | Tt will | A Sanitary Toilet is assured to users of Sani-Flush, the preparation that prevents all discoloration and cleans the hidden trap that nothing else can reach and clean. Sani- Flush removes all odors and accumulations—makes dipping and scrubbing unnecessary. Sani-Flush is patented—nothing like it. Just sprinkle a litile into the toilet bowl every few days. For this purpose only—not a general cleanser. 25 Cents a Can Local water often stains white porcelain bowls. Mal?y women in this city and vicinity use Sani-Flush to prevent this. Sold at the principal local stores. Ask your dealer for Sani- Flush. If he hasn't it, ask him to get it for you. Sani-Flush should be used wherever there are toilets in Residences, Business Offices, Hotels, Stores, Factories, etc. Does not injure plumbing connections. THE HYGIENIC PRODUCTS COMPANY Canton, Ohio The Trap which you can't clean except with Sani-Flush DON'T YOU WANT THIS BEACH SET? The “How can I marry?” a woman said to me the other day. “I couldn't leave father and mother to shift for themselves, could 1?” : She did not speak just hopelessly. Not in resentment, but in a sort of apathy, sadder to me than any passion of rebellion. Because She Isn’t Married Is She Responsible? She is the youngest of a family of The other three, two brothers bitterly, the | ac- ' own | im that } innocent he, man-like, refuses | | with every drop of red blood in : | ! i i i t l are all married. When v married their father was making a living, and their mother was in rea- sonably good health. Since then, hi salary has dwindled and the mother become a semi-invalid. The voungest daughter earns ary, which makes it financially possi- ble to keep the old home open, and in her spare time she gives her mother | the attention which her semi-invalid state requir A Man Who Wants to Marry. | I think we all know cases like this, |in which the youngest child or the | child or another who for one reason have left, is thrust by circumstances {into the poSition of being responsible { for the old folks. Usually it daughter, more rarely it is a bachelor son. There was a pathetic letter in one of the magazines recently, telling of the case of a son so placed, who wants to marry but does not feel like | asking any woman to assume the care of his invalid mother. Has brothers and sisters? Oh, | but | her work. a good sal- | pot o ! mother | personal | has remained at home after the others | is a | | time he | Last Child. they are married and it is, therefore, not their problem. An Exasperating Case. One of the most exasperating cases of unfairly divided responsibility that I ever knew was that of a woman who had two daughters. One of them married. She had no children and a comfortable income. The other was a stenographer. The mother in the last years of her life was invalid and the unmarried daughter made a home for her, took care of her and aid the housework on her return from The other daughter may have contributed to her support. But I don't know about that; but of the service that mes s much as money nothing. can’t have with me,” she explained blandly. “I am living in a boarding house, and mother wouldn't like that.” The idea that she might go to housekeeping and take her mother apparently never occurred to her. Not only the financial but also the responsibility for the older folks should be fairly and squarely divided among all the children, mar- ried and unmarried, according to their ility to help. Those to take their share, who need all i and money for themselv guilty of one of the least pardona meannesses. The unmarried daugh- ter, who gives up the best of her life to her invalid mother or father, I lost much. But not so much child who deliberately shirks his share of this duty—and opportunity. an my who refuse s the specialty ever introduced in New | Britain and despite the heat and ! counter attractions it has drawn some z00d sized audiences to the theater. "rancis Elliott as a female imperson- ator also meets with general approval |and Dave Schaffer does a few things | that entert THE SAND GIRL, Natural toned tussore, border of varied browns and reds, | gives this smart coat. The peanut straw hat is strapped with striped silk fringed to match the fabric of the beach cushion and the working. Va- cation girls will e upon this de- sign. ALL STAR CAST IN “THE VITAL QUESTION” An all star cast headed by Virginia Pearson and Charles Kent, the most celebrated of the Vitagraph players, | Stop scratchmg! will appear in “The Vital Question,” . . nmI SRR e i \shi[ch S to (slervc | Resnnol reheves itching instantly a photoplay leader for Friday and That itching, burning skin-trouble with a gay We have the best Equipped Awning Factory in New England and Saturday at Keene: Advance no- tices on the picture indicate that it is one of the most interesting releases | that the Vitagraph company has con- | = 2, £ tributed to the program In many which keeps you scratching and months. It is in five parts and Is a digging, is a source of disgust to drama of exceptional interest. It others, as well as of torment to you. should prove an attractive feature of ‘Why don’t you get rid of it by using Resinol Ointment? Physicians have prescribed it for over 20 years. In most cases, it stops itching instantly { and heals eruptions promptly. Itis | the program. Next week should prove another big very easy and economical to use. | event for Keeney's, the management having booked Charlie Chaplin in “The Vagabond” for six days begin- ning Monday ‘“The Vagabond” s the latest of the Chaplin releases and it has made a big hit in the cities where it has shown, Prelle's circus continues to create considerable talk throughout the city, It is without question the best animal vothing harsh or injurious and can be used freely for all sorts of skin-troubles even on the tenderest or most irritated surface. Ideal for babies’ eruptions and chafings. Every drug- gist sells them. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap contain | | | carry best awning ma- terial. EddyAwning & Decorating Co. 106 City Hall Place, Ner .ain P —