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LI:IE BURKE ON DX’S SCREEN TONIGHT oday ke I and tomorrow are Billie vs at the popular Fox Play- Che six of the great serial iloria’s Romance” will be bwn on these two d and as in past, this is in itself, enough to ure capacity busines In this pter Gloria is still confined to her I although rapidly getting well, fer the careful and skillful treat- Int of Dr. Royce. Gloria's brother eives an anonymous letter which rms him of the intrigue being car- on between his wife and Fren- David prepares a trap for his e, by informing her that he is going hth for a week on business. She nediately plans a little trip with neau. Freneau all the while is tr to ward off the mysterious strang- who proven to be the father he ruined some years 1l interesting bedroom displaved by Gloria in which also introduce cters to the story in a vers In addition to above Fox mater film, “Dare- featuring the Cleopatra khe screen, “Virginia Pearson, will shown. This is a western story en around a woman saloonkeeper b western mining camp. The plece unds in the action of this section he country and is gripping from, 1. The balance of this m will be made up exly, with interesting parts of the world, rst Travel Pictures and Ovey comedy, entitled, ame to Town.” has Amer! eorge hen Jerry C PREPARING FOR FAIR. miom Books Sent Out for Berlin’s Agricultural Annual. he premium lists for the state fair erlin have been printed and over po copies are being sent out today. pone desiring a list will be supplied fpddressing Secretary Leland W. atkin, Berlin. This vear’s list has I completely revised, a number of fer premiums being offered and bral new classes added. he executive committee spent the ter part of last evening’s meeting g over the advertising and public- rrangements, he motorcycle races will be rge of well known motoreyclis plans of the management provide a large number of excellent prizes the racing events which will be il on Saturday, S in September 16. report was received that the Con- icut Pomological society will have bxhibit of all fruits at the fair here. members of the soclety have urged to compete strongly at lin. ttractions are being added daily to midway and it is expected that feature will eclipse any midw arranged at the fair. ring & Buckley of New Britatn the contract for the wiring of grounds. Extensive improvements be made in the stables. Work- are now busy getting the grounds eadines Last Time Tonight, Nance O’Neil in “THOSE WHO TOIL” Tonight and Tomorrow “The Folly of Desire.” In Five Reels. Grace Darling and Harry Fox in “BEATRICE FAIRFAX” a New Serial to Last 15 Weeks, audeville—3 Today and Tomorrow Mr, Virginia Pearson IN “Daredevil Kate” William Fox Presents Billie Burke IN “Gloria’s Romance” Chapter 6. PATHE WEEKLY “SEE AMERICA FIRST” GEORGE OVEY, in, “WHEN JERRY CAME TO TOWN” 5c Matinees Evenings 10¢ THEATRE Hartford Day at 2:15 Evening at 8:15 ALL THIS WEEK AL REEVES BIG BEAUTY SHOW 50 PEOPLE—350. Mostly Girls Beats Can Be Reserved By ’Phone or Mail. RAN Matinee Every the | News NEW. RRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 'for i3 heczter Goers and Women Readers A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His How Cora and David Temple Solved Their Marital Problems By ZOE BECKLEY Woman’s Cora smiled at her marriage. Of course : mere fact that David had at 1 some silence gave her immensc your reasans for feclipg discouraged o plode it. The first one, for instance: you would have had me well up “That, my ‘Basy street’ is not a “There are as many E: tr in different towns. You men think E like food and clothes and house: would rather live on Hearteasy street, prouder of being loved than of being ave a $6 wedding ring that mean ond that only advertises friend husl “You have put me on Easy street that is the best of all Easy streets and you men confuse your wife the best dressed woman not his love, that speaks. It reflects gl dolled up like a Christmas tree, his ho his automobile a twelve-cvlinder fiier ernessed within an inch of their lives. Tt's a lot easier, too, Dave, to pa in service. A man can write her or pay her a compliment to save ta yourself, Dave, and David reached out and expre; in an unoriginal but highly s away and smoothed her hair she wen As for your second wail, Mr. Te camparisons between yourself and yvo averages instead of isolated experienc vp very well indeed. Some of your ol successful, Others haven't. A few Some are living far beyvond their mea who have not lived to show what th “You are only thirty, David. You ture, and that would have been crown are too young to predict failure for ya ten ye: rou will look back on it as not designed good houses, or worked opportunities, It is simply that you pens to anybody. “I'm not making light of the thin nasty fall. But that is all. We can We're still young. There's plenty of men, in the d husband in tha the argument is being carried into her <e you see differently,” st broken throu confidence. ‘on Fasy dear but stupid old Davy, single thoraugh s and | pride with your love. top this nonsense Optimism. way a woman does when namely, love and at inscrutable own special field; h swered briskly. The h his long, brooding, worri- “I'm going to take each one of »ver the Colony Park failure and ex- You say that if all had gone smoothly street’ by now. proves how li are, as you seem in matrimony as there are \ street means only phys 1 luxuries swels, Women know better. We Da than on any other, We are dressed in Paquin gowns, We'd rather ! love and mating than a $6,000 dia- »and’s wealth, of the heart, my the most important? A man says ‘T enjoy room.” He does. But it i ory on him to have use on the finest corner lot in town, and his kiddies tutored and gov- tle you know wo- to think. ain streets Don’t you see Half the time seeing my his vanity, spouse all dcar, v out money than to express vour love a fat check for his wife when he couldn't k vou imst keep your vanity street.” of Cor: philosophy After she had broken his soul. So, about Kasy his appreciation a, t on: mple, in which vr college, class 1 think you will make invidious if you will take nd you have kept sociates have been exceptionally been through the divorce court. as vou well know, like the men could do. ve had but one real business ven- ed with glory but for an accident., You ursclf, It is shortsighted and silly. In a mere episode, It isn't as if you had hard enough, or taken advantage of got in with the wrong man. That hap- vou es, a ns, ey h g David, for it was a bad crash and a pick ourselves up and make repairs chance vet for growth.” Never once had Cora reminded David that she had cautioned him of the dangers of too rapid growth, had bege he Colony Park scheme. David thou! vou little brick, you,” ged him not to plunge so swift ght of this now, He locked at his was all he said. It Made H dogs the said, “I dog in o un-| We were talking about cther day. One wouldn’t have a the house. They woman long-haired get things “Shart-haired in warm weather, voman; “but last visiting my sister how cold it is there? ¢ short-haired dog made me miserable, celd. I tald her one around.” The lady’s sensitiveness interested me, because it is typical of a certain attitude. 1 mean that attitude which shrinks from beholding or hearing about suffering of any sort because it | interferes with its peace o+ mind. When Tgnore=ce I certain the misery on our library table dogs are all Tlght’ » said another winter I we and you know | Well, she had and it really it looked so | I wouldn't have Bils, industrial | resulting ! abaut book and from them lay the other day. “Have you read that?” the visiting lady. She picked it nce. “Mercy, pping it if it burned oked at first few pages saw it w about thase ing thin simply couldn’t go' I hate things like can you read them?" we it one said, her. “I and I up and gave no!"” she the s all and I Hos Those Poor Have To Live.” Again, I know never will go near who part a - woman the paorer ! help? asked | depress- | Creatures | er Miserable. of the makes city me for feel the W i she any purpose. unhappy. those tures ax foolish, but I can’t help it.” I don’t believe she thinks it's| foolish. More likely she is rather pleased with herself for feeling t way. It shows she's so high | strung and sensitive, “Well,” someone the use of sceing or hearing out suffering that you cannot It makes you unhappy, and v hat good does it do?” Just What the Pharisee Thought. £0 “to see poor | have to live. suppose will say, ‘“what | is Must Have There something iend, It in what you y, my fi I yle point that is just thought who on the ather | to see suffering. The sight of suffering | heart painfully tender and sympathies uncomfortably acute. 1t makes one less smugly cont with one’s own ease and prosperity. 1t gives one an uneasy sense that one ought ta be doin mething tc ward getting the good things of life more evenly dividec And the Pharisce was wise enough to want to avoid all that discomfor | And yvet somechew, as I remem- | ber, it wasn’t the Pharisce of whom Christ said, *“Go thou, and do like- wise.” TeEZ O is a highly sensi- Doubtless Pharisee sed by didn’t want of view, what the carefully side. He the —-—N\‘.m REVELATIONSOF A WIF By ADELE GARRIGON Underwood Sees in Dr. Pettit Favor, Ty a Rival for Madge’s I have never experienced 2 more perfect day than that which the Un- derwoods, the Durkees, Grace Draper, Di. Pettit, Dicky and I spent on our “desert island.” It was one of the alsolutely flawless summer days which September so often brings in these latter year topsy-turvy seasons when ‘“winter lingers in the lap of spring” so long that April weather comes in June and “rare June day walt for autumn. Our boat, a large, camfortable one, built on lines of usefulness rather than beauty, slipped over the dancing tlue waters of the bay like an en- chanted thing. A neat striped awn- ing the boat beneath which we lounged at ease. ¢ We had insisted that the men smoke and they looked the picture of can- tentment; Harry Underwood and | Dr. Pettit with cigars and Dicky and Alfred Durkee with villainous looking pipes, which they both evidently fan- was stretched over the rear of & cled as accompanying hardy seamen. The man at the wheel was a good looking though uncouth youth, whom we had employed on similar trips be- fore. Dicky selectetd him, nat only tor his skill in guiding the boat, but because of his knowledge of the iffi- cult art of camp cookery, “What Jim doesn't know about building an open-air fire, broiling fish over wacd coals nd enginee a clam bake isn't worth knowing, Dicky had declared one day, and on the occasions when he had catered to our comfort I had found Dicky's words ta be true, “Handsome animal, commented Alfred Durkee idly, Jim stood erect with his hand ping the wheel of the steering paratus. “Katie evidentl thinks so,” | Dr. Pettit, smiling. “Really, Mrs. Graham you ought not allow her to bedevil that youth in the way she is doing.” When the Devil Drives. I looked lazily over to where Katie, the role of our ‘crew’ as grip- ap- | id | body malkes the | { felt towara | at | mayonnaise. 1916. e e — e seated near the wheelsman, with our boxes and bundles piled near her, was iabbering away coquettishly to the | yeuth, who, with cheeks reddening cven through his weather-beaten tan, was grinning sheepishly at her chatter. | “Don’t spoil s Underwood. drawled TT: a lucky fellow whether he realizes it or not, Wish the was anybody as interested in' me as Katie seems to be in that chap. “Perhaps she would transfer her attentio ' his wife began mocking- | Iy but her husband prevented ccmpletion af the sentence by coming swiftly to where she sat Lifting her, deck chair and all in vowerful arms. “S'help me, T'll chuck boarqd if you don’t staw that gab,” he threatened, grinning at her as he held her e: ly. “Promise?” “Needs must when the devil driv retorted Lillian, as coolly as if thel little incident were the most ordinary | bit of playfulness. But, he put her down again, I shuddered, | It was in keeping with the air of| Lurlesqued melodrama with which Harry Underwood invests all his rail- | ry, but the glimpse I had had of immense brutal strength the man possess fascinated well as| fied me. I think he must have | rcad something of what I felt in my eyes, for he leaned forward and said, mockingly, yet with a hint of hidden seriousness: “Don’t be frightened, little one, I'll never hurt you.” Harry Underwood’s nonsense always annoys me, but this particular speech especially irritating, because the 100k of wonder which T surprised | in Dr. Pettit's eyes. He was looking . from Harry Underwood to me gravely with a hint of sternness. I had gleaned | that he was an exceedingly fastidious | man, and I read in his look a wonder | that T should permit the boorlsh jest- ing which Harry Underwood ad- dressed toward me. you aver- the as s Banter. physician’s Madge Resents Ha I met the young grave, questioning eves, I felt my cheeks flushing with anger taward beth Harry Underwood's disrespectful banter and the disapproval which I read in Dr. Pettit's gaze. I was glad when Jim turned the of the boat, and ran up to the landing of one of the beach resorts, vitn which the south shore of Long Island is sa thickly dotted. “This surely is not your ‘desert lard!" " Grace Draper exclaimed. “Oh, no, this only where we catch our fish,” Dicky replied, smiling. We all understood his meaning when a weather-beaten looking indi- vidual who had evidently been await- ing us, advanced from a nearby bath- house with a shining string of fish| and a basket of clams, He passed them over to Jim, who promptly stowed them away, and turned the course of the boat again toward the cpen sea. “That's the way you fish, is it jeered Alfred Durkee. ‘T thought you invited us ta a fishing trip.” t “Why you dreamy-head-in-the- clouds-book-worm, retorted Dicky, | *“if I eve put a shing rod in vour bands you wouldn't know which end of it ta put in the water. And as for Harry, he's almost too lazy to eat the fish, let alone catch them. T knew | T'qd have to do all the work for the| crowd, so I had Jim buy them in- stead.” The mental picture doing all the work for ppeared to be too much, for ever except Dr. Pettit and Grace | Draper burst into a shout of laughter, | little Mrs, Durkee fairly shaking with | mirth. | Dr. Pettit's face held the conven-! tional smile of a stranger, who had not quite understood the merriment! he ring, but Grace Draper’s face was unsmiling. Instead turned a sympathetic glance tow: Dicky. REvidently she meant to con-| vey to him the fact that she could not join in any ridicule directed at him, 1 forgot of Dicky’s! any crowd anger I had my LO]\!L‘H\DI: the jealous the girl in her silliness. The boat sped on and finally Wwe le in sight of a gleaming beach of £znd, with seaweed so luxuriantly tangled that it looked 1 small clumps of bushes, with the calm, still | water of the bay on one side and the| lazily rolling surf an the other. “Behold our desert island!” Dicky exclaimed dramatically, springing to Lis feet, ) Jim ran the boat skilfully up on the, beach and grounded her. Harry Un-| derwood stepped forward to assist me . ashore, but Dr. Pettit, with unob-| trusive quickness, was before him. | As T had my hand in that of the! young physician, Harry Underwood £ave a hoarse stage laugh, “I told you | 50,” he croaked maliciously; “I knew | I had a rival on my hands.” [_ enu Broiled Tripe u for Tomormw_1 “Breakfast. Fruit Graham Coffee Lunch Chicken Salad White Cake Iced Cocoa Dinner Vegetable Soup Meat and Potato Pie Cauliflower Steamed Squash French Dressing Watercress Frozen Souffle Coffee Chicken Salad—DMix cupful cold cooked chicken, cut picces, one cupful cucumber cut in cubes, one cupful diced celery. Mari- nate with French dressi Chill, drain, mix with three-quarters cupful Arrange in salad bowl; garnish with pimolas and hard cooked eggs, mayonnaise, curled celery. Frozen Souffle—Take three table. spoonfuls sugar and six yolks of eggs, whip over hot water till solid froth, Gems Olives together one in i laay ! dipped in sherry wine. ;an ! brought down the house with applause ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES On Needed Goods The last opportunity to secure these timely garmer at these Prices. Come at ONCE—we CHARGE them to you, and accept convenient weekly payments. ‘Wool Suits—values to $30.00.. Coats—Sport and Dress styles .... Values up to $2 Dresses—Tub Skirts—Summer Waists, Etc. at Prices un- heard of in Hartford. 887693 MAIN STREEL remove and cool, mix in gently one pint whipped cream, and one dozen fingers, cut in small picces and Turn into wet mold, cover tightly, bind around a but- tered cloth, bury in ice and salt for two hou STRONG BILL AT KEENEY'S THEATER Their boxing match indulged in while standing on their hands is unique as well as to be marvelled at. Because of the requests of the large number of people who were unable to see Nance O’Neil in “Those Who Toil” last evening, as the house was filled to its capacity, Manager Mec- Mahon announces today that he will accommodate his patrons and hold over the picture and show it tonight again, This will be pleasing news to those who wished to see this inimita- ble actress and could not. In connec- ! tion with this the Selig news film will be screened. BIG PEACH CROP AT GRAND THEATER lesque comedians, whom he has re- cngaged this season, owing to their great hit of last season; Sulzback & Miller, clever entertainers direct from the Keith Circuit, their first appear- ance in burlesque; Bernice Taber and Kdna Clair, the Califarnia beauties, direct from the Golden West, also ne to burlesque; Eddy & rle, sen tional novelty whirlwind dancers; Pagana, the beautiful ragtime violin- ist; Francies Murphy, the Julian tinge of burlesque and as the extra added feature, White & nugh, clever singers, dancers and pianists. There are thirty stunning pretty girls in the chorus, who have been provided with costumes befitting their grace and.charm. Last, but not least, Al Reeves, himself, with a brand new monologue and A bso- lvtely new song, entitled Life.” The music for the show original, and is full life and very cetchy. One of the spirited selections George M. Cahan’s stirri "ho | American Ragtime,” in which en- { tire company participate with did harmony. Matinees are dally. \ Fadsand T’ashion] Hats have flaring = “The Folly of Desire,” er feature with an all be the headliner at Keeney for tonight and tomorrow. five-reel photoplay of emotional dr adapted from the famous story “The Shulamite.” Combined with this Grace Darling and Harry Fox will be featured in “Beatrice Fairfs a new serial which is to last teen weeks. It was only after considerable difficulty | bas been one of the foremost pro- that Man McMahon was able to | ducers of novelties in the burlesque | secure thi al for his theater and | famous “Beauty Show" it is believed that the most fastidious theater, Hartfard movie fan will find fault with it. |t week. | “Beatrice Fairfax” comes to this city Reeves scems to possess the happy highly recommended from a long run | faculty of giving the public just what in the Metropo | it desires in this field of amusement. For Friday He is one of the few managers who Steward will | sirive to engage performers of well- Vitagraph y “The Suspect,” a |known reputation and are relied upon strong d of love and intrigue. |te give a performance full of sparkle Combined with moving pictures, | sh. This being the twenty-fifth three sterling acts will help to aug- | anniversary af your old pal Al's ment the entertainment. Helen Jack- | theatrical carcer, he has left nothing ley has been making quite a hit in | undone in the way of securing gor- aerial act while Bond and Bond | geous costumes, beautiful girls, elabo- | rate stage settings, and the highest | salaried artists in the world. Among thase whom he will present on this visit are Charles Robles and Al Green, two of America’s best bur- a Red Feath- st, will an is all Al Reeves, who for twenty-five years the splen- no given and appear in urday Anita the five-reel brims, All the new materials are soft. increases The leg-o-mutton slecve i favor, | in their latest dancing and singing | s performance. Vittorio and Georgetto | The separate skirt { fichu blouse has come formal evening wea with a fanciful have a turn, the likes of which has in again for in- never been wisiessed in this city. presesves whnle plums, peaches, grapes and apples are in season—while you can get them ctically your rav E It is the sensible thing to the sensible thing to use Granulated Sugar It is all cane, quick dissolv- ing and of highest sweet- ening power. Kept clean by 2 and 5 pound car- tons and 5, 10, 25 and 50 pound non-sifting bags packed at the refinery. Ask for it by name «