New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 13, 1916, Page 4

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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1016, = S - News for Theater Goers and Women Read_efs O A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME I Her Side--and His | How Cora and David Temple Solved Their Marital Problems By ZOE BECKLEYX Pay Weekly Lonliness C(;MING | There are some things that seem to come out of a clear ky and strike us down like thunderbolts because weare unsuspecting and unprepared. v o Bl | Their very force bowls us over. We give up. We relax. We cannot fight such ¢ lmay Ngni' flc?' 2“ & (hings They ave too much for us. But by and by we recover. i Then there are things, like the pa ng of our friends and kinfolks, or An Enormous All Star Revival the loss of property, or employment, or some kindred misfortune. They are of the cver welcome the sorrows we usually sec coming and are more or less prepared for and become reconciled to. We fight. We gather ourselves together, take fresh Start theFall Season Right! Clothe yourself and your family in Warm, Depend- able Garments and arrange with US for Convenient Weekl Payments for the entire account. Simply say “Charge It"—we will do the rest. B e e s e LADIES' AND MISSES' SUITS $14.75 UP PR;N‘ E OF But there is a sort of thing that comes to us sometimes that we cannot e JISEEERCO SIS 7.98 UP i | quite classify. It is not a shock. Nor a calamity. Nor misfortune. It SR IR C s - . 2.98 TP 8 | comes gradually, as a sort of realiza-tion rather than a sorrow. First it is v TSs (Ll cerlefan duslie) 98c to $15 i Pll SON 4| only a hint; something half imagined, half real. Then it grows more per- FALL SHOES... 8 $3.50 UP [ 71 sistent. Until finally we know that a change come. We miss some i H | thing. but can’t quite put a finger on it. There's a change. We have some- M ’ F “ . A Cluster of Wonderful Girls. ff | thing else, perhaps, but it doesn’t take the place of what we've lost. And it ens a SultS Watch This Space for Particu- g seems to have no cure. lars. 4 This change or whatever it was came to Cora Temple. It was a long while before she was able to give it a name. It was not jealousy of David’s work. For she loved his work and sympathized with it fully, helping him in a thousand wa It was not neglect. David adored his wife and made a companion of her whenever he could. That was it—whenever he could! But there were many evenings when he could not. Whole weeks sometimes when they scarcely had an hour's talk. i It was not that Cora was left alone. For David was always at home ‘5 unless he was chugging about in a high-powered motor gathering informa- tion, investigating, suggesting, planning for the disposal of condemned { # | tenements, the making of play parks, the building of sanitary homes. i But Cora Temple ‘was lonely, nevertheless. Oftentimes a vast and ter- ! ! | $10, §12, $i4, up to $32 Hats—Shoes—Furnishings Miscu 887-693 MAIN.STREET HARTFORD. rifying loneliness enveloped her. She never spoke of it to David, for the simple reason that she knew in her heart of hearts it was inevitabhle- There was no help for it. David had his work. She had her charming home. s ———— There was plenty of money. There were mutual interests. Ah! there was one special mutual interest, as Cora always suddenly re- membered with warming spirit and dimming eyes. She would wait patient- ly for that. What of it if she was a little lonely now? 2 And when It came It would fill her life and cheer her heart and il- o luminate her home. The long days and silent evenings would be forgotten. s “Surely there’ll be no loneliness then,” she would tell herself, hugging By ADELE GARRIGON | to her breast some little downy blanket she was hemming or some wee fluff on which she was embroidering a word of four letters beginning with “B.” ] THE MERRY ROUNDERS | LIEUT. DANNY, U. S. A. PLEASING 'EM ALL AT FOX'S THEATER One of the noveties in Max Lieutenant Danny Ward, leading Spiegel's production of “The Merry |figure in “Lieut. Danny, U. §. A., the “One must learn to live L = 2 i Fo e | R » 1 ¢ Tri e LR eek Nl A Madge Became Very Much | umphant thrill, that evidently she re- | Rounders,” at the Grand theater, is |new Triangle picture to be shown at C) Then she would look over to the windows of the artificial flower shop 0¥ Madg i e e L S e Charlie Chaplin in back of her house. People often worked there nights. And she felt less , L pset Over Prospects of Losing Katie. e 2 ; e by ‘ : rom Tangoland, the finale | Fox's today and tomorrow while trot- “THE PAWN BROKER” ereTo | face flush miserably when | {imatum I had given her on the|of the first act, in which the black |ting along at the head of a platoon i B PRl IR GEE D Y cccasion of her outrageous treatment | unq s o o e ihiel horder auce Jim Gregg blurted out the informa- | of Lillian Underwood. : e contrast in stage decorat- | of cavalry patrolling the border, see Tonight Only - \ | tion that he and Katle had been| I had told her then that I would | '8 and costumes is carried to a de- | through his glasses a caleche beins Dorothy Davenport in ',& X T FRE ECtin e Wensaced Rthisloveningalandljialwaysimake fher Jiwel come Wiinous|[SEeepeve b torefiacen M fbuiesq o d Eurioslyd iy e It o et SRR SIS E 0 «“I'HE BARRIERS were “going to get married pretty | D0Me and treat her with all deference, | Another novelty is the dance evolu- | Grande, with Mexicans hot in pursuit, i o but that I would never allow her to | tion, showing the various styles of | As the caleche nears the border, Dan- OF SOC Mother Graham had heard a noise | interfere in any personal concern of | dancing in vogue from 1812 until |y ang his men SnDcar analihe Mach s in the Kitchen and had summoned me | Mine. Was it possible that she meant | the present day. These are only two | > *7C [t Tien Sppear nd U v Fri. and Sat, to go with her to investigate it. We | to abide by those words guietly. { of the novelties introduced through- |'¢30s retire cursing. 16 occupants : | had found the table set for a spread| She preceded me out of the room, | out the action of the show, which is | 0f the caleche are Senora Ventura . : Earle Williams in | | with a profusion of our food, and|PAYIng mo attention whatever to the |rich in comedy material and replete [and her beautiful daughter Senorita “OAR AND HIS Katie and Jim snugly ensconeed in|Yaluable and tearful thanks which |with song hits. The show featurcs | Ysobel Ventura, They are fleeing l w ld Y s d B g [ the big rocking chair Bollopwas ?".“r“’;gh"“‘i to me. i we|ADe Reynolds and George F, Hayes, | from their hacienda to escape the " The memory of Mother Graham’s en oine er in e hal we | two of the best known comedians on | vengeance of Pedro Lopez, “the ou ou dtan Yy Hlm e e e B ety 0 Gl i st o it, | the burlesque stage. A specialty se- | butcher” a brutal marauder who had o : J s burn. My mind went back | mounted the stairs and went to our | lected cast of principals supports | once been a peon on the Senora es- ‘Women are like the angels. Those | I Terels e cheeks M = : X % ; : I e Senora es : : es { If the crime were a natural outcome | (wif(ly to the never-to-be-forgotten |T0OMS. At the door of hers she| Reynolds including May Latham and |tate. Danny escorts the woman and who suffer belong to them.’—Balzac. | of some recognized fault which she ‘ht when Dicky and I had plighteq | Faused, with her hand upon the | the soubrette, Elizabeth J The | the girl et i “Should a woman still love her hus. | had loved him in spite of, as. for in. | MERt When Dicky and ad plighted | Paused, with & Losionpang E 5 2 ane. he | the girl to the army post and plac —_— . 2 5 L DuShlioEonnas, 1- | ur troth. I remembered it as ir it | knob, turned to me, and said w chorus of twenty-four girls have |them in the safe keeping of tr band If he had been sent to prison for | stance, some crime committed in a fit | O HOth- T v emphasis: | been chosen for beauty, g 1| colonel. Then he 2 him and try to get him out? 1rorniinclotheniHand ith o lifar imel IMNNSESESIS S O SBRODS S ae R I o) s cIaTiatian o tions forly Ul vl |l e s L e B ISR Os | sl Sl B S VN A resder friend sent me that gues- | brought to Heht seme smexpected ang | PATIors of Mrs, Stewart' aiini| these Rosiglistle snotions cof vonrmarol e sque, Is seen in one of | picture of old Mexico, of a real scrap tion. objectionable side of his oharacter, | Brooklyn, where my mother and I had | very fine, but when vouwve lved as| the important roles and Frank Ward | of the kind you can only find in = . " 3 S ara N e > = ong as have you'll learn At it e , S 2 2 We talked it over the other evening. | he might become a different being to | 1iYed so many years, and where, after (»mfiz“,‘ S e voune 'Lyiwmos the juvenile role. Miss Ruth | Mexico. On these two days the Para- There were many opinions on the dif- | her and she might not love this new | I'er death, T had stayed until my mar- |;mi S ‘h»hmmg Seniohy té;— s Wesgley is another principal in the | mount will offer the international o) 3 - g ige to Dicky. Mrs. Stewart, wise,|Probaply b 3 oS show this year. tage sucess “Rolling Si fe 5 fergnt phasesiofithie auamtc GRENIEE ider i ther thit ehe we to in L Estics feellnes Catile ke that e e Zoatur Something Would Depend Upon His But Love Is Another Matter. Sirls that boarded with her called | Faven't any fine feelings such as you L e s '::.' s Innocence Or Guilt. { One might #ell be in love with Dr. | that parlor her “courting room.” No|Of I have. But you're young and| e |¢5, comedy roles than the average ; i o Jh ou’ll learn, I hope.” : 3 8 L 5 In the first place, something would | Jekyll and not care for Mr. Hyde. one v ever allawed to disturb the|Y°U ) . ] 2 use. The go Today and Tomorrow depend upon whether ono - beligved | - The Authior-Man brought up a point | oocupants of that room when @ vouns | She Wenlt to her room quickly and [ Menru tor Tomorrow ! R el s that one’s husband was guilty. If one | Which is interesting to note. In al- |woman was entertaining a young man | SPut the door. S = | into a screen masterpiece by ‘ belleved in his innocence—and if his | most all the cases which occupy the | there. A Big Man-Sized Job, Breakfast the Famous Players Film Co., takes Triangle Plays Present previous life justified me, I would . first pages of our mnewspapers, the Mrs. Stewart had been Jack I smiled to myself as I reflected | Stewed Apples place in one of the funniest boa < certainly believe in it even though the | Wives stand by thelr husbands until | Bickett’s staunchest partisan. She|upon the thoroughly character | Cereal with Milk |ing houses you ever saw. Marzu Emd Markey and evidence to the contrary were very | some other woman enters the case. |qisliked Dicky intens vet she never | way in which she managed to b I"lannel Cakes {ite Courtot co-starred with Owen s d strong—there would, of course, be np case of Dr .Peck, the dentist, |in any manner disturbed us. Ijthe last word in the matter. She | Coffee | Moore in the production The K William Desmon question as to whether one would con- | ¥ accused of poisonig his |thought, with a shuddering horror, of | probably imagined she had withered StonaiPlayera will bresont e a Ster N tinue to love him and stand by him. _IH.(h?l‘ in-law and mother-in-law, and |{wkrat it would have meant to Dicky | e with her contempt of my thoughts Lunch |ing in “His Lying Heart” and the e USA’ Suppose, on the other hand, he were | tried fo poison his wife. In spite of |znd me if some one had rudely broken |and actions. Vegetable Salad | Paramount thei Burton-Holmes Lle\!t. Danny, KoV W unquestionably ;z\\fl\_\'_‘ Naturally one'’s | the n'msf_ damning evidence, she stood |in upon us in the sacred moments There was only one remark of hers Cress Sandwiches { Travelogue to balance this interestine attitude would be different. by him until the other woman ap- |after he had asked and 1 had |which remained in my mind, and that Cocoanut Cakes and instructive program, which will She Would Feel That He Needed Her | Peared. 5 answered the most momentous aues-|with a far different effect than she | Tea be shown continuously from 2 to 11 Paramount Eleyacestt More Than Ever. Of course, in some criminal cases, | tion of our lives. had intended. .She had spoken of PR orteatiraaT \ Owen Moore Th. an of the highest charac -'Th»feffmr"prxl"o“‘.f.?c““”" rERo ble. | My heart went out ta Katie with re- | iatie as belonging to “cattle that had Dinner { e wom: ® highes 8 = s S ou cel ex- ! > & > e feeling I reflected a little 5 == = —_— e : ; morse and sympathy. 1 went swiftly | no finer feeling r Roast Beef Brown Gravy | fact terfiwould gstiiiistand "",’“‘:“' ’:(’ '}‘:‘\';‘ as one would if one's husband | giar'to the girl and took her twisting, | bitterly that it would not have been | String Beans Browned Potatocs |Bake in a greased pan for thirty * > . 2 would gfectiginaly Ljghlsgmeal nese ol becamelinear, 3 fiuttering, angry hands in my own possible for Katic or any one of her Pepper Salad ! minutes. > Rolling Stones’ had an even areater frlan on her ; All these are guesses. What 1 smould L e Xind to have displayed a greater lack S e i lzens hithanfeyenahetonss Coflong Vol WOl did o Ronlvcinaile of fine feeling than had my mother- | Coffee ! Spanish ¢ ; ; F; 4 A g i -~ = T i g 3 8 3 2 e Spanish Cream-—Soak half hox pow- But would she still love him? Ah, | perience would teach us. ‘Katie, dear,” I said soffiv, ‘“‘will = ! X DOW . o . L inlaw. dered gelatin qus : KEYSTONE COMEDY that's another question. Heaven keep Us from ever knowing! |you forgive me T am so sorry 2ais | " icofiers cngagement, however, upset | Cocoanut Cakes—Beat four egss ana | Put on e analatis H11 Hissalven. A has happened. If you had told me N e e S el 3 S G ; 5 : o BURTON-HOLMES - S 4 me. was almost time for us to re-| half pound sugar together over hot | Yolks of three eggs and four heapin TRAVELOGUE ; et Gl you expected Jim I would not Mave|ium to the city for the winter. Of| water until light, then allow to ocool, | tablespoonfuls sugar well beaten. Stir > - aisturbed ’;‘j; I'm wa:_\ ;z%nd ro‘rsour course, if Katle were ta be married | add half a gill of milk beating it in. | till it thickens. Remove from fire and . : [ nanEenses e s q“r‘;;ni‘:’"i: SUPPET | she would not go back with us. The | Sift In half a pound of flour, two |fold In stiffly beatcn whites. Add one WELCOME HOME BOYS ASK FOR I now, a 2E ~| girl .had been with me since the first | ounces cornstarch and one heaping | tablespoonful vanilla cxtract and pour and GET BEGIN ON SALTS row. 3 & 1 2 T s i A o | row- o ) ( ronth of my marriage. I did not | teaspoonful baking powder, lastly mix | into wet mold. Serve with whipped Sfatince 5o Evening 10c 5 AT FIRST SIGN |1 “"T‘;'\‘ ;“ the shy six-footer stand-| .,}ize how much I had grown to de- | In two ounces of desiccated cocoanut. | cream when firm and turn out CpR s | OF KIDNEY PAJIN |ing beside her. A .. | pend upon her efficient service, her | Except Saturday, Sunday an | | 1 congratulate you, Jim,” I said, loving faithfulne until T faced the | Holidays. | THE ORIGINAL We cat too much meat, which clogs | NOIIN% out my hand, “Katie is & dear | pospeet of losing her, Whatever | , MALTED MILK | Kidneys, then the |[Ecor BTl BEome soreee hortoften Uil vouldl 1) dol witnout herdin thellcity: A I | S R e P ruas standing as| ' ury second season of lectures before a e e Ci e ! | if p rificc vhe: urned to er from j ., 2 Chesp substitates cest ¥OU samso price. —_ JEDELl, 5 XM (316 history class of the Lotus Study L Ji Her face was dark with dis " pr—— s imnnemn. | Says glass of Salts flushes Kidneys | 7™M L . A club would soon begin. They were 5 i - R S T and ends Bladder approval of my handling the situa-| o0 me $25 a lecture this season, ! == P gt B P L || . or eepin R Q N ALL THIS Why Not Get — not speak. T thought with a little tri- | | j4ica] and war news of the day, with and 35¢ | WE o Uric acid in meat excites th - | e——— e | thie tracing back of their causes in | | 4 : | Rid of Eczema? neys they become overworked; get - N g events that had gone before. 4 levol teaspopnfuls RYZON; 2 cups (4 Ib.) 1 HARTEORD. | sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of | iR ”-; SiCKLY GHILD When Lillian had seen the outlined g?l'i?i‘z::?l::onf?l DR i L) | MAX SPIEGEL'S lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the | A course she had said emphatically that 3 confuls melted butter; maple syrup. If your skin itches and b ith | Pladder is irvitated, and you may be | yather Tells H B as ; it was a big man-sized job I had un- o . ' ?Y urns wi | ) 3 Father Tells How Boy was Restored = i Mix flour with RYZON and salt, and eczema or any such tormenting, un- | obliged to scek relief two or three | (5 O (TR LT dertaken, T felt that she was right. S ) ‘ % e 4 Y s > g % 0 . . > = em into a bowl. Beat yolks of eggs, sig] < . night. e e ontailed a great deal more work : LYo, ) ghtly skin disease, simply wash the | times (during the night. When the | e DR G e T 1t entailed a grea 1 2dd butter and milk. Add this mixture goad: ROUNDERS zore places with Resinol | kidneys clog you must help them flush i o that Vinel i Tortil and study for me than had the course ually to dry ingredients, beating thoroughl. | Soap and hot water, dry, off the body’s urinous waste or you'll ¢\ Britain tha 1S & wonderful | o¢ the last season. ; J ; e BisEsh & i , dry, £ £ | body builder for ailing children. Here | © e son . When well mixed, fold in the stiffly beaten Lith ABE REYNOLDS ana . | 2@d apply a little Resinol be a real sick person shortly. At first | JO0¥ DI CEE S A i It wouid be simply impossible for whites. Pour from a pitcher into xyhe cenle?g% GEORGE F. HAYES. Ointment. ~ Usually the you feel a dull misery in the kidney | IS more proof of the fact | me to attempt both that work and my i A A SR e e . Show b mbogue | Pthie Eops INETANT region, you suffer from backache, sicic |, J» To Albury of Miama, Fla, says: “poysework without the assistance of be used in place of butter, but the waffios pppteet 5 ; el LY, you no longer have headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, | - OUr little Doy was puny and €ross . woyltrained maid, and with my | will not brown as well. Matinee Daily. to dig and scratch, sleep tongue coated and you feel rheumatic | {fO™ the time he was born, and We( n per_in-law as a member of our s {’f“{‘,"“s Bosiblesand twinges when the weather is bad. | hardly knew how to handle him.ipamiy 1 aistinctly dreaded breaking o ; X ‘ i:a;mn?fi‘hcgms. That Eat less meat, drink lots of water; | W h"]” "01‘ as three years fvllfl1 "‘e WS in a new girl. YO\}J‘ are sure to make the most deliciously light . —— = || also get from any pharmacist four | Weak and so cross we could hardly I lay awake so long pondering the and wholesome waffles if you follow this reci - = P A ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoon- | 1ive With him and we could not get| pagter that I had not vet fallen ¥ pe and use nEn | The diseanation arrests the action of | 4] in a glass of water before breakfast | Nim to cat anything. A friend asked| gqeep when Dicky came in from the RTFBBU AHT SJHJ“L || the tortured, inflamed il r"‘“‘?rc_i | for a few days and your kidneys will | US to try Vinol. We did so and youljast train, I called to him softly as (5] ¥, e 5 | Bealth—quickly, easily, and. of litg. |then act fine. This famous salts is Should see the change it has made|yq pagsed my door, to let him know : ; | 40th Year Opens @2 E; G el e o | made from the acid of grapes and | in him. He is now a goodnatured, | that 1 was awake, and he came in paturday. morning Classes in f| years, and sold by every druggist, lemon juice, combined with lithia, and | healthy youngster, ready to eat at|anq sat down on the side of my bed ! 3 ‘ ‘;n 1: and color. Write for || { has been used for generations to clean | any ll]m“- and we cannot praise Vinol | while I told him of Katie’s prospec THE PE — cular: | . ) clogged kidneys and stimulate them to ; €enough.” tive marriage and the dilemma in RFECT BAKING POWDE PROSPECT ST. Hartford Conn, g i What the Right Soap .| mormal activity, also to neutralize the | Vinol is especially eflicient in | which it placed me W — '““’“’“" Does for Your Skin | acids in urine, so it no longer is a [ building up uny, weak, ailing chil- | " “And you're worrying about that.” The baking knowledge of 10,000 women and e i B | Money cannot buy a_purer, more |£0urce of irritation, thus ending blad- dren, because of the beef and cod |said Dicky, with fine scorn. “Plent many famous cooking experts mad: the new RYZON = ES’ NIG cleansing toilet soap than Resinol Soap. | der weakne: | liver peptones, iron and manganese | of maids to be had in New York city, Baking Book. Edited by Marion Harris Neil, illug~ ~ ADIES xHT And the healing Resinol medication in r Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in- | peptonates and glycerophosphates | ray dear. If you can’t find a satisfac- | . trated in colors, the RYZON Baking Book is the first B l. Afl : it helps to keep the complexion clear, jure; makes a delightful effervescent | which it contains, and as it is without | {ory one we can always go to a hotel.” | complete manual of baking powder baking Al- ina bow Ig AUCYS | fresh, and beautiful lithia-water drink which cveryone | oil or grease, children love to take | He gave me a kiss that was meant though priced at $1 00, you can geta RYZON Baking ~ = = = [ should take now and then to keep the !it. | to be consoling, and went on ta his| Book by using RYZON ~ Ask your grocer. ach Wednesday Eve. A. 2. JOHNSON, D. i3, 5. |kdineys clean and ac Druggists | The Clark and Brainerd Drug Store, | own room, while I wished, oh, so 1 ol ok . TN here soy they sell 1o Jad Salts to | Riker's Drug Store, New Britain. Also | earnestly, that T could throw all care RYZON is made with a pure and better phos- ys open ) T ] | 5 v NS folks who helicve in.overcoming kid- | at the leading drug stores in all Con- | and responsibility from my shoulders phate. Man must have ph hate in his f Afternoon. | Nattorar Banic Biag Open Fenmsy e trouble while it is only trouble. llucxirut towns. | as lightly as could Dicky. phosphate in his food. 2 | G, Gl e e x e e _- A e P ! - “ I T Ve . - - S - > — 3 g . A - -

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