New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 17, 1916, Page 4

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4 .LYCEUM Friday Ev'g, Oct, 20 ~ PRICES—25¢, 50c, and $1.5 owell's Tuesday Night. Carriages 1 SATURDAY, Oct, 21 MATINEE AND NIGHT Seat 0. to $1.00. Seat Sale at Crowell’s Wednes- day Night, TONIGHT ONLY. Florence La Badie “THE FUGITIVE Gold Rooster Feature. Don’t Miss the FIVE BOYS IN BLUE Big Musical Novelty. TODAY ONLY Triangle Plays Present Henry B. Walthall IN “Pillars of Society” Paramount Plays Present Sessue Hayakawa IN e Honorable Friend eystone “Vampire Ambrose” Paramount Pictograph HARLIE CHAPLIN N n “The Floorwalker” atinee 5c Evening 10c ALL THIS WEEK RAN HARTFORD. one and Pillard a Brand New Show E RAG DOLL IN RAGLAND Matinee Every Day LADIES’ NIGHT ina Bowling Alleys ach Wednesday Eve. s open to ladies every Afternoon. TFORD ART SCHOOL s in Drawing and Painting. Day and Evening. Philip L. Hale of Bos- f | struct elimination. | responsible for much of the illness of M | and that it Most Effectiv, Motiher Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin Relieves Baby When Other Medicines Failed. child’s health and larity of the bowels. | especially susceptible | trouble and any overstrain of the fsmve- organs has a tendency to comfort regu- All children are to n- ob- | childhood. To reiieve constipation a mild la | tive should be employed. Cathartics and purgatives are violent in their action and should be avoided. Mrs. Alfred Du Bois, Mt. Holly, N J = Dr. dwell's Syrup Pepsin is with- | out doubt the most effective remedy for constipation she has ever used is the only remedy she could find for her baby. Little Barl was badly constipated during his first year and nothing she tried seemed to help him until she got a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Now he is a fine, strong, healthy boy, and s Dr. Caldwell for it. Caldwell Syrup Pepsin combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin cotic drugs; it acts gently | griping or oter discomfort, and is a without ap- There is nothing so necessary to a stomach | This condition is free from opiates or nar-!c NEW. RRITAIN Thea Remedy Has Ever Used | peals to children because of its pleas- ant taste. Druggists everywhere sell it for fifty cents a bottle, and every mother should have it in the house for use whenever occasion arises. To avoid imitations and ineffective | substitutes always be sure to ask for Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, See that a facsimile of Dr. Caldwell’s signa- ‘lllr(‘ and his po t appear on the vellow carton in which the bottle is packed. A trial bottie, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. | | W. B. Caldwell, 455 Washington St., | Monticello, Illinois, ‘TPRINEEOF PILSEN” AT LYCEUM FRIDAY At the Lyceum on Friday night the | tuneful and familiar airs of that most virile of musical comedies, “The | Prince of Pilsen,” will be heard again. | | The beauty of these songs, such as. ISTONE-PILLARD SHOW .‘ ENTIRELY DIFFERENT ! | | That George Stone and Etta Pillard have lost none of their popularity with the patrons of the Grand theater, was evinced last evening, when an at- tendance of record breaking propor- | tion was on hand to greet this pair nearly I three hours the audience was treated f of clever entertainers. Ifor , DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1916. A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side--—-and His How Cora and David Temple Solved Their Marital By ZOE BECKLEY Problems One’s Son and One’s Daughter would you rather have it a girl than a boy?"” asked Beth Woodford. ust like you, Cora, to go taking the opposite side of a question Jike that. ‘Anybody else uld be wishing and praying for a son. Everybody wants the first baby to be a boy, whether they admit it or not. Why, 1 often suspect they say they want girls just to stave off the dis- appointment if they have one. Girls,” added Beth, “have such a hard time in the world.” A faraway smile touched Cora's fac new quality, a spiritual something. “That's just why,” she answered, looking past Beth, past the confines of the sunny room, out into the world beyond her chamber windows, “That's just the reason, Beth. I want a girl because I believe I could keep her from having ‘a hard time.’ It's because girls are taught wrong that they have a hard time in life. I long to make a companion of my daughter, Bethie; to get close to her and be her dearest friend. “Somehow I understand women. I know woman nature through and through—its hardships, its limitations, weakne You gee I've never been a man,” she added with a smile. I know naturally just what girl longs for and hopes for, and fears and shrinks from, and drawn to—ali her emotions, in short. I would give my girl all the dear things she longs for—thingy, some of them I never had, Beath, because—well, all mothers don’t understand perhaps.” Cora paused a moment, then re- sumed with a quickly suppressed sigh, “I understand women better than I do men,” she repeated. “That's why I feel I could do more for a daugh- ter than for a son.” “Fiddlesticks!” cried Beth impatiently. ‘A sensible mother can do a thousand tinmies more with a boy than with girl. Think of the careers open to a male that the female of the species can only nibble Think of the possibilities in business, in politics, law, medicine, everything. Men always have the best chances “Of course they do,” agreed Cora spiritedly. “That's why it is so much bigger an undertaking to launch a girl successfully in life, and so0 much more worth trying for.” “Oh, very well. If you're instead of the easiest, why go Mrs. Woodford, Cora laughed goodnaturedly. for this childless, aimless cousin of hers, the soft berths in life. “I'm not exactly looking for a hard job,” smiled Cora, carefully turn- ing the corner of a wee pink sack on which she was embroidering a bor- der. “But while I'm about it, Beth, I might as. well do all I can for the world. Every successful woman helps to make the worid better for every other woman. The more well-educated, well-equipped girls there are the easier it grows for women to take their places in whatever lines their tal- ents fit them to follow. ‘Why, Beth, dear, if I had a self-reliant, inde- pendent, successful daughter I'd feel a lot prouder than to have a suc- cessful son. Almost any boy can succeed. It takes real fighting qualities “But why a face beautiful with an indefin- able is looking for the ahead and have hardest job in the worid vour daughter,” snorted Deep in her heart she had a real pity who seemed always looking for 1 to a show that differs entirely from the usual brand of burlesque perfor- man that has shown at the theater since its opening. Under the man- agement of Joe Hurtig a supporting troupe has been gotten together this season, which promises to write in theatrical history the Names of Stone, Pillard and Hurtig with emblazoned letters. The book for the performance was written by Will H. Smith and | George Stone, music by Will H. Vo- dery and lyrics by Mr. Smith. The plot of the burletta consumes two acts and nine scenes and is a musical ex- { travaganza of the highest standard. In | no troupe appearing in the Capitol I city this season has the patron been | afforded the pleasure of viewing such beautiful costumes and magnificent scenery. There also a bevy of pret- ty girls in the chorus who are fully le of handling the many difficult dancing sets, and in the art of melody they leave nothing to be desired. The burletta is entitled, “The Rag Doll in Ragland,” and the plot is of a nature that keeps the audience on the jump to keep up with it. Things work | smoothly until the middle of the first ESTELLE BIRNEY In the Merriest of Musical Comedies, The Prince of Pilsen. | of the Sea Shell,” | Smoke,” ana others, have served in a | comedy. | Iy attach to a work of this kind, and | tain their | Eldora Stanford, Frank MacEwan and | others '\ Brooklyn Druggist Praises ict, when the troupe seem to diverse from the plot, that is from a point of understanding by the audience, and in- dulge in a frolic of song, dances and “The Message of the Violet”, “The tale “The Stein Song” with its swinging Heidelberg refrain, ‘““The Song of the Cities,” “Pictures in The brunt of the work is carried by the stars, Mr. Stone and Miss Pillard. The latter has added some to her abil- ¢ in the terpsichorean art which is ing something, her nimbleness of foot and her pleasing manner of ren- dering several songs making an instant This year there is an elaborate re- The song, | vival of “The Prince of Pilsen” and | “ re’s i 3it of Bad in Every its cast embraces the names of Charles | Good Little Girl,” has been rendered at the theater on former occasions but Horne, Estella Birney, Edward T. c Mora, Dorothy Delmore, Walter | it remained for Miss Pillard and Ben Bard in a duet last evening to popu- James, George C. Hall, Irene Duke, larize the song further. With a num- her of added verses of a catchy chord, the pair were forced to respond to nu- merous encores, Mr. Stone getting into some of them which also brought “down the house.” FIVE BOYS IN BLUE VAUDEVILLE LEADER large measure to maintain a lasting popularity for this entertainment. | Frank Pixloy’s story and lyrics have more poetry and romance than usual- Gustav Luders’ rythmic harmonies re- freshness and charm. I Skill and judgment in effect- ing the alliance of vocal excellence and zood looks in chorus contingents are rikingy exemplifieq in this organi- ation. The scenic and costume equip- ment are new and the music as played by an augmented orchestra promises to be a pleasing feature. - | Seat sale opens tonight at Crowell’s. Five Boys in Blue, a quintet Civil war veterans, who have been | furnishing an entertaining musical | novelty on vaudeville circuits for al number of years, are at Keeney’s this ! the Great Kidney Remedy I have handled Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- for a girl to get on.” “Huh! “Ah, that’ Men alw: I gue: s another matter,” boy. do. satisofied, We love anything that comes.” How does David feel about said Cora softly. I wonder why? Oh Beth, I think we women think more about the actual bringing into life than we do about the sex it?” queried Beth. ‘“He’'d rather have the And so, either way, I shall of the little creatura! JUNE CAPRICE IS COMING TO FOX’S Alicia runs away. She leaves the orphanage at which she had drudged and seeks comfort in the fields This is the way William Fox’s new feature ‘The Ragged Princess” begins. This will be one of the feature attractions at Fox’'s tomorrow and Thursday. June Caprice as Alicia, the most captivat- | ing kind of an Alicia. When she finds a pair of overalls in a barn, she dresses up as a boy, and hires out to a farmer. She falls in love with one of the farmer’s help, Harry Deigan (Harry Hilliard). Later Alicia is adopted by a rich mine owner in the The man named Tom eDigan and he is Harry’s half-brother. Harry, learning of this goes to the city. There he discovers that the property h brother claims really belongs to Ali through an old claim, and he confron Tom with the truth Alicia gets her property ang her Harry In addition 1o the above Billic Burke will be seen in Chapter Fourteen of Gloria’s Ro- mance, the Pathe Weekly will show the latest news of world interest, “See America F " and the George Ovey comedy “Catching that Burgler” will be shown. Today the Triangle fea- ture, “Pillars cf Society,” with Henry B. Walthall, the Paramount feature, “The Honorable Friend,” with Sessue Hayakawa, the Keystone comedy, Vampire Ambrose, Charlie Chaplin in “The Floorwalker” and the Paramount Pictograph will be shown. A few drops of liquid sodamint in hot water will sometmies relieve the Dry, Hoarse or Painful } Coughs Quickly Ended Home-Made Remedy that Saves You $2—Does the Work MAY IRWIN SINGS IN LAUGH CARAVAN And May Irwin will sing again. announcement could cause more ple ure to the many admirers of the love able commedienne than this. She coming here in the new comedy, ‘Washington Squar2,” and will be seen at the Lyceum on Saturday, matinee and night. It was during ment at the No her recent engage- ark theater, New York city, that Miss Irwin used her woman’s privilege and decided to change her mind about singing For several sea- sons she has never varied from her de- termination to refrain from in public. But when she took “laugh caravan” to Washington to make President Wilson and the mem- bers of the National Press club laugh, she couiq not resist the many requ made hor by the promised gues! then returned for the continuation of her New York engagement and troduced the same songs. Iver since she projected the famous “Bully” song to universal popularity Miss Irwin has been the foremost in making the songs of the people. Noth- ing she has fostered in this line has been common and ordinary. While she originated the class of songs known as the “coon song,” she ever main- taineq a standard of excellence worthy of the better ideals of the colored- American. It was for her imitators to let down the standards In her new repertory she leads off with a llting, love song: “I'm Home For Home, Sweet Home”, “Those Were the Happ: D ", “Where Did Robinson Crusoe Go With Friday On | saturday Night?”, and others. Seat sale Wednesday at Crowell’s. Aenu for Tmnormwhji in- Breakfast. Stewed Apples Cereal Cream Plain Omelet Root, kidney, liver and bladder rem- edy for twenty years and have heard plenty of favorable reports concerning week presenting the headline attrac- | Thoroughly. tion. The old musicians made a distinet | § astically applaudad. collectively the it from my customers. They are sat- isfied with the results obtained from its use. I know of many cases where Swamp-Root has cured Stone in the Bladder, Gall Stones, Gravel, Catarrh or Inflamation of Bladder, Liver|; trouble and Rheumatism. I have used it in my own family with good results; and I heartily endorse Dr. Kilmer's | Swamp-Root and believe it has good | curative value. i Very truly yours, The prison scene from ‘Faust” is ALEX. LIPSCHITZ, Drugsist, enacted almost in its entirety by 84 North 6th Street, | Leona Gurney, singing comedienne, Brooklyn, N. Y. | who is also among the talent this weck. Miss Gurney is a versatile en- tertainer and she impersonates the various characters of the opera in skillful fashion changing from Mephistophales ‘o Marguerite with Jane Reed and her c cigarette and Charles Besnah, singer and dar also give pleasing vaudeville bits, The Pathe Gold Rooster photopla “The Fugitive,” with Florence Le- Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size | Badie in the lead, is billed as the bottle. It will convince anyone. You | feature of the film program tonight. will also receive a booklet of valuable | “The Fugitive” i a powerful drama information, telling about the kidneys | and is well adapted for screen presen- and bladder. When writing, be sure | tation. Tt is interpreted by a high and mention the New Britain Herald. | clas mpany. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size | There are gevoral other act enthus Individually and “vets' e entertaining. Their act at this time is especially popular. There i air of patriotism about it and nctively pleasing flavor. s” were here a few years ago - popularity at the time well merited a return engagement although | the management was unable to bill them until nov November 12th, 1916. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & OCo. Binghamton, N. Y. . 1 | | . Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For | e You. Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., good fllm bottles for sale at all drug stores. features on the program. ! Lit with the “first nighters” and their | ® The prompt and positive action of this simple, inexpensive home-made remedy in quickly Heal % the inflamed or swollen membranes of the throat, chest or bron- chial tubes and breaking up tight coughs, has caused it to be used in more homes ' than_any other cough remedy. Under its healing, soothing influence, chest soreness goes, phlegm loosens, breathing becomes easier, tickling in throat stops and you get a good night’s restful sleep. The usual throat and chest colds are_conmquered by it in 24 hours or_less. Nothing better for bron- chitis, hoarseness, croup, whooping cough, bronchial asthma or winter coughs. o make this splendid cough syrup, pour 21, ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth), into_a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup and shake thoroughly. You then have & full pint—a family supply—of a much better cough syrup than_you could buy ready-made for $2.50. Keeps perfectly and children love its pleasant taste. Pinex is a special and highly concen- trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, combined with guaiacol and is known the world over for its promptness, ease and certainty in over- coming stubborn coughs and chest colds. To -avoid disappointment ask your drugpgist for “214 ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don’t accept any- thing else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptlv refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Twin Mountain Mufling Coftee Lunch Canned Corn Pudding Spiced Fruit Sand Tarts Tea Dinner Rice Soup Broiled Sirloin Steak Sweet Potatoes Lettuce, Prune and Nut Salad Canned Pineapple Coffee Twin Mountain Mufiins—Cream one quarter cupful butter, add gradually one-quarter cupful sugar, one well beaten egg Sift two cuptuls flour and two heaping teaspoonfuls baking pow- der together and add to first mixture alternately with one cupful milk Bake in hot buttered gem pans for thirty minutees Canned Corn Pudding—Mix one can corn with four well beaten eggs, add one capful milk, one lablespoonful sugar, one heaping tablespoonful but- .r, and scasoning of salt and pepper. rn into a butiered baking dish and until it is firm. It should be prown on the top. The latest thing in tatting is butter- | flies, to be used as motives in collars | or lingerie. singing | only doing single work. | her ] ter Goers and Women Readers 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. Don’t Put Off Saving Coupons for this beautiful set. Remember that for only 25 coupons and $2.75 in cash we will send this 50-piece Saxon China Dinner Set to you, all express charges prepaid. It is a high-grade china, beautifully deco- rated in color and each piece has a gold line around the rim. One coupon comes with each dozen Parksdale Farm Eggs Order a dozen from your grocer today and start saving the coupons. You can tell the instant you break each Parksdale Farm Egg in the pan that itis a fancy egg. Parksdale Farm Eggs are guaranmteed. Coupons, also, with Wedgwood Creamery Butter. P. BERRY & SONS, Incorporated, Hartford, Conn. Sole Distributers for New England States Note: As we now offer a 50-piece instead of a 42-piece set, we have peen obliged to increase the required number of coupons from 15 to 25. DO NN As the Mind Is Set This fall 1 had every arrangement made (even to the buying of my tic ets) to start on a vacation on a cer- tain date. Just two days before the da; found I must postpone that vac and go back to the routine of daily life. And never was anything so hard. I had been doing double work to ge ready for the vacation. Now I was And vet 1t ble or diffident, or inferior in educs tion, if she didn't have proper facili- ties for entertaining, or couldn’t ord it, one could understand. But none of these obstacles and from what I have seen of her when she forgets herself, I think she has simply permitted her mind to agdinst company. She dwells on the fear that every thing won’t be just right, she lets her- self feel abused because her husband’s position forces entertaining upon her she steadfastly holds the picture of a very quiet life as her ideal A Stiff Neck In the Mind. It's as hard to see enjoyment when your mind is dead set against it as it would be to admire something beauti- ful when you had to twist round a stiff neck to see it. I know a woman who had her mind dead set against living in the house with a member of her husband ily. She made herself miserable it until somehow she came to sense; “I am letting this spoil my I she said. “I won’t think about more.’ 0, I don’t like her, she said when I asked her how it worked, “but I don’t mind her any more.” That's a sample of what one can ac- complish by setting one’s mind the way. exist get set seemed twice as hard. 1 Had My Mind Set Vacationward. Why? Because I had set my mind vacationward, and it's the way your mind is set which makes things hard or eas I have a neighbor who has a great dread of company. Unfortunately her husband’s position makes it necessary for her to do more or less entertaining. She will come into my house on a beautirul morning looking so luxurious 1 that she casts a shadow over the sun- shine. “What's the matter,” T say. are coming to spend “Don’t you like them’ “Yes, but I'm so afraid everything won’'t be just right, and then its so confusing to have the house full of people all the time.” Fler Mind Is Set Against Company. Now, if she were naturally unsocia- A rght What the Cooking Experts Say About THE PERFECT BAKING POWDRER “We consider it to be the purest in quality, the strongest and most wholesome of any baking powder of which we have knowledge.” —MARION HARRIS NEIL, Principal School of Cookery, Philadelphia. “I have thoroughly tested RYZON znd find it pure and the best baking powder I have ever used.”—EMMA PADDOCK TELFORD. “After numerous tests and thorough use— I assure you the results prove the RYZON Baking Powder to be the best I have used.”— E. K. LEMCKE-BARKHAUSEN, Principal of the Greater New York Cooking School. The baking knowledge of 10,000 women and man famouscooking experts made the new RYZON Baking Book. Edited by Marion Harris Neil, illustrated in colors, the RYZON Baking Book is the first complete manual of baking powder baking. Although priced at®$1.00, yox can get a RYZON Baking Book by using RYZON. Ask your grocer. RYZON is mode with a new and better phosphate. Phosphato is as necessary in man’s food as zalt. 10c, 18¢c and 35¢

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