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LYCEUM Saturday, Oct. 28th Matinee and Night, John Cort Presents | PRICIES—Matince, $1.00, 75c¢, J 50¢, 25¢. Seat Sale Wednesday 7:30°p. m., Crowell's Drug Store, 10 PILCT VICTOR HERBERT [ | ORCHIS" Teday and Tomorrow Triangle Plays Present W. S. Hart in “The Patriot” PR Paramount Plays Present Dustin Farnum in “The Parson of Panimint” o Keystone | Burton-Holmes Comedy | Traveiogue Matinee Se Ivenings 10¢ Ton’ght and Saturdey EARLE WILLIAMS in “The Scariet Runner” (New Episode) Cther Big Photceplays High Class Vaudeville COMING SOON Essanay-Chaplin Revue ALL THIS ; 3 R AN WEEK HARTEFORD. MAIDS OF AMERICA With Al K. Hall fl And An All-Star Cast. # Ladies” Matinee—10c _ LADIES’ NIGHT [Ftna Bowling Alleys Each Wednesday Eve. fleys open to ladies every Afternoon. R LADIES’ TAILO ING DEPARTMENT t 21l times ready to remodel your Coat or Suit into the latest style. ourning Garments Made up at shortest notice. xpert tailors. ffery reasonable prices. RAPHAEL’S DEPT. STORE, 280 MAIN STREET. HARTPORD ART SCHOOL [asses in Drawing aod Painting. Day and Evening. pstructors: Philip L. Hale of Bos- ton; Robert F. Logan—Apply too far ahead, I'm not in his cla now." 8 Prospect St. Hartford, Conn, , . Ne NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1 916. A STORY YOU OAN BEGIN AT ANY 1TIME How Cora and David Tempioc Solved Their By ZOE BECKLREY Marital FProblems \ Say “Charge It Pay Weekly Fifty-Fifty For a prank Janet stealthil surprised him frowning over a check book out of “Police! tention from his action, 3ut her wor ght. stuifed the things Walter shoolk 1 “Only a few Janet knew v what he wa the settlement of a difficult matter, and She reached into the drawer and brought out Walter protested. “Walte you know that as a ma ing anything from your She was pokin get the e at r the bil Then s “I thought s our home. You were going to s account and I knqw you didn’t intend to tell me anythin you would have had 1 walter i an hour, if I did not sto; dollars in your name in the to the agreement on which ou ve He knew it. Sut the difficulty he. felt s with him more Strongly than “It's a man’s part to pay the exPenses of his home, Janet took his face in her hands and held it firmly for attention. 1id, shaking him., with common. It isn't fair—and our agreement the arrangement “Listen to me, Your agreement to share fifty-fifty for vou in my hall bedroom—alone. your hall bedroom—alone. You, as & conventiona] kept up this state of affairs until you made enough support me. I as a modern business "' folbe supported: and) Iiceiusedl mEthe second marriage |about the Henry Blossom-Victor Her e e e i 1) hap- | angl 1 i - g \ C 1 : arria I e 2 3 '~ | contracted for the big Essanay-Chap- | angle program a play without a wom till you ‘made your pile’ I provosed that we move our hall bedrooms to- |Pert comic opera, “The Princess Pat,” |1in Revue of 1916, a five part com- |an in the cast—"The Patriot,” in alesmansnip ourse ~ gether, add a kitchen and a living roOom and a study and throw the door | Which John Cort wiil present at the and the film will be shown in |which W. S. Hart is starred, and between them open. Of course we had:- to get murnity from tar and feathering us. should Especi ‘A man pays a wor “Why should he not ps conventional, stereotyped, barrel-o # ‘I'm not a regular husban finger at her in warning not to for them myself.” she said And, without heeding his sputtering, she walked off with bills for half the expenses of their little new home, How Many Moves Ahead? Two friends of mine took up the : game of checkers a year or two ago, | and have been having a kind of running tournament together ever since. The other day, I asked one of them how the tournament was coming op. “We've stopped,” he said. “He “Why do you let him beat you like that?” I asked. Too Much Like Work. He hela out his hands in a move- ment of helplessness. ‘Couldn’t help it. He plays so many moves ahead; I won't do that. Too much like work—what’s the use. I don’t suppose there is any par- ticular use. Games are a sort of men- tal gymnastics that do not accom- plish anvthing except to train the muscles of the mind. If you cease enjoying them, it is time to seek some other exer se. But the philosophy of playing a game 50 many moves ahead I like. <n n Always Play a Move at a Time. When children first play checkers, they play just one move at a time. By a mov win, and keeps on winning until his | opponent also learns to play a move ahead. d by, one of them hegins to plan ahead. At once he starts to opened heaf of black-covered book. As her hands closed over his eves he tried to shove the Help! I'm being kidnappead! divert her n swiftness of perception foiled that “Mr, Stedman, a¢ your lawful wedded wife I dem pers you is secretin’ from the partner of your bosom queen style, pointing a rizid finger nd to see them pa- ' she cried in which of—of mine!” bring about the game of banter, and bills. Stedman, I'm surprised at yvou,’ man you have no right to showed through her joking. She glanced at the hook. fitting up little bank about it. In K agreeing to id lamely. languishing HERE TOMORROW {BOOKED FOR KEENEY'S AT FOX'S THEATER You Have a Future for me in would have to marry and v 4 : The e T One of the most enjoyable things | The management of Keeney’s had | Thos. Ince contributes to the Tri- keep the com. |Iyceum with Miss why you pay for my hall bedroom and ™y half of the kitchen and study? |Cort theater, New York, and Park | g nay people, for whom Chaplin posed |roster, however, contains, besides Mr. Has Helped 100 men ally since I earn almost as much as vou do?” i n's car fare When he’s with her rent when she’s with him?" “Walter Stedman, is our marria8€ to be exactly the same hum-drum, ;an-tune, rubber-stamp kind of mar.. rriages or is to be unique, he protested. It is rated as the biggest comedy , undistinguished, from a billion Other ma: inal, modern, sensible? You're a Tegular husban Walt y that hen, if you're not one, prove it by lettinz me keep these and settle wagging his One move ahead soon becomes two three checker player the end of the game at the very be- few moves ahead is wax in his hands. Two other good vaudeville acts arc [ EFay : ALL FROM ERIN’S ISLE. plays for given. || DUS] p2 — e _— : \Pa]]as,Pammoufl: ; Story That Irish Regiments Are Re- who plays only a o TAKE YOUR PICK OF e S————_ crulted With Britishers Scouted. ** stands aside for any- With “The Princess Pat.” THESE SMART ONES |- Dublin, Ireland, Oct. 27.—The e Vorld Sanas aside for any: charge thut the Irish regiments, and 52 Davia Starr Jordan. plays several moves ahead,” is another way of put- Playing the Game of Life Several |n the ensemble to form a pleasing Who is going to buy a | Teal comic opera with an abundance forecasts the the neighborhood, transportation development of | 1ight to hear. Seats now at Crowell’s, looks thoroughly tacilities, and buys a home that srows in value and | A skunk neckpiece may be fas- that fits into his own future. : chances to | flower. e him, without studying any of One young man permits himself to drift into any i Another studies himself, the field, and tries to find where he will fit best, anq 4 greatest ultimate opportuna T[] WQRK Do you play the game of life one | many moves you can play it wisely? b A {S to buy Clothing for SAVE and deny yourself ‘VH i vourself and your Famil, when W are quite willing to let you have the the Garments, Shoes, etc., that you need ¢ and accept payment ia Convenient Weekly Payments that will be ar- A i ranged to suit your income? No extras of any sort—No interest—One 3 Fair Price to All We Clothe Men, Women and Children LADIES’ SUITS ...$14.95 and up TRIMMED HATS ...$2.98 and up LADIES’ COATS 8 and up LINGERIE WAISTS 98c and up STREET DRESSES 8 and up SILK WAISTS . 3.98 and up PARTY DRES and up SHOES .. 3.50 and up ; ‘ MEN’S SUITS AND OVERCOATS “Don't A ‘ SUITS $10 to $32 OVERCOATS $12 to $35 i s foRkEeny ; HATS SHOES FURNISHINGS S » - $57—695 MAIN STREET bills and W five poor HARTI'ORD i — Sk, 3 btk on |“THE PRINCESS PAT” |CHAPLIN REVUE IS |A WOMANLESS FILM | Think—Plan—Work incur in Ruth Welch and a clever cast from its long run at the in the near future. The re- | which will be one of the attractions at the Y. M. C. A. vue is the supreme effort of the Es- |at Fox's today and tomorrow. The Square theater, Boston, is that fact Hart, two children, an Indian, 82 before joiring the Mutual compan IT CAN HELP YOU achievement ever recorded in motion pictures and throughout the country managers of theaters are literally falling over each other in their ef- forts to get the right to show it. The owners of Keceney's were in the van- guard and as a result the picture booked for New Britain at any early within two weeks. patrons will be offered episode in the great Vit comes a photoplay that reaches all heart: A photoplay that makes a never-to-be-forgotten impression.Such an achievement is this nc Dustin Farnum feature. The story portrays life in a typical western mining town, the wild, crude, wirile type of man- hood and womanhood which prevaded i s S the scenes of '49. Into this atmos- S rle WWilli AR el phere comes a young\ rson, simpldf of Amer most beautiful film stars roinded, strong-hearted How Mr: D feoR e e il o, e Farnum as the parson subdues the e town; brings care rounders and church hypocrites into his fold, re- generating their lives and purifying their thoughts is a portrayal of last- ing impression on the mind. The Key- stone Players will present “Dollars and Sense” and the Paramount t In additon there will be twenty | recls of Universal releases in addition | to a five-part dramatic offering. Interest continues unabated “Fads And the musi comedy in which the Shaws, support- o led by a capable company, are pla Burton-Holmes Travelogue to balance I e e e nd this interesting and instructive pro- el o ot he s gram which will be continuous from i and costumes are most elaborate and 2o Ll pen o detiiang, soon be- enhance the value «of the offering. ST years old, and “Rags,” the famed ca- ” e R - hine actor. Hart has the part of Bob particularly the Dublin Fusiliers are Wiley a homesteader and miner, | being filled up from veserves of Hng- whose suspicion that his government | lishmen and Scotchmen, is repudiated has defrauded him makes of him a | by the colonel lately comanding the traitor-. The photography of this fea- | Dublin Fusiliers battalion recruited ture is said to far excell anything of | from the commercial young men.y imilar nature ever produced on the j There are, he says, not twenty men in reen. A commendable piece of {the battalion who are not Irish, and photography is a night scene showing | these had come in because they had the tents of the soldiers illuminated |Irish friends in it. from within. A bugler suddenly ap- } Irishman who had been serving in pears in relief against the canvas of |English regiments had applied for one end, and, blowing “Taps,” sounds ' transfer to the Dublins and this may the signal for the extinguishing of have given rise to the charge. Some the lights. One by one, the lights dis- | English regiments have been recruited appear, until only darkness remains, | almost entirely from the Irish in Eng-w that it is not weighed down with an unwieldly lot of chorus girls nor cursed with a collection of vaudeville. There are just enough young ladies background. “The Princess Pat” is a of the |Cf humor and a score that is a de- teneqd by a gold motif or a velvet penetrated fairly, however, by the |land, notably the Tyneside Irish which ¢lowing embers of the camp fires. In | was officially called the Northumber- addition to the above the Paramount 'land Fusiliers, in the lists as the 18th will offer the favorite of the screen London regiment. The casualty lists Dustin Farnum, in “The Parson of |of Scottish Highland regiments show Panimint.” Once in a while there ja large proportion of irish names. ers an good pay. WIFE TOO ILL RYZON IN BED MOST OF TIME PR R R L) A 1 Menu for Tomorrow ) e i Bl‘(’al;f;;.xt CAL T Stewed Prunes “akes Rice Croquettes Batter Bread Coftee Lunch Potato Salad Apple Fritters Chocolate Dinner Boiled Fish Egg Sauce Boiled Potatoes Baked Squash Apple, Celery and Nut Salad Sago Puading Caftee Apple, Celery and Nut Salad—Talke equal parts of apples, celery, and wal- nut meats. Cut the celery into crescent shaped pleces, as it slices naturally, and the apples, first in eights and then across in thin slices. Use broken nut meats, do not chop them. Serve on lettuce leaves with French dressing. Batter Bread——Beat two eggs well; sti] half a cupful cooked rice into two cupfuls milk add them to the eggs, with two tablespoonfuls bugter. Then sift in half teaspoonful salt and two cupfuls Indian meal; stir all to- gether and bake in battered pans. ®at hot. SINGER’'S MIDGETS E. Pinkham’s Vegetable | COMING FOR WEEK Compound. Three railroad cars will bring into | Was so poor and my constitution so run ity the greatest theatrical or- will open a week’'s engagement at the theater in the near future. The Sing- consists of twenty-five tiny midgets, twenty-three persons, eighteen ponies, two midget elephants and over fifty dogs. | They will present what has been just- the greatest attraction in The twenty-five tiny mid- most accom- Dlished artists that have seen in this city things that they do Among the man strong men, boxers, come- today but for it. I would tell all wo- London, Oct. instrumentalists. ten distinct specialttes, each and ev one a sensational hit. It must be re- g Aqgison Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. niembered that these men and women 4 L 'diana perfecly formed There is hardly a neighborhood in this and none over 38 T 5 «mrdo zot depend found health by using this good old- Lpon their size to “get by” they are fashioned root and herb remedy. | have suffered such a large decrease in artists each and every one of them If there is anything about which you i th entertainment would like special advice, write to the nction of the government will incon- such as has never been seen in this Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.,, Lynn, venience only a handful of the olderl little folks, ¢nd proporticned inches tall, but they Her Health Restored by Lydia Corn Bread Mix 1 level tablespr~a butter with 2 tablespoons suger to a light cream, add 1 yolk of egg, stir well and add the 2nd yolk of egg, beat the whites very stiff, add them with 1 level cup of corn meal, 1 level cup of wheat flour, 3 level toa- spoo YZON, The Per- fect Baking Powder, and 1 cup of milk. Mixlightly together, until all is well mixed, then pour into a buttered and floured shallow baking pan, bake in medium oven 15 minutes or till done. 7 The baking knowledgo of 10,000 women and many famous cooking experts made the new RYZON Bak- ing Book, Edited by NMarion Harris Neil, iliustrated in colors, the RYZON Baking_Book is the first complete manual of baking powder baking. Although priced at $1.00, ou can get a RYZON Baking Book v using RYZON. - Ask your grocer. The Bread America) « Was Raised On { With RYZON you will make better corn bread, muffins and other corn meal products than you have_ever been able to make before. / RYZON THE PERFECT BAKING POWDER Indianapolis, Indiana. — ¢ My health down that I could not work. I was thin, pale and weak, weighed but 109 pounds and was in bed most of the time. i beganitake LATE MODELS, ing Lydia E. Pink- g . ham’s Vegetable This turban came from Paris, the el cot ) Illflterml being Joffre blue velvet con- rasted with a brilliant silvery “fan- months later I | . . p,r maidens is the plainer black weighed 183 pounds. | Velyet model bound with blue satin I do all the house- | 1ippon, picoted and trimmed on tho | work and washing for eleven and Ican | oft side with one pink rose appli- | truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- | qued. acrobatic | etable Compound has been a godsend Z singers, to me for I would have been in my grave NEW USE FOR CLUBS. —The National Lib- They do men suffering as I was to try your valu- | eral club and the Constitutional club, s . WM. GREE! two of the most widely known eyl Iy 8 | don’ clubs, have heen commandeered for war administration purposes. Both buildings are close to the War Office and the ministry of munitions. Like all the clubs of London these two The Mar- Lyceum ever been country, wherein some woman has not RYZON is made t.ith a new and better phosphate. Man must have phesphate in his food. membership through the war that the | Mass, | members.