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t ' LYCEUM JAIl This Week Walter i N ) Naylor B Players = A\ Opening in ROLLING | STONES” Come and See the New 4 Company Matinees—Tues., Thurs. and Sat.—10c-20c. N\ ¥ A\ N\ <4 W Wa¥y \ \ \ \\." \ /\ \\\‘\1‘\\‘ \ MM (¢ N . LLREZ A NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1917 There is But One Genuine Aspirin Counterfeits and substi- tutes may be ineffective, and even harmful. Refuse them. Protect yourself by demanding Bayer- ‘Tablets of Aspirin. ‘The genuine have “The Bayer Cross” on every package and on every tablet. “The Bayer Cross —Your Guarantee of Purity” Pocket Boxes of 12, Bottles of 24 and Bottles of 100 The trade-mark “Aspirin” (Reg. U. S. Pat. Office) is a guarantee that the monoaceticacidester of salicylicacid in these tablets is of AN the reliable Bayer manufacturc, AN e\ NI AN ' Nights—10-20-30-50c Seats Now at Crowell’s BY RUTH SIDE TALKS CAMERON The Easy Last summer, in the course of a walking trip, we stopped at a light- house which was a favorite point of interest to tourists. The kéeper had two children and we snapped them with our camera. Then we asked the keeper for his name and post office address so that we could send him copies. He gave it in a lack-lustre, unin- terested way which surprised me. T suppose your children have their pic- tures taken so often that it isn't much of a novelty,” I probed, ten® tatively. “Yes,” he sald: ‘* a good many of the folks take their pictures.’ “You must have quite a tion ?" Tonight, Fri. and Sat. Pauline Frederick in “THE SPIDER.” Other Good Films High COlass Vaudeville All Next Week Nazimova in “WAR BRIDES.” Py n 9 collec- “That’s the Last Wc¢ Hear of It.” ‘‘Well, no,” he said. “You see, the folks always take our address and promise to send the pictures, but most always that's the last we hear of it And then I didn't wonder any more that his voice was lack-lustre, It is 80 dangerously easy to make | generous promises! ‘And equally easy, evidently to for- get them! 1 P | City people go iInto ‘the country | | RAND THEATRE § W. & W. ar and Garter Show ith AB Star Cast, including on Clark, Bert Rose and Jac- quelin Tallman. musement Co.’s and, struck with the comparative | meagerness of opportunity in certain lines, they give off promises to share theirs, right and left. When they get back to the city they will certain. lv send magzazines and books and | post cards and snapshots, and &ood- ness knows what. Then they go bacl | {dren comes pretty n and the country folks watch for the Promiser postman to fulfill some of these promises, and watch in vain—unless perchance, like my friend pf the lighthouse, they have too much bitter experience to expect any fulfillment, The Wickedest Thing She Ever Did. Do you remember in “Trilby’ how someone asks her what was the wick- edest thing she ever did, and she tells about going off on a coaching trip and disappointing her little brother Whom she had promised to take on a picnic that day? Well, I think the wickedest thing I ever did was to promise a very old man at a country place where T went one summer that I would send him some post cards, and then off, and put it off until it late. To was too disappoint old people ar the unpardonable sins. ' But, someone pleads, one is so busy or chil- being’ one of | fthese days that one simply does not jhave time to do all the kind things one wants to do. Granted. But one does not heed to make careless promises to do, them. It's selfish never to promise, but isn’t it more selfish to promise, raise people’s hopes, and then not ,keep one's promise. Now, please, don't let thi make you afraid to promise. But rather, more ¢ punctilious about keeping them. T e Quick Way § © End Coughs, Colds i ¥ and Croup s v \m Excelleat, Inexpensive Home- Remedy that is pt and Sure. How Cora and Davia Temple A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His Solved Their Marital FProblems By ZOE BE(CKLEY you have a severe cough or chest sccompanied with soremess, throat hoarseness, or_difficult breathing, your child wakes up during the it yitzn :rounth d "0“ w:ntuml‘lek just try this pleasan ng ‘l'lo-nule cough remedy. Any drug- supply you with 214 ounces of (50 cents worth). Pour this into bottle and fill the bottle with sugar syrup. Thus , you have a pint of really re- le cough remedy—one that can ded upon to give quick and last- jef at all times. can feel this take hold of a cough way that means business. It and raises the phlegm, stops bt tickle and soothes and heals the ted membranes that line the t and. bronchial tubes with such iptness, ease and certainty that it eally astonishing. X i inex is a special and highly concen- ed compound of genuine Norway 3 extract, combined with guaiacol is noted for its speed in overcoming e coughs, throat and chest colds. ions of enthusiastic users have it famous the world over. e are many worthless imitations noted mixture. To avoid disap- nt, ask for “2% ounces of with full directions and don’t | pt anything eclse. A guarantee of b ‘tllted uti!flchq:l' orfln‘wnu_v prom'ptl_v nded, goes with this preparation. Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Emf The There were moments when Janet Stedman was seized by the wildest thoughts. A very net of confusion seemed closing around her. Bewil- dered and frightened; she would try to think out the situation calmly with regard to herself and Nicoll and Wal- ter and Lucy Benton. “If I only knew!" she would cry in her heart when panic gripped her, sometimes in the very midst of work at the office. “If T could only sce in- to, the future a little way—if 1 could only know what is In each of our minds. And that's the hideous part ~—none of us quite know what we are drifting toward.” What puzzled her even more than the feeling existing between her hus- band and Lucy Benton was the atti- tude of Roy Nicoll toward herself. Whole days passed during which Janet almost convinced herself that Roy regarded her as a valuable em- ployo and nothing more. She even .‘.‘& with ~voice to be some pro- wo- engagement by telephone one whom his smiling claimed beyond doubt man. | TJanet gave herself an almost liter- al shake when she found herself ac- tually feeling annoyed on one of these occasions. Some instinct fold her the person at the other end of the wire was Dorothea Crafton, whom Janet had not seen since both were guests at Hill Farms Inn months ago. Jan&t hated herself for being angry at Ni- coll for seeing Mrs. Crafton. She ha- ted Nicoll for making her hate he self. She hated Dot Crafton for “pur- suing” Roy. Then back round the circie she swung, hating and loathing herself and being thoroughly and un- a OPEN NOSTRILS! END A COLD OR CATARRH ¥ How To Get Relief When Head and Nose are Stuffed Up. 3 ount fift Your cotd in head o rrh disappears. Your clogged nos- % will open, the air passages of your a4 will clear and you can breathe ly. No more snuffling, hawking. | reasonably wretched. ous discharge, dryness or head- ‘ Everything was wrong. Life hrought no struggling for breath at| nothing but problems, one upon an- | other. Even the blessing of congenial work could not come unmixed with the bitterness of sacrifice—for she was sacrificing to her profession all that had formerly meant happiness. Her dear dream of having both work and tove was all but blotted out. Home was a mere shell into which she and Walt crawled wearily at night, silent, each with a mind on the morrow’s work.: ht. fet a small bottle of Ely’s Cream m from your druggist and apply a je of this fragrant antiseptic eream Your nostrils. It penetrates through Ty air passage of the head, sooth- jand healing the swollen or in- ped mucous membrane, giving you &nt relief. Head colds and catarrh magic. Don't stay stuffed-up fe. Relle¢ is sure, Fog Janet pushed a welter of papers im- patiently aside on her handsome d and rose, lips caught between teeth, | hands clenched nervously together, and walked to the window. It looked out over the teeming city | With its hundreds of tall, impene- | trable walls housing all sorts of hu-| man activities-—triumphs, ¢ ppoint- ments, struggles, perplexities such as hers perhaps. Janet wished she knew somebody to talk to, some one with a gift of prophecy, some one help her peer into the future @ her what it held. Her mood fitted well with the fog that wrapped the soggy town. Murky and dark were the streets, dim cg overheard him sometimes making an | vons some of them seemed, as looked down from her height. lights gleamed up, where the roofs that sheltered them were {in the smoly air. “If T could only see my way through it!" Janet spoke the wor alond without knowing it, striking her hands together distractedly, And very lost She had not heard the door open, nor a step across her thickly rugged floor. But with a leap at the heart she suddenly felt some one s close behind her. She neither s nor moved. Nor did Nicoll. could hear him breathe. Momenta she expected to feel his arms about her, vet she could not summon pov er to move. A spell seemed over her. The blood pounded in her temples. To Janet jt scemed as if some psychic current conveyed words to her as clearly as if Nicoll had shouted them. Not ordinarily phra but some- thing superfinely potent and com- pelling. Something that lifted her above all care. Something that gave her rest, robbed her of all will fight— With an effort, she turned, to bear the strain longer. “What a fog!"” sald Nicoll in a tone so casual that ‘to Janet's con- fused senses it seemed she must have experienced a waking dream. With both hands she covered her eyes, her burning face. “Come-—don’t smiled the man. unable be afraid of it “Let's go out in it l and explore.” | callea | to the world for { there ! him, | her, | Savarin had gripped to put it | ! prove j usual importance | She ha nding | to! r Goers and Women Reader REVELATIONS Lk AD How Robert Savavin Faced His Wife and Made Her See That She Had Lost Her Power Over Him, 1 do not think the woman who had herself Murs, Allis a moment or two that the realiz figure of the brown-bearded man con- fronting her was the man whose life she had ruined, the had believed dead, Robert Savarin Far a fleeting whom she husband, man her cond the artist, lost o many years be- cause of his clouded brain, gazed steadily at the woman whose conduct had loosened his grasp on sanity. His sister, Mrs. C‘osgrove, gave a little in- articulate cry and started'toward him, but I gripped her hand firmly and held her bac! With one glance into the ey Robert Savarin 1 had realized was no need to be afraid anything that he might do. ever sanity looked out of a man’s eyes it d from the clear depths of the rtist's sad brown orbs, “And so, Mildred,” he said at last, s that of [ slowly, and there was that in his voice scorch | which' it seemed to the very soul of the woman “T find you here.” The woman whom we had known as Mrs. Allis stared at him wildly for a moment, then with an inarticulate ¢ put her hands to her eves as though to shut out the sight of him, and swayed as if she were about to faint. 1 rushed to her s arm, but at my touch she steadied herself, took her hands from her eyes and struck my hand away from her with the fury of a wild cat. “Don't dare fouch me, you hypo- critical little beast!” she said, and I cauld not help but smile at the word “little,” for I am taller than she She misunderstood my smile, and her face darkened, while a look of such malignancy came into it that I shrank away from her. What followed came so swiftly that T did not understand it clearly until it was all over. I had a sudden terrified glimpse of her springing at me with hands outstretched to claw, of Dicky’s strong arms whirling me away from and of another figure that shot Letween me and the infuriated woman, When T looked up from the shelter of Dicky's embrace I saw that Robert the infuriated me must before Wwoman by holding her off and watching her ac tions as he would those of a maddened animal, while she writhed in his grasp and hurled gasping sibilant imprec tions against him. dred,” he said pleasantly. of | For, if | ide and grasped her | both arms and stood thus, | 11 at vour old tricks, T see, Mil- mm— ———— OF A WIFE AARRISON ] “That Cannot Concern Yol | At the casual tone the woman in his { eras) suddenly stood still and looked {at him through narrowed eyelids, In- ftuitively T understood the change which had come over her. | had a| ! shrewd guess that the Robert Savarin | of the old days had not been wont to look in such unmoved fashion upon I his wife's outbursts of rage, | & Robert!” she drawled at and I could not but marvel at ! quick return to poise—‘you are really alive. Where have you hidden elf so cleverly all these years?” nnot possibly concern Mildred,” he said quietly. Then draw- | ing her forward to an easy chair hé »ushed her gently into it, and, releas- ing her hands, stepped bhack and folded his arms, regarding her steadily. i T think beth of them had forgotten there was any one else in the room. And no one else in the room moved or | poke. Tt was like witnessing the max of a gripping drama, and all our attention was focussed upon the two principal actors. What “Concern me!’ unpleasantly; -0-9-0, ou, | Robert Savarin Knew. the woman laughied "I should say it does concern me. You happen to be my hushand, don’t forget that, Robert | Savarin, and for-fifteen have | thought you dead. Yau will find that | you cannot casily throw a wife ide like an old sho. “You are quite right,” the man re- ponded, “and I should not atte Mildred—there was a’dead ‘if You were my the woman's face pallor crept and clung, but he&F | was brave. | “Yau are raving!” she said con- temptuously. “Fifteen years' absenc !and pretended death does not rele |one from a marriage bond, however irksome it be.” | “No the man returned {“hut the. discovery of his ! wife’s marriage to another man pre- ivious to the ceremony she went | through with him is considered an | | effectual reles 1 believe. | The woman’s bravado shri | [fnrr- his words T saw her bite her | 1ips until a tiny spot of blood came. | 1l s0 voice celled be- | “You mean she said faintly, last, ~% of in me mean that the marriage were ortly after . he replied “To what extremity proofs placed vou left steadily. they drove me, has been my fate during the £ nce matters nothing to 3ut the charge of bigamy which angs over your head ought to mean fa great deal to you.” vour my s0 “WAR BRIDES” FOR NEXT WEEK'S BILL The coming to New Britain of “War Brid the most sensational photo spectacle of the vear, is expected to an of more film circles and the management of Keeney's which has secured the featurc for all next week is expected to accommodate record-breaking crowds every day. The film has been shown on Broad- way to capacity audiences with ad- mission charges of from $1 to $3 pre- valing. The Keeney management, however, has decided against increa ing the rates during the weck the | picture tops the local program and the regular charges will be made at the box office. The star in this noted camera triumph is Nazimova, one of the world's most celehrated actresses. the support of a splendid company. . For the next three davs the man- agement Will offer the big Frohman reen success, “The Spider,” present- ing Pauline Frederick at the head of the cast. This picture will be tonight for the first time in thi It is said 10 be a society dram exceptional interest ana it should tract large audiences. There will some other good film offerings includ- ing a new chapter in “The o Runner’ s s event than the in shown city. of at- he 5, 10, 25 and 50 Ib. cotton in2 and § Ib. cartons When you bake a 1 cake— ““Sweeten it with Domino’’ Granulated, Tab! Confect eeaaraene-iee T0 REMOVE DAN } TOIREMOVE DMIURUEE &) Get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour a little into your i hand and rub well into the scalp with the finger tips. By morning most, if not al’, of this awful scurf will have disappeared. Two or three applica- Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Mush Cream Boiled 2ggs Toast Coffee Fried Lunch Macaroni Cutlets IEndive Crulle Tea Dinner Boiled INish srench Fried Potatoes agetti with Cheese Lettuce Salad Coffec. Endive and dry the leaves of endive, then marinate with Chill for one hour Sprinkle with Salad—Wash Jrench dressing. and serve crisp. chopped chives, Allow one teaspoon- two drops Cocoa Junket ful powdered vanilla for each cupful milk, work to smooth paste with a little boiling wa- ter, add the warm milk and make the junket in the usual way. cocoa and IS GRIP 1S AWFUL, Gld Fashioned Remedy Gets Patients in buble. Because Michael Cullinan of 30 feared that he s about of the Bond street hecome a victim grip he his own medical adviser yes- of liberal to acted as v and pr ibed liberal dose of the of in terd whiskey. Because he member Judge 4o at was @ Meskill's doses James cla deport- ment police court session this morning and given a ticket good for expert treatment at the state farm for inebriates. He admitted remember- ing Judge Meskill's previous warning but thought it was all right, under the circumstances with a cold coming on, to temporarily suspend the rules Judge Meskill did not sustain the de fense. Joseph Nesker of 177 staged a vaudeville act 8 on Main street yesterday until inter- rupted by Policeman Frank M. Eng- lish. It cost him $3 and costs. Po- liceman English testified that the bi- cycle appeared to be as much intoxi- cated as its would-be rider and the combination attracted much atten- | | tion. Ludwig Rheinhold of §1 Church street said that he tried to cure a cold vesterday with cider brandy and can- dy but the prescription did not seem to agree with his constitution. He Curtis vith a tions will destroy ev bit of dan- druff; stop scalp itching and falling hair. wae discharged after Deing repri- manded by Judge Meskill and warned to be more careful in the future. | Chestnut Street Resident Says That He Received Wonderful Results From the Famous Remedy, Lax-a-Tone Mr. John Schweitzer, 391 Chestnut St., This City, Is Only One of Many Endorsers of Herbal Lax-a-Tone. rtin, the Lax-a-Tone expert at the Iiconomy New kngland, any New Britain citizens are endorsing 1 a he is glad to refer as to the merits of! and neighbors and wants the people of New Britain to remember that he is going to use home people from now on. This is something that is unheard of as a rule in advertised medicines, a8 most of them use outside testimonials. That Lax-a-Tone is a superior rem= edy for constipation, sour acid stomach, billous attacks, gas, bloat, nervous- ness and that all-tired-out, run-down feeling will be attested to by your own friends and neighbors. Mr. Martin says he today publishes the signed testi- monial of Mr, Schweitzer, who says. 3 “I have been a sufferer for a long time with malaria, and one who has suffered from that trouble needs no introduction to the miserable symptoms, That tired-out feeling where you feel more dead that alive, no appetite and bsolutely no ambition. To make a long story short, 1 have taken Herbal, Lax-a-Tone and I find it an excellent remedy and am glad to recommend it."% Sych statements as the above are bound to carry weight and at least are convincing, so all sufferers from this malady and those suffering from, indigestion and symptoms given in first paragraph will get excellent results, with the use of Herbal Lax-a-Tone. The Lax-a-Tone man is at the Economy New England Drug Co., 368 Main St., where he is introducing this remedy to the New Britain public. Mr. J. . M Drug Co., 365 Main St., says that v the new Herbal Tonic, Lax-a-Tone this remedy to your own friend Reg.U.S. ¥ Pat.Office AMERICAN CHICLE COMPANY B! .;;]f\('i)‘;‘ Jack __ CHEw NG GuM “You may have the witness,” says the attorney for the defense. Then he unwraps a piece of Adams Black Jack Gum. And why does he prefer Black Jack? Because the licorice flavor wards off throat infection and puts his voice in better condition to address the jury. The K"?éfi?!... Ouartét SOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH New Britain TUESDAY, EVENING, JAN. 30, 1917. at 8:13 o'clock er the auspices of the MEN’S BROTHERHOOD This is the first appearance of this famous musical organization in New Britain, and we ask your co-operation in glving them a hearty, welcome. Tickets may Dbe purchased from members of the Brother- hood. ADMISSION 75¢ and $1.00 ALL SEATS RESERVED—Tickets exchanged at Crowell's Store at 9 o'clock, Friday morning, January 26, 1917, Drug'