New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 23, 1917, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LYCEUM THIS WEEK Walter Naylor Players IN | Margucerite Clark’s Greatest Comedy Success Baby Mine . Matinees—Tuesday, {* and Saturday, Price 10-20c. Nights—10-20-30-50c. Thursday | Seats 3 Days in Advance. ALL THIS WEEK NAZIMOVA, in “WAR BRIDES” Starts Afternoons at 3:45 Evenings at 9:30 TUES, WED. THEODORE ROBERTS, in ‘PUDD'NHEAD WILSON’ 3, TONIGHT | Dorothy Gish “Children of the Feud” Pearl White “Pearl of the Army” Florence Rose Fashions Keystone Comedy “The Village Blacksmith” Other Features Wed. and Thurs. Theda Bara, in “The Darling of Paris” Bushman-Bayne “The Great Secret” RAND THEATER ’AM HOWE’S ' BIG SHOW With Sam Howe Himself! 2—Act Burletta—2 ‘A WIFE IN "ERY PORT” Ladies’ Matinee, 10c, N et L) 3 NOSE CLOGGED FROM A COLD OR CATARRH pply Cream in Nostrils To Open Up Air Passages. T a1 what relief! You open right up. the air h clear and you can o more hawking, 15 discharge, headache, struggling for breath at cold catarrh is gone. stuffed up! Get a small le of Ely’s Cream Balm from your ;gist now. Apply a little of this rant, antiseptic cream in your nos- , let it penetrate through every air age of the head; soothe and heal swollen, inflamed mucous mem- giving you instant relief. Ely’s m Balm is just what every cold J§ catarrh sufferer has been scek- " It's just splendid. clogged ges of nes i, no your or Ne NEW e A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His How Cora and David Temple By ZOE Solved Their BECKLEY Marital FProblema heiSenles ob Lote: Janet's chllling reception of Walt's book, her unwillingne: to hear why he had gone to Lucy's studio on the evening he had to work at home, and his detention at the book bindery while the first belated copy wa struck off, caused a wretched spell o silence to settle between the two. Into each one’'s mind came the same difli- cult problem. When modern man and women weighs life it is on scales of Love and Work. The two must balance or life itself is found wanting. Withou Love, Work sinks life to drudder Without Work, life sinks to sloth. But if one must outweigh the other, 1t should be Work. I%r, after all, there is a kind of love in work; whereas no amount of love will keep love alivc and nourished on the bread of ness. This was the religion of life both Walt and Janet Stedman. Both for | in had built their lives on work hefore love had come to them in common. They had told each other, in those deep moments when one dedicate one's self anew to life, that if cver their love showed itself to be a drag on work, which to them also meanth growth, they would be strong enough to be surgeons to their own lives, and sever the tie that bound them. When every morning Janet w leave for her work with Roy on their magazine, Walt would say: “‘Good luck to you today, dear!" ‘What his words uttered was a wish that the day would bring a rich yield of work. But in his heart he despised the type of magazine Roy Nicoll v putting out. Nicoll, like a good bu iness man, measured success by the money it brought. If the public was willing to pay money for “pap and adulterated food’ 'in its magazine: Nicoll intended to give the public what it wanted. Janet, seeing only the immediate effects of the magazine, thought it good. Walt, seeing farther than she in such things, saw that under coll’s influence ‘“Woman” would he only “pap and adulterated food” for- ever. When he wished her ‘“good luck,” therefore, in thea mornings ne | had a twinge of conscience. He wished her “good luck but not the pur- poses for which Roy Nicoll and the magazine stood. He wondered to himself whether 1t was not mere fealousy or a curmud- geon spirlt toward Roy Nicoll that made him feel so far removed from sympathy with the magazine; henca | Work down for hoth Walt and Janet! | idle- | s Work wa with Janet's work he had felt the s type of magazine ybefore he had eve In fact, his Noose,” writt L met Janet, 1 detestation of a that very it in prote: Then e way ‘Woman" met Nicoll. dtory, ho even betore been inspired tale he had read in ! . He had writee: what that m azine had praised, in the samo w Nicoll had pralsed In Wi story, | the very thing Walt himselr despised. | Now Janet's progress lay altogether in the direction which to Walt seemed to lead to the kind of writing Walt was trying his best to destroy. 1n ! short, Janet's work and Walt's work were hopele: it owar other. He looked for the thousandth time the brave little book he and Tucy Renton had produced—for he way convinced Lucy had almost a share in it as he. Tt had come from the depths of his heart that book. it rang true. Tt would live. M would arouse thought. The joy he had tak- en in writing it! y Janet had little share in its crea- tion. She sympathized less with it than she did with Roy Nicoll's ideas for their magazine. Lucy, on the other hand, had been the spark which had struck fire from him—and there, at last, a strong, almost living, think: ing thing, was the book! He looked from it to the latest is sue of “Woman'—Janet's and coll’s first number. Their ideas had indeed prodiced a harmonious mi azine. Janet had glowed over it as |though It had been her child. Her work had developed Janet amazingly in the short time she had been editing “Woman.” Roy Nicoll had net only | given her the great chance for de- velopment, but w doing infinitely | more for her than Walt himself, it wor s the measure. And to Walt, the measure, as it was to he realiz ' about tae wias lon Silken he had by his agalins at as Janet. Walt read the issue of the magazine again and again, hoping to see some- ing in it to approve. Rut the more he read it the worse he felt toward it. Suddenly the whole structure of their lovo appeared to Walt to be wrong. Fe, Walt, was not giving Janet rthe sympathy in her work she needed: vet Roy Nicoll gave her that ver, thing. She. Janet. could not givae AWalt the svmpathy in his work he craved: and Laey Benton save him that very thir Tove was drags BY RUTH CAMERON The Etern ““There, said the Authorman’s Wife, triumphantly, “I'm so glad we're invited to the Charity Ball.” “Why?"” asked the Authorman. “There'll be a terrible crush, and the cards are two dollars and a half this vear instand of two dollars—on ac- count of the war, I suppose.” “I know that,’ said the Author- man’s Wife. “I shouldn’t care for it ordinari but it's such a splendid chance to wear my new gown.” The Authorman laughed. “I don't see anything so that,” his wife protested. “I was thinking, dear Madame, of what you said to me just before you bought the gown.” “What 2" Like Flora McFlimsey, She Had Noth- ing to Wear. funny in “That you had to have it because so many important things kept com- ing up that you needed that kind of a gown for. “Well, they did.” “And now you are planning to to something that you wouldn't urally be interested in that can have a chance to wear gown."” “1 suppose that's terribly funny from a masculine point of view,” said the Authorman's Wife; “but, as I have often told you, my sense of hu- mor isn't masculine.” First She Wants Something to Wear, Then— “My dear,” said the ‘as if you needed to tell me! But reaily, can’t you see that you've pressed the whole philosophy of wom- an’s attitude toward dre First she wants a dress to wear and then she wants somewhere wear the dress. It's an eternal cle. Whick ever way the poor who wants to cut the cost of li turns, he finds himself shut in by it.” The Authorman's Wife retorted something to the cffect that the poi man who wanted to cut down the of living might sometimes look his cigar case instead of at his gowns, and the argument be- came so personal that T lost interest it. But I loved the Authorman's analysis. s0 Authorman, ex- eir- man cos in wife's vou? Just the Dividing Li Tt scems to me he sketched just th dividing line between a normal an an abnormal interest in clothes. To want pretty clothes so that y may be appropriately and becomin dressed at all the functions you d sire to attend is normal To work the thing the other way around, and go to functions so that al Circle. you can have a c¢hance to clothes is abnormal. It's normal to want when one takes part in course. It's abnorma! to the chief pleasure and of the intercoursé. wear your to soc look nl make raison inte that d'etre well | BRITAIN DAILY | market | years | ferer from indigestion, dyspepsia con- Clothes are nothing but the frame, the frames more than the pictures. ple that portant T WEDDING ANNOUNCEME: News of the | Miss Ilizabeth I and Mr John Sheehan are im- belated wedding of wr, daughter of Mr. of Laselle street of. Hartford, reported as having taken place early in the fall, ha t been made. The ‘fil‘uon] is engaged in the automobile | business in the Capital City Farr and which is 8o | nat- | you ! the somewhere, | to: stiff neck, all pains and aches yield to Sloan’s Liniment. Do nof rub it. Simply apply to the sore spot, it quickly penetrates and relieves. Cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments, it does not stain the skin. Keep a bottle handy for rheumatism, sprains, bruises, toothache, neuralgia, gout, lumbago and sore stiff muscles. At all druggists, 25c. 50c. and $1.00. _Sloan’s Liniment H/ILLS FAIN Sore shoulders, lame Buck, and it is only among uneducated peo- | [ although his voc HERALD. TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1917. ws for Theater Goers and Women Readers T SAYS SHE COULD NOT SLEEP NIGHTS Patz, 1 Wonde Many | va 9 Broad Street, Re- ful Story That Will Pceople in New B Tone's success here in New repetition of its the United States. has a formula is seientific. 1t was put on the to last and for the past four has steadily increased in the of ales, The Lax-a-Tone thousands of testimonials all ove the United States and malkes it a practice to publish home testimonials In each and every town. simply throughout remedy that a that it numbe Co. has from MRS. EVA PATZ, Mrs. Patz says. “For a long time T have suffered severely from stomach trouble. I would have severe attacks of indiges- | tion, was tired out and run down, had violent headaches and could not sleep nights. 1 saw unless some- | thing was done quickly I would take to my bed, but am glad to say by the ' use of Lax-a-Tone 1 have entirely regained my health, and I thank ! Lax-a-Tone." i Now don’t forget if you are a suf- | pation, are nervous and run down, that Lax-a-Tone will give you results that you never dreamed of, The Lax-a-Tone man 1s at the Fcon- omy New England Drug Co., 5| Main street, where he is introducing, ' daily, this remedy to the New Britain public, SAM HOWE’S COMPANY HEADED BY HIMSELF Having surrounded himself with as capable a company of performers has graced the boards of the theater in several s made hi diences Grand Sam Howe 1917 debut to good sized au- at the popular Hartford yesterday, and if plause the efforts company is to be accepted as a ori- terion, then the company is in for . busy week from an attendance point. Howe is the same old Yyears gone by, always able to bring: forth a laugh when it tin and 1 organs have ceased playhouse 1n the ap- | of the( tendered stand- | Sam of | ! to be tuneful, his efforts to warble | antiquated i to | | | | rons. do not endanger| g chorus giri as soloists melodic his popularity, Ppic try their “skil been tried by numerous companies this season, and the stunt has met| with favor, but when the Howe girls were tried out in the rendition of “By the South Sea Isles™ it began to look s if the suburbanites were to miss| that beautiful opportunity of secing how close to frigidity the “‘rattle on | the Connccticut company and The! “New Haven™ road lines can be made | without causing the demise of its pat-| | has! While the star, Mr, 1lowe, occupies most of the attention. there are number of opportuniti for Harry | Rowen, another member of the troups, | to seeure some chances to break in| sionally with a joke or two, and s the of them. Dainty . A8 vivacious as ever, sin best well, and dances gracefully, and a1 of friends was added to her o ready lengthy list hy her tireless of forts last evening. Steflie Ander and I2dith Hall are excellent perfoi and what they do is done we Loretta, the prima donna. desp ct that her voice bordered racuous tones last evening, duc to cold, was acceptable. | The plot of the burletta is hnfll! around a yacht owner who Is the pos- sor of a wife in every port that he visits, also one aboard the sailing craft and the sit ions that confront him prove exciting for the victim and funny to the audience. host se ht-1fearted Women, light-hearted woman i the joy of a man’s life. Beauty will fade, a good figure will change, but the charin of healih and chee il endure to the end. But how can | 4 woman be cheerful and happy when : down by some female de- -angement, with a backache, head- ache, and often on the verge of a Servous breakdown. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound is the standard remedy for such ailments. During the last 40 years thousands of homes have been made pappy by this woman's great remedy for woman's ills, Lig A cheerful { new chapters in the | threc {eity + Brides™ | start | ope— ey e e LYCEUM PLAYERS IN NEW SUCCESS “Baby Mine” Ably Produced With Murphy in Hit Role It is indced **Some Bu Lyceun this week. The > s start their second week Britain with a play that to create a lot of fun for those for- | tunate enough to visit the scenc of their activities. That there action from the beginning of the act until the drop of the curtain on the final scene will bhe attested by all those who attended last night. Ralph Murphy in the role businesst man around whom the entire action of the play is seen at his best. If, in his previous en- deavors, this player secured a hold on' New Britain audiences his work I night stamped him an actor des tined ever to hold attention here. Playing opposite him, Miss Dorothea | Antel was exceptionally good. Some | of her speeches were rather long as ! were the cause of a tripping in lines now and then: bul owside of t she gave a zood accounting. She has more than enough to do throughout the play, what with taking care the baby and the other little things that must be attended to throughout the entire action of the play. As a fun-maker, there is none hot- ter than Philip Quinn. To his care Wi entrusted a part that calls for action every minute. And Mr. Quinn supplies it. In situation he figures in there is room for laugh- ter. He goes step further. He sends the audience into spasms, L night he did not miss one chance convulse , an wive audience with laughter. ving the role of his wife is Mi Virginia Perry. She illustrates just what can be done with husband when a wife knows The entire cast, as a matter is good. To the four people men- tioned above, however, must go'the laurels. They have the leading parts and play them for all they are worth. Others who contribute well to a play is an attraction well worth while Orrin Burke, Har Hamil- ton, Victor Beecroft, Miss Irene An- tel and Miss Margie Dow. To give away the plot here would ho to spoil the play for thosc who have not seen it. i by at the or Play- in New is destined of a centers n every one to a how. of fact, K. CROWDS ENTHUSE OVER “WAR BRIDES” With for the sensational **W; Kc Brides” a special attraction, ney's of- fers to the amusement seekers of the city this markable week one of the most re- lay-outs of vaudeville that New had an opportunity cight reels of sensations and thrills incorporated in the classic film pro- duction, presented hy Nazimova, the great Ru an tragedienne, nd a wonderful company, the bill rts off as o program par excellence, ing along its trail the Paramount feature, a picturi: “Pudd'nhead Wilson,™" Theodore 1Roberts. Then s and ever photopls Britain h to enjoy is splendid ation of introducing there are big serials which have be running for weeks vaudeville acts, which will last and bi The shov over four Tours, is offcred to the people of the | environs increase in the price of an action deplicated by er in New England. That all who wish to may have the management has this thrilling speet ternoon at 3:45 and in the evening at 9:30. The feature will be preceded by the Paramount hookings and the serials as well as the vaudeville. This week's vaudeville entertainers include Doss, the man that grows and other novelty favorites. and its without slightest mission other th the no see War opportunity, arranged fo acle in the af- the " Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast . Cerenl with Crean: ried kKgg Flannel neai: Cof Tanch Fried Potatoes Paked Custard Sweet W Tea Dinner Cream of Squash Soup Broiled Breast of Laml Rice Croquettes Stuffed Peppers Lettuce Irench Girape Sherbet Coffeo Dr Plannel Pancakes—Beat well, add half teaspoonful level tablespoonful t fuls milk and sufficient flour to makhe thick pour batter. Beat hard, add » teaspoonfuls baking powder, hont 1in, then bake at once in large pan calkes. four ecgs salt, one three Sherhet—Dissolve pound sugar in one pint of boiling water, boil two minutes, then set de until cold. Add one pint grape juice, the juice one small lemon, and turn into freezer. When half frozen add the white of one egz whippad to a stiff froth with one tablespoonful powdered sugar, and finish the frc ing. . Grape one-haif of | that | | n e L e omplexion Fresh as a- Dais in sight — Remarkable discovery of skin os- mosis quickly enables women with sunken cheeks, wrinkles and marks ef age to become | most beautiful, youthful and | charming. | By Mlle. Mareix, France's Great Urize Beauty a1 and de Chevanne, age possesses a smooth, velvet-like skin complexion, without wrinkle in sight told the writer pe sonally in Paris that she owed it all to the discovery of skin osmosis. With this marvelous discovery every complex- ion blemish can be banished In three nights in muny instances, and you can awaken in the morning with a beautiful natural rose colored complexion as fresh as a daisy. I have known dozens of hollow-cheeked, tkled, aged-looking women, who had n up all hope of ever looking beauti- and youthful again, to “Come back' again become most beautiful, youthful ascinating in from two to three weeks' by this wonderful simple method matter what your age or what tried unsuccesatully, skin osmor positively br you new beauty and Merely wash your face in warm night and rub in a teaspoonful any good pure roseated you cun obtain from your drug morning wash. the face with and rub in more cream. weeks or less watch how the old, hard skin turns into new, looking skin almost all due to simple produced solely by warm roseated cream. But bo surc pure roseated cream, it s different thing from ordinary to o Count vears of I's wonderful vouthful he At seventy “lously soft almost girl-like B ful and and time No have will youth water or two which In the water at the mag rough youthful very eyes soft, herore your skin osmosis water and to use an entire ot for Wrink he confounded prefer good 1 set se them and you not ally any le creams and them 1 Tokulon (Ltoseated), will_do. If you have of Japanese Tce Pencils and connection with the cream quick actlon on the deepest wrinkles matter of how long standing, in one night’s time and awaken on the morrow to witness most astonishing results. 1 personally guarantee success came, in any of my newspaper Which 1 write on subjects relating to beuty, or 1 will refund the amount paid products which [ recommend, You take your dealer's receipt at the time you make your purchase. Iv American address ls Simone Marfex, ) 2nd street, New York. NOTE manufacturer's dlon Roseated have such unbounded in thelr particular brand, that offer to forfeit $200.00 to any charitable {nstitution, i it can be shown that it will not banish every complexion blemish and give most astonishing new beauty to wrinkled, care-w aged women in three days' thme in many instances. Tt can be obtained absolutely fresh and guaranteed pure from Dickinson’s, or most any goodfq, druggist in this city. mu: pers but wr face with in every anticles any provided he of Cremegs ad- | cup- | With | ollow- | “The Daring of Paris,’ INCOMPARABLE THEDA ’ ON FOX SCREEN' Tonight at Fox's theater, Miss Dor- Arts Miss Keystone Fine of of Triangle Children the “The the othy Cish production in the the be headliner program the seventh will On Pearl Feua™ bill. be the same will White in the \rn epi- sode of military serial. “Pearl a three reel brand new of the comedy, "he Village the Florence Rose Fash- ions and another good comedy makes up the program for tonight. Tomorrow and Wednesday the best bills that has ever been fered in a Fox program will be shown at {his house. Miss Theda Bara the foremost Iox s who was selected for the first Fox de luxe production on account of her national popularity will appear in “The Darling of Paris”. Miss Ba is too kell known to the | movie fans to need any special men- tion here. Suffice to say that in “The ! Darling of Paris” she does her best work and in this production she is surrounded with the best cast that has ever supported a star. She is the gypsy girl who with her mother comes to a big city and s kidnaped by the monarchs of the underworld. “The Darling of Paris” was originally booked into Fox's for four days but the engagement has been conflned to two days on account of the demand for the feature. There will be no ad- vance in prices for this engagement. On the same program Wednesday and Thursday will be the new ifox film comedy “The Cloud Puncher,” the new Pathe’ News and the second Blacksmith' one of o THEDA BARA , DIRECTION WILLIAM FOX ’\Wedxiesday and Thursday, at Fox’s Theater. cpisode of the Great Secret” Lushman and popu with Miss ar ser Mr. Fr: Beverly Bayne. Good Old Home-Made Family Cough Remedy Much Better than the Ready- Made Kind—Easily and Cheaply Prepared. L] . If you combined the curative proper- ties of every known “ready-made” cough: remedy, you would hardly have in them i all the curative power that lies in this simple “home-made” cough syrup which takes only 2 few minutes to prepare. Get from any drugfimt 215 ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth), pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. The total cost 18 about 54 cents and gives you a full pint of really better cough syrup than ou could buy ready-made for $2.50. astes Rl_cusnnt and never spoils. . This Pinex and sugar syrup prepara- tion gets right at the cause of a cou;ih and gives almost immediate relief. 1t loosens the phlegm, stops the nasty throat tickle and heals the sore, irri- tated membranes that line the throat, chest and bronchial tubes, so gently and easily that it is really astonishing. A day’s use will usually overcome the ordinary cough and for bronchitis, croup, ‘whooping cough and bronchial asthma, there is nothing better. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of penuine Norway pine ex- tract, combined with guaiacol and has been used for gemerations to break up severe coughs. To avoid disappointment, be sure to ask your druggist for “21% ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don’t accr‘?t anything else. A guaranteé of absolute satisfaction or money prompt- ly refunded, goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. \

Other pages from this issue: