New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 20, 1917, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1917. p—— = News for Theater Goers and Women Keeps Her Children B in ngect Health Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepéir: | the Family Laxative for Many Years. Doellefeld of Carlyle, TIL. recently wrote to Dri Caldwell, at i Monticello, 111, that she has used Dr. { Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin in her home for a number of years, and would not ; be without it, as with it she has been able to keep her four children in per- fect health. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup' Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin that acts on the bowels in natural w and regulates n of thi most important Nearly all the sickness to which children are subject is tl‘x(‘eulfie to bowel inaction, and a mild, depend- able laxative, such as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin should have a place in every family medicine chest It is pleasant to the taste and children like it, and take it readily. while it is equally effective for adults. Reddg_rs tty as a Picture- can and dis- THIS WEEK 25th Anniversary of Russwin Lyceum | | 1 i Mrs. A How a muddy, sallow, aging skin be mmde wonderfully youthful beautiful through ‘remarkable covery of osmosis of the skin. When you see a thirty horrid crowsfeet around her rged nose deep lin bout the mouth, and possessed omplexion. you can be she knows beauty the average much cause anybody, after year or complexion, premeving a fresh, there is really Why any woman hetween thirty should not look from five to fif- ars younger than she really s by knowing the secret of just what to do. Tt ought to be g of pride with You to keep yi clear and your face yout much as it is to keep vour hands and mnalls clean. But you cannot hope iful and at ve unless i 1l _opportunity to act vouth matter what how coarse, harsh and unsightly nor what You have the moment ou produ: unger and - The Walter Naylor Piayers in Bmacy woman with past Ppouches pores, no no Dost m. by a She looking old ana she able to sign all &0 or the 1ce. on wrinkles while A act function no and teen simp that a facsimile of Dr. Caldwell's signature and his portrait appear on Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is sold | the vellow carton in which the bottle in drug stores everywhere for fifty | is packed. A trial bhottle, free of cents a bottle. To avoid imitations | charge, can he obtained by writing, and ineffective substitutes be sure vou | to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 455 Washing- get Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. See | ton St., Monticello. Illinois. REVELATIONS OF A WIFE By ADELE GARRISON What Her Mother's Letter Told. Margaret’s eyes This play opened the Lyccum Make This the {25 years azo. | | Big Week. Matince Tucsday, Thursday an_ entirely erent thing from face creams, ¥ and must not ba confounded with them. Most women p fer Creme Towalon &Roseated. If you ha: wrinkles. get a box of Japenese Tce Pens cfis and use them in connection with the cream and you can get quick mction on the deepest wrinkles, no matter of how long standing. _ For giving an inde- scribably beautiful effect to the neck and arms as well as suppressing almost fm- medlately the appearance of all smaller wrinkles and marks of age, many women use a little Santonex in connection with this method for producing skin osmosis., NOTE:—The manutacturers of Creme Tokalon, Roseated, have such unbounded confidence in their particular brand that they offer to forfeit $200.00 to any char- itable institution If it can be shown that it_will not banjsh every complexion blem- ish and give most astonishing new beau- ty to wrinkled. careworn, aged womep In three days’ time in many instances. It can be obtained absolute resh and, guaranteed pure from Diokinson's or most’ warm water and rospated cream. But be any good druggist or department store in sure to use only pure roseated cream. the city k The above is one of a series of articles on beauty specially written by Mile. Simone Mareix, of Paris, winner of two great international . beauty prizes, one in Paris, the ! other in, England. Mile. Marelx personally guarantees success in every case with the products recommended in her newspaper articles or will refund the amount patd/”* for them, provided you take your dealer's receipt at the time you make your purchase. Her American address is Simone Mareix, 20 West 22nd 8t., New York. Creme Tokalon, Roweated, and the other products mentioned can be obtained absolutely fresh and guar- / anteed pure from Dickinson's, or most any good drugsist or department store in this clty looking woman has re- <ajned her charm and wakened to find her- self pretty as pic- ture with eves of wrinkles and com- plexion blemishes this simple Wateh what it does for you! Mero- Iy wasl face in | warm at night in a teaspoon- two of any roseated cream You can obtaln the druggist. In face with cold 1w more cream. In three weeks or less you Wil be astonished at the change that las taken place. See how the old, hard- cned. coarse, rough skin turns into new. r soft. " youthful-looking skin almont | Defore your Very eyes, all duc to simple osmosis of the skin. produced solely by and Saturday. Prices 10c Nights 10c to 50c. \ [ wondert method. or not safe, stable or unstable, Dicky was “my man,” the only man 1 had jever loved, the only man I could, ever {love. “For better or warse,” the dear old minister had said who performed our wedding ceremony, and my heart reaffrimed the words as I bent my eycs again to the closcly written pages I held in my hands. “Because you have always been so bitter, Margaret, against your father, and because it has alwys caused me great anguish to speeak of him, I have allowed vou to rest under the impres- sion that I had never heard any- thing concerning him since his dis- appearance, and that I do not know whether he bc_hvinz or dead. The “MELTING MILLIONSH 1 I‘ast statement is true, for vears ngo! AT FOXYS THEATER definitely refused to receive any communication from him, but T must tell you that I believe him to be liv- ing, and that I know that living or dead he has provided money for your { use if you should ever wish to claim‘ 1. “The address he last sent me, and! For my daughter Nelmeea! fockuiiy nose pores and deep wrinkles. alone.” GEORGE WALSH o DIREC‘I‘IO]} 3 . WILLIAM IOX The superscripition on the envelope which T held in my hand stared up at me with all the sentience of a living | thing. The letters were in the crabbed, trembling, old-fashioned chirography of my mother—the last wards that she had ever written. It was as if she had come back from tthe dead to talk to me, When I had fitted the tiny key, put into my hand by my mother but a few days before she died, into the old lock box which lay in the top of the trunk of Keepsakes, the letter ad- dressed to me had been the first thing that met ‘my eves. I could scarcely see the handwriting for the tears which the sight of the old box she had treasured called forth. the morning wash bt and rub in Charlic “EASY Chaplin - in STREET” Tonight and Wed. Marie Doro in “DIPT.OMACY” . | AT FOX’S WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY IN “MEUTING MILLIONS.” | versity. He was stroke on the New ! | York Athletic clubs crew for two | vears. In the big ring scene in “Melt-, ing Millions” some of the best fighters | on the Pacific coast appear in action. | “Ramona’ will be the big attraction | of the week at Fox's and will be shown | on Friday and Saturday. On Saturday afternoon at 12:30 a special matinee will be run for the children. The show will run continuously on both {days. California scenery has never been spread before the cyes of the | Thurs,, Fri, and Sat. Jack Pickford in IRVING SANDg HIT | comment heard at the conclusion o{, the performance forecasts a successful AT GRAND THEATER Charlie Chaplin is at Fox's tonight in his latest comedy “Easy Stree Lillian Gish in the five act drama “The | House Built Upon the Sands”, chap- ter 11 of “Pearl of the Army” are also there. Wednesday and Thursday | week for the company as well as . plenty of entertainment for the theas, , ter patrons. Heading the compan: | \'TONIGHT - Charlie Chaplin “Easy Street” Lillian Gish ‘The House Built Upon the Sands” Pearl of the Army i CHAPTER ELEVEN WEDNESDAY AND . THURSDAY . _George Walsh Melting Millions Bushman-Bayne TheGreat Secret AY AND __ SATURDAY Ramona Big Western Production 12 Reels 4 IR GRAND HARTFORD 1 5, 8:15 Daily THIS WEEK NEW YORK GIRL COMPANY Sce Mlle. Babette, the ‘fe- male Lew Kelly.” Also Harry . Bentley, Walter Pearson, Clara Evans, Francis Tait Botsford, Sylvia Brody and Mamie Mit- Tel. Ch. APLIN AND DORO N FILM ATTRACTIONS | frhotoplay 1 clue catnre at o tonight Chaplin in ria Doro in “Di- in film is booked s special attrac A while the Doro feature is to be on bill but two daye. During the last f of the week “Seventeen”, with bk Pickford and Laura Huff in the ding roles, is to head the ~list s, v e vaudeville talent jreh and Russell, who | Railroad; Dena y in a'sketch and r and dance team, ke for consists ofter gooper’ and mes and of | of | The | With the memory of my mother's advice ‘not to open the box unless yau are in desperdte straits, or until the time has come when you feel that ! you no longer harbor the resentment! you ngw feel toward your father,” I! hesttated for a long time befare breaking the seal, With the letter | pressed close against my tear-wet! cheek I sat for a long time busy with mémories of my mother and debating whether or not I had the right to open the letter. “When You Read This.” I certainly was not in ‘desperate straits,” and I could nat conscienti- ously say that I not longer harbored any resentment toward the father of whom I had no recollection. I felt that never in my life could I fully pardon the man who had made my mother suffer sa terribly. But the longing to know something of my father which I had felt since the coming into my life of Robert Gordon, the mysterlous, elderly millionaire, who was the best friend of my mother and father, had become almost an obsession with me. “Little mother,” T whispered, “for- give me if I am doing wrong, but I must'know what is in this letter to me.” With trembling fingers I broke the seal and drew out the closely written pages which the envelope contained. “ ‘Mother’s only comfort,’ the letter ! began, and at the sight of the dear familiar words which I had so often heard from my mother’s lips—it w: the name she had given me when a tiny girl. and which she used until | the day of her death—tears a&ain blinded my eyes.” ““When you read this’ the shaky handwriting went on, ‘T shall have left yvou forever. It is my prayer that when the time comes for you to Tes 1 it it will be because you have forgiven vour father not because you are in 5 I wish 1 could have seen you safe in the spelter of a good man’s love before I had to go away from vou forever!” “Safe in the shelter of a good man's Had my mother been wish when she could no longer witness its fulfilment? T was angry and humiliated at myself that T could not give a swift unqualified assent to my own question. A “zood man,” Dicky certainly was, and 1 was in the “shelter of his lov t present. But| “safe” ‘with Dicky T was a 1! could never be, Mingled alv with | my love for him, my trust in him, was a tin undercurrent of uncertainty as to the stability of my husband’s af- | fection for me. i~ As I turned to my mother's letter again there was a tiny pang at my heart at the thought that by my mar- | ¥age with Dicky T had thwarted the ! qearest wish of my little mother | heart. ! For betwegn the lines of this last {letter she had written me T could read the unspoken thought that had | been in her mind since T was a very | voung girl. ‘“Eafe in the shelter of | 2 good man’s love” meant to my motiter only one “safe in the shelter of Jack Bickett’s love” T could not | have grasped her meaning more ! clearly. a that of the firm of lawyers who has the management of the property in- tended for vou, are sealed in en- velopes in this b Tn it also are .all the things _necessary to establish vour identity, my marriage certifi-| cate, your porth record, pictures of your father and of me, and of the three of us taken when you were 2 vears old before the shadow 'of the awful tragedy that came later had begun to fall.” T sprang from my chair, droping the pages of the letter unheeded in the shock of the revelatian they brought me. My father had planned for me; had provided for me; had tried to communicate with my mother! He} must have been repentent: he was not all the heartless brute T had thought him. Menu for Tomorrow ST Breakfast Fruit Delmonico Potatoes Coffee Lunch Baked Corn and Tomatoes Onion Cream Sandwiches Fruit Tea Dinner Black Bean Soup Roast Beef Iranconia Potatoes Stuffed Onions Celery Mayonnaise Chocolate Pudding Coffee. and Tomatoes—Fill a baking dish with alternate layers of canned corn, tomatoes and toasted bread crumbs, adding plenty of salt and pepper, a suspicion of sugar and pieces of butter. Have the top layer crumbs, cover and bhake for forty minutes, then uncover for ten min- .utes longer. 5 Onion Cream Sandwiches—Add one teaspoonful of cream to a cake of Phi cream cheese and one tablespoonful of Spanish onion and spread between two buttered slices of bread, cut very thin. Baked Corn TRY THI5 10 BANISH ALL RHEUMATIC PAINS People who have been tormented for vears—yes, evef so crippled that they were unable to help themselves —have been brought back to robust health through the mighty power of Rheuma. Rheuma acts with speed; in a few days the relief you r It antagonizes the poi ons that cause agony and pain in the joints and muscles and quickly the torturing soreness completely disap- pea Tt is a harmiess remedy, but sure and certain, because it is one discov- ery that has forced rheumatism and sciatica to yield and disappear. Try a 50-cent bottle of Rheuma, and if you do not get the joyful relief | ‘What Her Father Wished. But my mother’s wish must forever | ‘remain ungranted. Jack was ‘“some- in France,” and for me, safe| "always has a supply of Rheuma and you expect, your money will be re- turned. Clark & Brainerd company guarantees it to you. Walsh in the Fox special re- Melting Millions” will be shown. football playing in *‘Melting Millions” is not mere acting.’ It is simply getting back to the good old days at I'ordham college when Walsh s known as the greatest punter in the greatest game. are his old varsity outfit. George wa: also a star player at Georgetown uni- The togs he wears | in the mag- “Ra of {world to such an extent ificent twelve reel production, ide from the charm Mrs Jackson’s romance, which “has | s0ld nearly. 4,000,000 copies of < her book, the film production will be not- able as a panorama of varied view representing Californis proud dis I tinction as the garden spot of ' the | woria. BY RUTH ‘_ SIDE How People Spend Their Money The response to my question, *“‘How much do you give?” has been most gratifying. Apparently I touched chord of popular interest. Several readers have gone further thdn the answer'and supplied me with their whole budget, I wish I had this whole page. I could fill it with these interesting human documents. As it is, I'm going to give you some this week and more if you are interested in knowing how people of various incomes apportion their money, especially gift a their money. “FFor a wedding present one I know well,” writes a friend who says her income ave for some letter ges about ten dollars a week, from three to five doilars. Ior casual friend, one to three dolla She Buys Presents Throughout the any Year, I have a drawer in which I place anything I see during the vear that I think would make a good present i and which I can get for a reasonable figure or can make, “We have the duplex system of envelopes in church. [ give fifteen cents for the support of the church, and ten cents far benevolences. For Sunday school and other church col- lections I give five cents at ordinary services, and ten to twenty-five at special services. “For collections for pu gifts, Red Cross, ctc! - give from ten cents to according to circumstance: How Forty Dollars a Month Is Divided. “Perhaps the way I divide my in- writes a friend who receives a month, room and board included, “would be of interest. “Savings bank—$20; clothes (I make most 6f them myself)—$7.00; church and charity—$4.00; upkeep of room at home—$2.00: higher life (such as magazines, theater, etc.)— $2.00. If I need the doctor I take that money out of savings.” “I am a business woman,” writes another, (by the way all these an- swers appear to come from women, we'd like to hea® from some men, too), “I get $14.00 per week. I am es for post- I gener ne dollar come,” forty dolla “I spend | TALKS CAMERON a church member and give twenty cents each Sunday for support of the church and mission Christmas usually costs me from >8 and for wedding presents I never give less than $6. 1 might add that I board and it costs me about $9 per week, in- cluding carfares. I will be grateful to have you write something on this sub- ject, as if I give too much or not cnough I would like to know it.””, Did You Ever Hear the Equal of This? | Here is an extraordinary generdus person: “I have an income of about $900 per vear. I gave wedding gifts— $45; Christmas—S$10: charity—S$100; church—3§50; little gifts— showers for brides—8$5.” HAVE DARK HAIR AND LOOK YOUNG Don’t stay gray! Nobody can tell when you darken gray, faded hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur. Grandmother kept her hair beauti- fully darkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. ‘Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with won- derful effect. By asking at any drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound,” you will get a large bot- tle of this old-time recipe, improved | by the addition of other ingredients, all ready to use, for about 50 cents. This simple mixture can be depended | upon to restore natural color and! beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist says everybody uses Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has peen applied— it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, it is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and beautiful. This preparation is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. again this' season is Harry Bentley, & clever delineator of the Teutonid dialect whose work bristles through<+ out the production.. Mlle. Babbettey known as the “female Lew Kelly” is ag good as ever. The hits of the perd ° formance are the singing of parodiesis by Bentley, Evans and the rural sketchy, winding up with a yodel song by Mill§* and Lockwood, With a former local cabaret artist Irving Sands, playing one of the lead- ing roles, “A New York Girl,” com- pany presented a two-act six-scene rollicking burlesque before a good sized audience at the Grand theater, Hartford, last night, and the favorable BROILS, BOILS, FRIES AND TOASTS The Electric grill will prepare an entire meal for two or three persons, right at the table. Simply attach the cord to any elec- tric lamp socket and turn on the current The Grill does the rest. Price for February Only e $4.98 Regular Vaiue $6.50 Concentration of heat without waste is a feature of the “THERMAX” Grill that saves current. It is so inexpensive to operate that anyone having electricity in the house may enjoy its convenience. THE UNITED ELECTRIC LIGHT & WATER CO. 94 West Main St., New Britain, Conn.

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