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$ \ DER NEW MANAGEMENT GEO, LEWITT INC, The TER NAYLOR PLAYERS Present UR NEW AINISTER of All Rural Comcdies MATINEES: ES., THURS. and SAT. ce Sale of Tickets at Box Office Only, nzxr 'WEEK ine Featliers” Walter’s Great Play at 0:45 and 9:15 Vormon Gastls Home Qur Own Town Girl ' HELEN VRHELAND loxd’s Queen of Song. SIDE . TALKS I BY RUTH ‘CAMERON Good Tastes Versus Good Taste “You know I've always had things * I heard a woman say the other nd I simply can’t bear cheap things. z That remark was the preliminary to giving an order for an expensive piece of goads.! “I know I ought to buy something cheaper,” she added, after she had given the order charge and send” and turned away from the counter, “but I couldn’t bear it. I sometimes wish I didn’l have good taste.” i Poor lady, as if good taste * were ever a hardship to any one. - Many Peopic Confuse Expensive ~Tastes With Giood Taste 1 suspect she was making the mis- take that a great many people make, that of confusing good taste with ex- pensive es, Good e and expensive taste are far from identical. At the most, they are only distant- 1y related, if at all. For good taste is bred out of love of beauty by good judgment, whereas expensive tastes are bred out of love of anything ex- by the desire to ‘- outshine one’s/ neighbors. iV I happen to know a. man and his NEW BRITAIN CHILDREN NOT AT FAULT . \ Children are not to blame when {'cross, feverish, not eating right, sleep- less, nervous and all aut of sorts. If mothers are on thq job and notice the little danger signals, they will find the tongue coated and the breath hot +#nd-bad, a sure sign of ~overworked and loaded acid stomachs, indigestion and clogged intestines. "This condition can be stopped in a few hours with a good dose of a sim- ple old remedy that has been handed down for generations in thousands of families, “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,” a harmless but sure faxative ‘which a mother warked out and used'! for her children and, grandchildren. | | Like all good things whi¢h have small beginning it spread to all the, neigh-| ‘bors ‘and still-it grew until now you [can get it in any good drug store in the world. Millions'of mothers today swear by to | wife wro perfectly illustrate the dif- ference between these two. And He Spent It on That One,’ The man is what he himself calls “fastidious.” He has been used to having things “just so” and he likes | them that way and no other. As a.l bachelor, he had an income which‘ was comfortable for ome, and he spent it almost whelly -on that one. Result, expensive tastes. For in- stance, he will not wear a Dpair of stockings that cost less than fifty cents, a fact of which he is very proud. His wife, on the other hand/ has | never had a chance to have expensive tastes, but she has jthe best of good taste and she has a¢complished mira- cles with-it. FHer home; with its rest- ful wall paper, low lights, in expensive but well-chosen furniture, harmoni- ous hangings and freedom from clut- tering ¢bric-a-brac, is one peffect ex- ample’ of what good taste can do with limited means, Her children’s clothes ;2: her own are another, t's the Most \dee{lng 'l'hln¢ 2 About Them. she‘a- reason to be proud of her Her husband should be ashamed of his. And yet, I'll wager, he has the greater pride. That is the most maddening thing ‘about people with expensive tastes,— their pride in them, especially when they are beyond ‘their means. I feel sure he looks down on people 'who can endure a twenty»;l\e cent (or cheaper) stocking. / They always do. She, on the other haid, is too busy"| exercising her good taste to' be vnln of it . ' And there you are! Wc..m “THE PROMISE” HEADS FOX SUNDAY BILL NG - At Fox's tonight Miss June Caprice ‘ in the Fox comedy drama “A Child : of the Wild,” Mrs. Vernon Castle in | “Patria,” chapters three and four, { this week’s Vogue comédy, “The Mu- | sical Marvel” ‘and the Hearst-Pathe | News comprise the program. Supday SR A T e ARy AR, “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup” and ! the children love.it, they Tike the; taste and it heals, kills cramps, sweet- ens and cleanses their sour little stomachs gently and thoroughly Give the little ones a echance,; mother, go to your druggist and get a bottle today; the laxative without a grain of dope, “Mrs. Winslow’s Sooth- ing Syrup.” - Sold by good druggists everywhere. For sale in New Britain by seluor s Prescription Pharmacy. * Inour fileof reports, covering a period ol twenty years, literally lhousandl of s tell how successful the Res- treatment is for eczema and similar skin troubles. The first use of Resinol Ointment and Resiniol Soapusually stops the itching and bumning, and they scon. clear away all trace of the eruption. No other treatment for the skin now before the public can show such a record of ABOUT FLOWERS ‘While we have the reputation . of growicg as fine carnations, sweet peas, violets, daffodils and flowering plants as can be pro- duced. The furnishing of beau- tiful floral remembrances, from { night the first performance beging at | (RN ki s ; 'ImernauonaL Serial AT FOX’S THEATER, I e 1 5 o'clock. The box office opens at 4:30. The second show starts at 8 o'clock. The program Sunday night will be headed by Harold Lockwood in the\fivc-act Metro drama, ‘'The Promise.”. Mrs. Vernon Castle will appear in the third and fourth chap- ters of “Patria.”” There will be other | fealures, a news weekly and com- | edies on the Sunday night program. “Patria” will be shown in the first | performance Sunday night at 5:50 and the second at 8:15. “The Promise” is Iproglamed) for the first performan: ,' at 6:45 and will go on in the second | show at 9:15. Next Wednesday and { Thursday the mid-week feature show | offers for its topliner the favorite Fox | star, Miss Virginia Pearson in the i special release ‘““Sister Against Sister.” simple bunches or sprays of flowers, to more elaborate wreaths and floral designs is a pa_t of our service which is giv- cn most careful attention and at reasonable prices. Special this week, our beautiful violets 75¢ hund; ARTISTIC FRAMING The J. C. Ripley Art Co., BRANCH STUDIO 103 West Main St., New Britata, Conn, EDWARD T. LOPER Maker and Repairer of MUSICAL IN'STRUMENTS Fina violin repairing and bow hairing a specialty. Over twenty years ex- perience. All work guaranteed, Other kinds of fine repair work. THE WELDON, Room 3, - Hartford { Mail;, Tense, grlm. STRONG MORAL IN “FINE FEATHERS” “Fine Feathers,” the offering at the Russwin Lyceum next week, is one of the strongest plays of its kind ever written. Following is the com- ] ment on it by some of the metropoli- tan papers: The play is powerful.— N. Y. Times; Gripping and interesting, —Herald; Succession of dramatic wal- lops,—Telegraph; A masterly play,— N, Y. Tribune: Stfrring drama,—N. Y. powerful,—N. Y. Globe. ‘Against the ad\lce of his friend, a | Sovernment chemist in very modest | circumstances accepts graft and be- gins on the path that leads to in- evitable destruction. He is tempted by the knowledge that his wife is un- happy hout the pretty things her sex requi and by the “rosy” pic- tures painted as the result of bribes|’ by a successful business man,—an old college chum. ' One speculation leads to another and finally he reaches the point where prison stares : hini in the face. As a result the audi- } ence is treated to the most thrilling climax imaginable. And yet, “Fine Feathers” does not deal entirely with wrongdoing ,and punishment. There is a lighter vein running through'the drama to relieve its tenseness. “Fine Feathers” will undoubtedly prove to be one of the best plays ever put on here. “Ouy New Minister” may be seen for thé last'time tonight. ““The Prince of Graustark” will head a program of | high-class photoplays at the Lyceum Sunday evening with Bryant Wash- burn. o A very good method of managing the housework is to plan what you want done during the week, make out the schedule, write it plainly on a plece of papbr and hang it in the Kkitchen. - This will save your time and the servants can work to better advantage, 2 LIGHTHOUSE GIRLS BIG DRAWING CARD ‘Wood's Lighthouse Girls will give their final New Britain performance at Keeney's tonight. The young ladies in the act give a remarkable ex- hibition of fancy and difficult dives. Barney Griffin, the Irish tenor, sings his way into favor, and the Spanish Troubadors play in entertaining fash- fon. ‘Topping the film program toni:ht will bq the Paramount release, “A Son of Erin,” with Dustin FParnum playing the lead. Other good films .will 'be shown. 4 Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast., Fruit Broiled Pork Tenderloins Potato Cakes Rolls Coffee Dinner. Clear Soup Roast Chicken Cranberry Jelly ' Mashed Potatoes Stewed Corn Lettuce French Dressing Banana Ice Cream Coffee Supper. Celery Salad Sponge Cake Chocolate Pudding Coftee Chocolate Pudding—Take one pint hot milk,” one teacupful stale bread crumbs, and three tablespoonfuls grated chocolate. Bake for twenty- five minutes. Sauce For Pudding—One cupful sugar, one egg beaten together; piece of soft butter as large as a butternut, three tablespoonfuls . boiling water. The sauce must be made immediately before serving and should be made very foamy. - The larzesf crops come from natural ferti- lizers. Lowell Animal Fertilizers are made “ .of BONE, BLOOD, MEAT and high grade -! chemicals—nature’s food. Always active, they feed the crop with nutrition enough to keep the soil rich and productive. ‘War has cut off the ‘supply of P:at:nhh, but you can grow abundant crops without A io': e from ‘men who know, and write us for boo. “Producing Profitable Products.” LOWELL I-’ER'I'ILIZER co.. Bo.lon. Mass. For Sale by C. W LINES & CO. LOWELL A FERTILIZERS om BONE BLOOD and MEAT CAMPAIGN OF RELIGIOUS EDUCATION MARCH 6 to 18 . OPENS TUESDAY NIGHT CENTER CHURCH,; 8:00 p. m. Auspices Co-operating Churches. City Board of Religious Education. ] Y. M, C. A Y. W. C. A FEE FOR THE SERIES 50 CENTS. In No Car Save the 'Hudson Super-Six These Things Are Excluswe---And You ‘Want Them 'l'he Super-Six motor is a Hudson invention All its supremacies are controlled by our patents. : * So, in choosing a fine car, the first tlung to decide is—Are these things importan ? It means 80 per cent. more efficiency. It means almost doubled endurance. A smoothness undreamed-of before it. Motor friction and wear reduced almost to nothlng. And these are the chief results: e A speed capacity, due to lack of vibration, which has broken all stock-car record:. Record-breaking quick a cceleration. ‘Hill-climbing ability when, at Pike’s Peak, a Super-Six made the best tme u\ the world’s greatest hill-climb, against twenty great rivals. Endurance so surpassing that a Super-Six won the 24-hour stock-car record by 52 pet cent, Such marvelous persistence that a Super-Six twice broke the n'anscontmental record in one contmuous 7,000-mile round trip. No doubt these are feats you don’t care to perform. ~ways beeh motor type. But remember they have used to prove the al- superior The car which won them—as a stock car —has always been conceded . -stipremacy. Just because they prove less friction, . less wear, less waste. durance. . Now, for the Hudson—holds And that means more en- first tme, one car—the all the worth-while records. tand the endurafice records by tremendous margins. Some Stars’ Have Set Don’t be misled by ancient prestige in choosing a car today. Since the Super- Six invention, many a star has set. Phacton, 7-passenger Cabriolet, 3-passenger Town Car (All Prices £, .0. Two years ago the Six seemed doomed, because of this vibration. The trend was toward Ex%hts and twelves. That trend has stol;lvp;d. he Super-Six, by every test, ex- celled. Last year—in its first year—the Super- Six assumed first place in sales, among cars above $1,100. And this.year, as last vyear, the sales will be limited only by factory capacity. Now is the time to prove these facts—be- fore the over-demand begins. See how the Hudson, in beauty and luxury now matches its motor supremacy. See the new gasoline saver now attached to the Hudson—another exclusive economy. We have the latest models now on show. Town Car Landaulct Limousine WILLIAMS AUTO CO. 287 ELM STREET, NEW BRITAIN