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«;-.A_nm 2115, 8:13 Daily 7" ALL WEEK cius. H. WALRRON'S DSTON BURLESQUERS” Frank Finney, Florence Mills and Mae Holden a Chorus of Bmd ‘way Chickens! * ly Ladics’ Matinee 10c. - K" remed; !REVELmoNs OFAWH’E By ADELE GARRISON What Happened in the Throng That Tried to Get Into the Political Meeting. “Are all these people going to the Garden?”’ I asked the question in amazement of Dicky as we left the subway . station nearest Madison ‘Smmre Garden. Peoplé were literally pouring into the streets leading dl- rectly to the structure. “Sure,” ' returned Dicky. "A.nd there’s more coming every . minute. You see, it's 5o near election time that the people are pretty well excited about the political situation, and thien, of course, any president of the United States is a great drawing card.” . “W1il we be able to get in?" I asked dublously as we ‘came into one of the blocks adjacent to the big structutre and caught sight of the thousands of people massed in front of the en- tyances. “Wouldn’t have a chance in the wofld if we didn’t hold reserved seat coupons,” Dicky replied. “Our tlckeu read Madison avenue éntrance. street, of eourse, will be kept cleu nr everybody but the holders of |'served seat checks.” ‘When we reached the corner near- est the Madison svenue entrance, how- | ever, we found a swaying mass of people extending from the doors clear to the corner. Three stalwart po- Hcemen stood at the corner tslking together. Dicky stepped up .to them :jsnd flashed his précious seat’coupons before their eyes, “Can you get us through"" , a shade ippportantly it uemed “These -are reurved seat The offices, did not / evon look " at "t’h;t/ line right there,” he sald with- Jerk of his thumb to the massed icolumn of people, and went on talking to hfs brgther officer. Dicky's temper is always hung upen hair trigger, and this proved too ‘much for. him, “Do you mean to tell me,” he sald angrily, “that all the people in/ that line hold reserved seat checks? It's The lines haven’t been impossible! And properly guarded, that's all. i| they’re not moving forward a step. | Why are not the’doors open as they advertised they would be from o’clock on The officer turned his attention to Dicky with an ugly frown upon his face. I shivered a little..!T have a deadly fear of getting into any con- troversy with a police officer, and I think the man saw’ me, ‘for his tace relaxed, and a slow grln crept over it. But his tone was truculent. “See here, young féllow,” he said, and there was the fing of conviction .in his_tones, “you be thankful you're iving tonfght without worrying about these-lines being. properly guarded. Now toddle along and get in line or else beat, it quick. Canm’t have vou Jloitering around here. None of your 1ip, now,” he exclaimed savagely as %.nuh y other cough rmed}v‘ e Wa; it hl.cl hold of an obstinai iving immediate relief, will make t tlu.t von neVer tned m u dable ahould' pt handy _in g vme. to use at thc first signt of a eum during ‘the night or day time. Any druggist can supply you witl 2% onnccs of Pinex (50 cents worth). Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the bml- wnt‘.\ plain granulated sugar e Pron bare & fak piut of the Saost . ave a full pint of the most , oed:: ly you ever used. ” l X 'l\e quick, hstmx relief you fiet from | this e.ual!cn congh syrup will really surpris It promptv heals th -ulbnne. %t ine the throat Splen. wl ‘hooping concentrated com- nc extract, combined is famous | ld hwnt ask_for “21% e avoid di °.“'°' Inent with fall directions L WE ARE " BUILDING AN- OTHER GREENHOUSE —THERE MUST BE A REASON, Our purpose 1s to treat any business entrusted to us in such a fair and liberal man- ner, that our satisfied/ custom- ers will be our best advertisers, Special for this week, Car- nations and Daffodils, 60c per (doz., 2 dozen for $1.00. * Violets 75c per : hundred. Stock BOc large bunch, 5 '.l'L‘L. 1978. VIETS’ “Get In line or beat it. Take your choice quick!” y “Don’t Get Frightened.” Dicky had to obey. He had no Privately I thought other choice. him rather childish in the side play | in ;which he indulged, locking fixedly at the officer’'s number and then writing it down in his notebook, But the policeman took no further notice of him, and we joined the rear rank ' of the massed péople in line, It was perhaps five minutes later that I turned my head to look back of me. What I saw frightened mie. There seemed as many people back of us as there were in front of us. In- stead of being in the rear of the tight- ly wedged mass of people we were in the middle of it. "Oh icky!” i exclai] d. oluj ing his arm. “Look! how people are back of us, Isn't dangerous? Dicky turned, Tooked, scowled at me. “Do you fnean you want to get out of here?” he asked, and his voice and manner were distinctly unpleasant, I looked around nervously to sée if ahy one near us had heard him. “If you do, you'd better say so right away, 80 we may get out while we can.” The last phrase of his little speech terrified me. I saw. as clearly as he did that in a few minutes eseape from the crowd would be almost impossible, ‘But there was such' latent scorn in Dicky’s voice, such contempt for my lack of ‘‘gameness” in .not wishing to finish something I had ‘begun, that in.spite of my real nervousness and fear I decided to see thé thing through 'no matter what happened. “I was not aware it I requested y this and then replied with dignity. "“T simply askeéed it it were not dangerous.” “All time,” Dicky ‘answered with one of his quick smiles, and- then I saw him lift his hat and incline his head to sofie .one in front of us and to the left, near the street.’ I followed his eyes, and saw two very pretty but delicate looking girls, looking appealingly at/him. One had only ‘to look at them to see that they were of the frilly, helpless, clinging vine type which so appeals to mas- culine protection. The faces of both wore a frightened look, i “Well! What do you suppose pos- sessed those girls to come into this mob? "he asked himself, and, then he called ‘across to them. encou ngly: “Pon’t get lru'htened I'll see you through.” T felt a little pang a( my_ heart. He |. ‘had énapped at me wheri T had asked if the crowd: were dangcrous;and here he was encouraging the unspoken appeal of these strange girls, Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Fruit Broiled Mackerel Stewed Potatoes Crumpets Cofice Lunch Baked Macaroni Gingerbread \ ‘Cocoa Dinner Brown Onion Soup Salmon Loaf Parsley Sauce Mashed Potatoes Buttered Parsnips /Cabbage Salad Rice Pudding Coffee Sour Cregm Gingerbread—One cup- cul sour cream,.oné¢ cupful molasses, one-half cupful brown sugar, one egg, one teaspoonful each of cinnamon and ginger, one scant hnl( teaspooful of cloves, one-half teaspoonful salt, one- half teaspoonful soda sifted and dis- solved in the cream, one scant tea- spoonful baking powder, sift with four cupfuls of flour. Bake in two shal- low pans. Cabbage Salad—Take one pint of fincly chopped cabbage, and add half a cupful of sugar and salt to taste. Pour over this a dressing made as fol- lews: Half cupful of mild vinegar, one teaspoonful of made mustard and a little pepper. Mix these ingredients Wwith a silver fork just before serving, so0 that the sugar will have hardly dissolved; pour over the chopped cab- bage and serve. 0 Lovely pastel shades come in crepe de chine, ‘to be used for waists— peach, gray, orchid, shell-pink. ‘you to get ie out of the crowd,” T | right, Tl forgive you this| THE “NEW MILLINERY STORE” THAT SETS THE PACE 'FOR LOW PRICES, QUALITY, STYLE, ASSORTMENT ! GOLDENBLUM’S The “Neéew Miilinery Store”’—mew in name only aiid decidedly old in location. But will you know it after' the extensive alterations which have taken place within its doors? The new fixtures—the new display cases and counters all —w:flnmdlmu-—mtweh&venndmwewflldnmwmmrmde—-flnt-vrhnmvnhhw mmmflwmthyw&hufiu—- ‘wholsale Mufl.mmm reasonably customers recetve the.advantage of selecting from the same our nfllhm] daylight electric flood of light—all are mew, BUT stocks that the average re- tatlerselects from—the new styles as soon as/récelved—the different novelties that go to make up " our wholesalo stocks will all be on display for our New Britain trade—in fact everything Offered to our retail Hartford trade will be offered to our New Britain customers—Make GOLDENBLUM’S YOUR MILLINERY -+ HEADQUARTERS—THERE mu.mwmhfimmmu . PALM BEACH - HATS , With Straw Underfacfhgs $2.69 up In this lot of Hats are the | very latest creations from the smartest of metropolitan mil- liners. We have them all— the woman wl-oleekl flnexm-ndfm-t‘hemmwho mnserfldvenyleu. All are here and at prices - SIDE TALKS BY RUTH, CAMERON Is He Mean? our her A young married woman in town was ' telling me about brother-in-law one day. “He’s terribly mean,” she said; “he won't let Gertrude go anywhere or do anything. We're always trying to get them to go to the theater or go oft for the week end or things like that with us, but he says they can’t afford it* Its all nonsense. He gtsts a good salary.” - * Everything John Does Is All Right “Well, she won't admit she doeg‘ Everything John does is all ' right. | But T know she must. She ‘always loved a good time as much as I do. And I tell Harry It he tredted me like | that I'd get a divorce. 1t there’sl anything I hate it's a mean man. It's really no fun.to go out with them | either because they're always count- ing the pennjes. I'd be so ashamed if I were Gertrude.” The Critic Makes Me Doubt The Criticism The doubts come not from what I Five Minutes! No Indigestion, Gas, Sour Stomach—Pape’s Diapepsin Neutralizes acids in stomach, instantly relieving. dys- vepsia, heartburn, belching, distress. It’s fine! ! “Really does” put upset stomachs {in ‘order—'really does” overcome in digestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness due to acid fermenta- ition in.five minutes—that—just that |, ‘-—-makes Pape’s Diapepsin the largest selling stomach antacid and regula- tor in the world. If what you eat ](armems asd turns sour, you belch gas and eructate undigested food or water: head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue ‘coate your insides filled with indigestible waste, remem- ber the moment *“Pape’s Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly as- tonishing—almost marvelous, :nd the joy is its harmilessness. A large fifty cent case of h.pa' Diapepsin 1s worth its weight in gold fo men and women who ésn't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs in your home—should always be kept know of him,—I . have never even met him—but (from what I know of his critic Criticisms often take significance from those them, And I know perfectly well their make half who that | this critic’s idea of meanness would income and* be living within one's j trying to save a little. She isn’'t mean! Far from- it! She spends every cent her husband earns, keeps him jumping to make more, and even goes into debt to trades- | people. And not satisfied with living in that unnatural way, she must criticize other people who. will not. There are many people like her and they do much harm by the false standards they set. They Owe Everyone But They Have A Good Time. I know another couple who owe the dentist, the butcher, the grocer, yet &0 in for all sorts of good times. And when any of their friends will not | join them, on the ground of too much expense, they say, “Oh be a sport.' & It's a good thing to be a sport (in the best sense of this word); it fs good to be happy, to live your life in- tensely while you can; but the un- obstrusive yet all important founda- tions of all these goods, the sine qua non is the common honesty of paying one's debts, I suppose I sound old fl!hlnned but to me there is no meanness so dis- honorable as that which carelessly and needlessly runs into debt, WCM-\—- CHIC “BOSTONIANS” AT GRAND THEATER | Audlences who have been used to WILL BE BEASOKS EVERY DAY. THE NEW SPORT HATS $1.98 up cqualled. Sce the 101 different alnpu—dn-ew-ludm.nflfln The low prices Dbest quality in every Hat is assurcd. The prices are a rerehdo-, torn:hh-umm»rm-remnspeuql. e e e iy COMPLETE ASSORTMENTS OF MAKINGS ‘Everything for home hat making—millinery saj of ‘all kinds gre here in wholesale varjety and they are of quality and at the very lowest prices. Remember we are always “at your The Smart and Select Untrimmed Hats 95¢ up A WHOLESALE stock of Untrim- med Hats and WHOLESALE prices rule. Here you find' the newest, .m-hn‘d!helwmre. Charles H. Waldron's “Bostonians.” It is certainly a surprise to see a dark, house and only one loné man on the stage when the show starts. To be sure, .the show carries plenty ‘of pretty, lively girls but they are kept in the background until the plot under way. This is convincing evi- énce, that Frank Finney, the feat- ured comedian and the writer of this show, has struck a new note in bur- lesque. Florence Mills, the beauti- ;ful blonde ‘‘vampire wdman’ | the show, is’said‘to be one of the best dressed prima flonnu on any stage. PARAMOUNT STARS IN . “THE GATES OF DOOM” ] . Leaders in tonight’s film offerings at Keeney's will be “Gates of Doom"” with gn all-star Paramount cast and “The_ Years of the Lotust,” featuring Fannie Ward. These will be in ad- dition to “The Pride of the Clan,” the big Pickford film which is the special.attraction for the entire week. “The Years of the Locust” will also be shown Friday and Saturday. Prominent among the vaudeville acts are Gringrass, the cannon ball juggler, and Rush Lee You, the Chinese .Imerial magician. Allen's | Cheyenne minstrels contribute a mus- ical number with comedy interpola- tions that is exceptionally good. “riNE FEATHERS” IS GRIPPING DRAMA The plot of “Fine Feathers,” this week’s offering at the Lyceum, might seem commonplace at first glance, but ; Eugene Walter, its author, handled it in such a deft manner that it holds the attention of the audience through- | iout. The story deals with the evils of extracagance,—woman’s for finery. A pretty hat bought with the money that should have paid the butcher’s bill starts the mischief. It makes & man in very modest circum- stances want to give his wife the best that money can- buy. His ambition . is realized but in a dishonest manner |and all Yoo soon he realizes that *‘the | wages of sin is deatn.” Fine Feathers” is weil presented ' by the Walter Naylor Players in : delightful stage settings. The com- edy of the piece is supplied by the hired girl who seems to have a mon- opoly on the expression, “Yas'm. handy in case of a sick, sour, upset |seeing the curtain go up on a fast' Philip Quin is all that his part calls stomach during the day or at night. It’s the quickest, surest gntacid the stomach, in the world. for l stepping, noisy. burlesque chorus, will . find relief in the present week’s" at-' traction. &t the mmi mna!. /for, a successful business man. who come out.on top every mne. Virginia Pemr as the unbluog- £ Jooks with| passion | acts it to perfection and Smythe Wal- lace, playing opposite her, is seen good advantage. Miss uln;t’ Mis; {Dow and Mr. Murphy, also Mr. Be- croft, are satisfactory. While. “Fir Feathers” is ‘essentially a wol show, it interests men alzo for 't problem involved is the bone of ¢ tention in everyday life. For next week Douglas F‘alrbqn greatest comedy hit, “A Geutlmfl.n Leisure,” will be the offerink. merous theater parties are planned. - Seats are on sale daily & the box oftice. Sunday night’s photo- play feature will be “Whom 'the { Destroy,” with Peggy Hyland in the leading role. FRANK KEENAN AT FOX'S TOMORROW At Fox’'s Miss Virginia Pearson-in the, William Fox production;, ‘“Sister Against Sister” proved to be orne ptv the very finest attractions of the wée- son and a turn away business yester-¢~ day greeted the favorite star. Pearson will appear for the last ‘tonight. 'On_the same Brogram Francls X. Bushman and - Beverly Bayne in Chapter eight. of “The Great Secret,” the Fox film comedy, “‘Her Father's Station” and the war news from all over the world conu;ned in the Hearst:Pathe Newy.. The program Friday and Saturday has an exceptional headliner in; Fnak(" Keenan the great dramatic the Thomas Ince five act feature, “The Bride of Hate." Keenan last appéared here in Sin Ye Do” and his latest production, “The Bride of Hate” created & real sensation when it was shown in New York fory the first time last weekm i Who can forget having seen Frank Keenan play Jack Rance with Blanch i Bates in Mr. David Belasco’s produc- on of “The Girl of the Golden West.” ‘The Bride of Hate” recites the edy that results from a yauthful ro- mance and the uncanny methods of | the victim’s uncle to avenge the u‘x? gression. Mr. Keenan is seen i role of Dr. Dupley Duprez, owner of a plantation near New Orleans,” and his portrayal js said to lack none of the forcefuln that - always ' has marked his work in pictures. Shar- ing honors with Mr. gery Wilsont an’ alluring ‘slave girl upon ¥ amecedenu o cu-n of ‘the. story hlnxes | fAifth chlpu[! tria,