New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 22, 1917, Page 4

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JLTER MALDR PAERS ITTLE PEGGY - 0’MOORE te Your Reservations Early. Tel. 1000. ! Next Week ITTLE GREY W, Nigh fiolet Palmer e Blue Streak. | Bushmas-Bayne The Great Secrst FRIDAY AND SATURDAY . Dorothy Dalton Mrs. Vernon Castle Ch. ‘1026 2:15, 8:15 Daily Jack Conway ‘A JOERNS (Prima Donna) Meiton, Dainty Dolly and Other Stars. CONSTRUCTIVE ADVERTISING us for ORIGINAL IDEAS .yoar PRODUCT. A postal {tright, temper s0 well that I was afraid jhe Most Effective Remedy . Mother Had Ever Used Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Medicines Failed. There is nothing so necessary to a child’s health and comfort as regu- larity of the boweéls. All children are especially susceptible to stomach trouble and any oversatrain of the sen- sitive organs has a tendency to ob- struct elimination. This condition is responsible for much of the iliness of childhood. : To relieve constipation a mild laxa- tive should be employed. Cathartics and purgatives -are viotent In their action and should be avoided. - Mrs. Alfred Du Bois, Mt Holly, N J., says Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin is with- out doubt the most effective remedy for constipation she has ever used and t it is the only remedy she coufd fina for her baby. Little Earl was badly constipated during his first Year and nothing she tried seemed to help him until she got a bottle ot Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Now he is a fine, atrong, healthy boy, and she thapks Dr. Caldwell for it. Pr, Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herhs with In, free from opiates or nar- cotic drugs; it acts gently without griping or other discomfort, and ap- peals to children because of its pleas- ant taste. Druggists everywhere sell it for fifty cents a bottle, and every mother should have it in the house for use whenever occasion arises. To avoid imitations and ineffective substitutes always be sure to ask for Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, See that a facsimile of Dr. Caldwell’s signa- ture and his portrait appear on the yellow carton in which the bottle is packed. A trial bottie, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. 1 | SIDE TALKS Far From Mean There is' a woman once of our town whom I had always looked upon as very mean. She married comfortably and moved away. Her father and mother are in straightened circumstances, she seldom visits them and does nothing for them. . Could anything be meaner? Tertainly not if ‘it were true. . And until a few days ago I never doubted that it was. Then I happened to say somhething about Gertrude's selfishness to a mu- shedoes forh eralle ip so ff ta e$t tual friend. “You call her mean in spite of all she does for her father and mother?” she said. “Why I thought she didn’t do any- thing for them. She almost never comes to see them.” She Had a Good ‘Reason For Not - Coming. Because her mother .isn't strong and she doesn't want to make it harder for her, and if she comes she W. B. Caldwell, 465 Washington St., i} . ) bring one of the children. Monticello, Illinois. REVELATIONS By ADELE GARRISON ‘What Happened ‘When Dicky Met Madge With Dr. Pettit. My first-emotion upon seeing Dicky standing by the gate guard at tie Long Island station was one of stark I knew _his 'uncontrollable was still raging because I was in Dr. Pettit's company. Ot course I knew that it was only a matter of time when he would come to himself and realize . how unreason- able he was. For he, himself, no other, was to blame for my being with Dr. Pettit. ' If he had not gone to the rescue of the girl artists whom he had seen struggling in the crowd ‘| around Madison Square Garden on the night of the President’s speech there he would not have become separated from me, and I would not have beeri cast upon the tender mercies of the young physician. .My feeling of fear, however, soon gave way to righteous anger against Dicky, - I felt that I could not soon forgive him. for the childish exhibi- tion of temper he had given, when, after losing me in the crush outside the Garden, through his own negli- gence, he had been so flercely resent- ful at finding me seated safely beside Dr. Pettit inside the big auditorium. But underneath the fear and the anger which grippsd me lay anather feeling which startled me, so. strong, and, in a measure, unexpected it was. It was a feeling of relief, After all, I was not to go home without my husband, and with the fear of village gossip before my’ eyes. Angry or not, Dicky, my “man,” was wn.ltlyg ANSWER THE ALARM New Britain People Should Not Delay. L It yoyr kidneys are inflamed, Don’t stand around and do nothing. Like a fire it will soon be beyond control. You will get the alarm in time— Backachle, or dizziness or disorders of the urine. Heed the warning. Give your kidneys a rest by living more carefully. “Use Doans Kidney Pills to stamp out the cause. Profit by a New Britain woman’s ex- perience. Miss Kate Welch, 40 Sexton St., New Britain, says: “I was troubled consid- erably by dull pains across the small of my back and I think' they were brought on by my work, as I was obliged to be in a sitting position all day. It was a continual, dull pain and made me feel tired and worn-out. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me of this pain. I have had faith in them ever since and speak highly of them.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Welch had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, A ST Use the 'Phong It often happens that you do not find it convenient to visit our greenhouses. When you want flowers, USE THE ’'PHONE. Your order will receive |as careful attention as if you had made a personal selection. We furnish flowers for all -occa- VIS ‘GREENHOUSES Tel. 1978, ‘48 CLINTON 8T. | help: | tone. 0F A WIFE for me, An unaccountable }\figle glow warmed my heart €ven through my anger. Dicky Is Light-Hearted. One glance at Dicky’s face, how- ever, told me he had had time to repent of his childishness; that he was not angry any longer, but, on the con- trary, was bitterly ashamed of his atcions in the Garden. But, Dicky-like, my husband gave no indication in his speech of either embarrassment or remorse. On the contrary, when he caught sight of us he allowed just the right expression of relief to appear on his face and hailed us jovially. “Hello there!” he calldd out, ad- vancing towards us and stretching out a cordial hand to Dr. Pettit, “I was beginning to think I had original ‘boy off the burning deck’ beaten four blocks, / . “Gee, I'm _relleved about yau, Madge! I had visions of you in every morgue in the city. I thought I would stand ‘here until the last train went, for I knew you would make your way here if you could. ;How lucky it was you met the doctor. Where did you ever run on to him?” I stared at Dicky in blank amaze- ment. Was it possible he was going to igmore that moment in Madison Square Garden when, after wildly looking: around the balconies for me he had discovered me seated with Dr. Pettit and had angrily disappeared into the crowd without speaking to us? Dr. Pettit's face reflected my sur- prise, but he Wwas quick to take Dicky's cue. “I was fortunate enough to see Mrs. Graham in the crowd just after you had become separated from her,” he said gravely. “Otherwise I fear she might have been badly hurt, The crush was really dangerous at the door.” f “Yes, I know,” Dicky': nodded. “And I'm eternally grateful to you, old man, for taking care of her. Won'’t you come on down with us for a day or two? !'We can put you up comfortably, can't we Madge?” “Of course,” I returned convention- ally. “And we shall be very glad to have you come.” I wondered if Dr. Pettit guessed how my fingers itched to slap Dicky for his impudent, nonchalant treat- ment of the situation which had been 80 painful to us al, A grim little smile played around his lips as he re- plied to Dicky’s invitation, which he must have known was the merest mockery of hospitality. Thank vou,” he said, courteously, “but I could not possibly go. Some other time I should be most charmed to accept your invitation, And now that I have delivered Mrs. Graham safely into your care I will bid you go0d evening.” He liffed his hat with a formal bow which included both of us, and turning walked swiftly away. “As You Please.” I guessed that he was putting a re- straint upon himself, and cast a swift glance at Dicky to ascertain whether or not he also detected the young physician’sc hidden emotion. “Your sawbones friend didn’t seem aver and above pleased to see me,” Dicky said unpleasantly, as he walked by my side down the steps toward the train. “What was the matter; did he feel himself cheated out of a pleasant journey down to Marvin?" The covert sneer in his voice set me wild. It was the spark needed to fire the powder magazine of my Te- sentment. I drew Dicky behind a pillar on the platform runway, which partly shielded us from the hurrying cam- muters. “Are you going to make another speech like that to me tonight?” I demanded in a low but determined “Because if you are I'm going to go up in the station, late as it is, telephone Mrs, Stewart at the old boarding house where I used to live tbefore I married you, and stay there until you come to your senses.” Dieky stared at me & ent, then | J smile. §a scallo] “Well, wouldn’t you think she would have them come and live with her if her mother isn't strong?” “That would be the easiest and least expensive way but they want to keep their home and‘she is making quite a little sacrifice to make that possible. She pays most of their bills out of the money her husband gives her for clothes and luxyries. -Do you call that mean?"” should say not,” I admitted, ‘but I always heard a very different story.” DOROTHY DALTON AS “CHICKEN CASEY” “Chicken Casey,” the new Triangle- Dorothy Dalton play from the Thomas H. Ince studios, introduces a young author, Everett Dryden Hale, who has written & book of such strength and originality that it at once leaps into the ranks of the best sellers. The book is entitled “Waifs” and deals with the underworld, a subject of ‘which Hale, who is a New Englander with a strong Puritanical strain, knows by personal experience prac- tically nothing at all. A The principal character in the story is a girl nicknamed Rags by her as- Soclates in the dives and haunts of night life. A New York producer is anxious to have the book dramatized, and his leading woman, Mavis Mar- berry, insists on her right to create the part of Rags. Hale accedes to the manager's re- quest, but rejects Mavis for the part of Rags as he believes that her talent is exclusively of the refined comedy order. With the ald of a dramatic critic Mavis stages a surprise for the author and is introduced to him as a typical Rags in a low Bowery dive. Mavis enacts the part in such a life- like manner that Hale, unaware that the supposed Rags is a famous act- ress, starts out to reclaim her and informs the manager that he has found his ideal heroine—Chicken Casey, the name that he knows her by—who must huve the star role in his play. The play is produced with pro- nounced success, Mavis Marberry playing the part of Rags with the same realism with which she invested the .mock creation of' Chicken Casey. Hale, who is present at the premiere, recognizes that he has been the vic- tim of a trick and leaves the theater hurt and indignant. Mavis, whose masquerading had given her an insight into the nobility and chivalry of the man, finds a way to earn his forgiveness and secure a happy future for both star and au- thor, and Chicken Casey becomes only a memory. Menu for Ton!drrow Breakfast. Fruit Sugar and Cream Boiled Eggs Whole, Wheat Gems Cereal Coffee Lunch. Creamed Corned Beef. Stewed Fruit Soft Ginger Cookies Cocoa Dinner. Split Pea Soup ‘Baked Fish Mashed Potatoes Asparagus Lettuce Salad ‘Wafers / Cheese Apple Pie Coffee Creamed Corned Bgef—Slice enough cold corned beef to measure a heap- ing pint, make one cupful white sauce add a tablespoonful minced celery and keep hot at the side of the fire for ten minutes before serving. Soft Ginger Cookies.~-Cream to- gether one cupful each rown sugar and lard. Add one scant tablespoon- ful ginger, one scant teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful baking soda, one cupful molasses, one-half cupful boil- ing water and sufficient sifted pastery flour to make a dough which will roll out easily. Roll in a sheet two-thirds of an inch thick cut in rounds with and bake in- a AN ‘Where I Got My Misinformation. Later I tried to think what I had heard to give me'such an |impres- sion, and where. g And I remembered that most of my information had come from two or three of Gertrude’s, friends who had not marrieg as well as she. They had enlarged on the fact that Gertrude seldom came to ses her people; they had sald that it was too bad that she didn’'t do anything to help them financially. They .had known nothing .of the true state of affairs, and knowing nothing, "had assumed everything. 2 I think people are often misjudged about such matters. A One Cannot Go About Explaining. One cannot go about explaining all the details of one’s financial fam- ily aftairs. I know another case where the Wwidowed mother lived with an un- married daughter, a stenographer. Everyone said how selfish of the comfortably married daughter not to d® anythingJor her. As a matter of fact she was contributing the major portion toward the mother's support, and the mother preferred to live with the unmarried daughter. ‘Well bred people seldgm talk about the things they do for their own. Is it fair to reward their honorable retl- cence by misjudging them? / LITTLE GREY LADY LYCEUM NEXT WEEK Channing Pollock, whose, contribu- tions to the stage are numerous as well as interesting, among them being “The Red Widow” and “Such a Lit- tle Queen,” is pleased to call “The Little Grey Lady”, “a play without a hero.” consider it heroic for a man to confess his guilt and face the consequences, but surely the author must not be tak- en literally, for it would be absurd to say the play is without a heroine. The fortitude and quiet bravery of “Anna Grey,” known to her associates as ‘“‘the little grey lady,” is heroism of the finest type. ] The locale of the play is Washing- ton, D. C,, and the principal charac- ters are employes in the treasury de- partment. Miss Perry will have a role different from any she has essayed at the Lyceum and the other members of the company will be cast to excel- lent advantage. If yoa have not made the acquaint- ance of “Little Peggy O’Moore,” you have missed something. Peggy comes from the County Kerry, Ireland, and she is the most delightful creature you ever imagined. Theatergoérs always speak of her in the very highest terms. Peggy 18 the center of a very unusual succession of incidents and is always surrounded by a lot of charming peo- ple. The story has been written about her has the element of love in it while the sub-plot is of volitical com- plexion. The Walter Naylor Players are glving a splendid performance this week. ~ g4 Next Sunday the Lyceum will fea- ture Bryant Washburn in ‘‘Skinner's Dress Suit,’ 'a fascinating drama de- picting the tragedy, pathos, humor and sunshine of life. “LIBERTY GIRLS” 100 PER CENT. GOOD “The Fraternal Orders of America’? ir one of the novel comedy numbers included in “The Liberty Girls” pro- duction, now playing at the Grand theater. About every important lodge in America is recognized. The three Bullowa girls, doing a slack wire turn, are also, popular. Jack Conway, who wrote the book and is heading - the comedy department, makes the most of his character part in “Riley’s Va- | cation.” The piece is staged in two | acts and seven scenes. In the com- edy role Mr. Conway has selected as his foil Arthur Mayer, the popular German comedian. James Collins is playing “straight” and Etta Joerns has a fine voice. PARAMOUNT STARS IN BIG FILM FEATURE With an all-star cast interpreting the story the Paramount company will offer as the photoplay feature at Keeney's for the blance of the week a picturization of the famous drama, “The Martyrdom Of Philip Strong.” Tonight there will be a special Red Feather feature. “Follow Me \Girls,” a musical com- edy in miniature, is the vaudeville headliner for the week. It is an en- tertaining act and the patrons of the theater enjoy it., Jack Russell and company in the farce, “Billy’s Tomb- stones,” also find favor.. Theé muaical act 'of Stoddard and 3 #ome. Mr. Pollpck evidently does not. EVENTUALLY A GRAFONOLA in Every Home Why Not Yours, NOW Special for Friday and Saturday You May State Your Own Terms on Any Grafonola 3 You Wish. No need to wait for that Grafonola any longer. Step in Friday or Saturday. Pay down whatever ient, and arrange to pay balance to suit yourself." ’ r conven: ’ THE PRICE IS THE SAME AS FOR CASH . The PopularGrafonola ‘Favorite $50.00. We will not attempt to describe this wonderful instrument, as it can only be fully appretiated by .~ The ~ GRAFONOLA “LEADER” $85.00 . - With Automatic Record. File and Ejector. - i This Grafonola has a full; rich tone. Equipped with all the exclusive Colum- bia ents. Your choice of finis'li. : Other Grafonolas from $15 v $200. Decide today that you will enjoy the world music in your home. of | [WE CARRY EVERY COLUMBIA RECORD ) BRODRIB & WHEELER 138 Main Street 1 Fads and Fashions ] Nothing “is smarter than plain chalk beads. Embroider your hat, scarf and bag to match, Draped effects are seen ip some of the new skirts. f New silks for sports clothes are in vivid colors. + (Tel. 974-4) Hallinan Bldg. | Household Notes | Fasten window shades on their rol. lers by means of strips of agdhesive, tape and the shades will last { much longer. Nothing so good for a sprain as bathing with very hot water, in which ¢ turpenitine has been added, an ounce to a quart. Stomach Upset? Stbp Indigestion, - Gases, Sourness—Pape’s Diapepsin Instant Relief! Neutralize stomach acidity and stop dyspepsia, pain, heartburn, belching. Try it! ‘Wonder what upset your stomach— which portion of the food did the damage—do you? Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in a revolt; it sick, gassy and upset and what you just ate has fermented and turned sour; head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated—just take a little Pape’s Diapepsin to help neu- tralize acidity and in five minutes you wonder what became .of the indiges- tion and distress. 4 Millions of men and women today Eng it is needless to have dys- pepsia. A little Diapepsin éccasiondl- ly keeps the stomach sweetened an they eat thelr favorite foods withous ' | fear. 4 If your stomach doesn’t take ca of your liberal limit without rebel. lion; if your food is a damage instea of a help, remember the quickest} surest, most Barmless’reélief is Pape’ Diapepsin, which costs only fifty cen for a large case at drug stores. ft’ truly wonderful—it stops: .ferment: tion and agidity and - sets : :llubt. &0 H

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