New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 30, 1917, Page 4

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KNOCKERS NEW BRITAIN DAILY NOW BOOSTERS REVEI.ATIONS OF A WIFE|[ { All Loud in Praise of “Neutrone Pre- scription. 99” They all say “it does beat the Dutch” how quick “Neutrone Pre- ieription 99" got rid of that Rheuma- . It's almost magic. ‘“Neutrone ription 99° gets all forms of eumatism every time as sure as sun rise The first few doses esults, Those horrible Rheu< 5 pains stop, those poor inflamed g0 down, and oh! what a sed relief. Ever try anything like ?, Well, ‘it's true. There’s no flery, vile. smelling liniments, & good clean internal remedy ‘purifies the blood, drives all im- ties out of the system—makes you ke new, like doing things. Don’t .ny, ®wet a bottle today and your ubles are over. 50c and $1.00. Seltzser Drug Company and leading “UNITED STATES AWAKE” Feature Film | Many other attractions Today and Tomorrow ¢ e ——————————— FRIDAY and SATURDAY Pathe Feature ' “Her Beloved Enemy” EENEYS’ All Week Chariie Chapiin tn “THE CURE"” Mon., Tues. and Wed. Jack Pickford in “GREAT EXPECTA- TIONS’ m:-.,mh.,.uq,. Myrte Stedman in’" "nmmmwmsot By ADELE at Last.” “The parting of the ways!” I gasped, “Harry and you?” Lillian Underwood nodded .as calm- ly as if she had simply Bnnounced a decision to alter a gown or a har, instead of referring to a separation husband. it will have to come to that, I am afraid,” she said, and looking more closely at her I saw that her calm- -ness. was only assumed, that humilia- tion and sadness had her in their grip. “I ‘have always feared that when the time came for me to be ‘my honest self” instead of a ‘made-up daisy’— she smiled wearily as she quoted the childish rhyme—*Harry would not be big.enough to take it well. Of course I could and would stand all his un- pleasantness concerning my altered appearance, but the root of his actions goes deeper than that, I am afraid. He diglikes ¢hildren ,and I fear that he will object to my having my little girl with me. And if he does—" Her tone spelled finality but I had no time to bestow upon the probable fate of Harry Underwood. With a "Ind little cry, I drew Lillian down to y bedside and kissed her. "'Ol\' Lillian!” I exclaimed, “are you really going to have your baby girl after all?” i She nodded, and I held her close with a little prayver of thanksgiving that fate had finally relented and had given to this woman the desire of her heart, so long kept from her. I saw now, and wondered why I had not realized before the reason for Lillian’s sudden abandonment of the Touge and powder and dyed hair which she had used so long. Once she had said to me, “When my baby comes home, 'she shall have a mother with a clean face and pepper-and-salt hair, but until that time, I shall play the game with Harry.” And so for Harry's sake, for the man who was not worthy to tie her shoes, she had continued ta crucify her real instincts in an effort to hide the worst feminine crime in her hus- band’s calendar—advancing age. “When will she come to you?’ I asked, and then with a sudden re- membrance of the only conditions under which Lillian’s little daughter could be restored to her, I added: “Then her father is irg “Not dead, but dying,” Lillian re- turned gravely, “but ah, my dear, he sent for me two weeks ago and ac- knowledged the terrible wrong he did me. Iam vindicated at last, Madge— at last. Why Lillian Said “I Am Vindicated froi Mine, AlL Her volce: her, cheek tand, I'felt the have kept back all through theexeitement of my accident. How Mke her to put by her ‘| oWn greatest experiences as of no con- - Snapdragons n’nn you .seen the sllw ' Pink, Snapdradoms from the i Viets Greenhouses, There is nothing more beautiful to send ~to a friend, and they last so < domg. Tel. 1973, VEETS HARTFORD “Tel. Ch. 1026 2:15, 8:15 Daily THIS WEEK! “SIGHT-SEERS” ‘Wit J; Xennedy and Jack ‘Miller .and a company of co- stars. A Blutch Cooper show with a ‘wonderful chorus! ‘Pajly Mat. (women) except CONSTRUCTIVE - ADVERTISING us for ORIGINAL IDXAS yoar PRODUCT. A postal have our salesman explain The A. PINDAR CORP. ' 836 Arylum St, Hartfora, Zhone Ch. 1141-2 sequence When Welghed against an- other’s trouble! ‘My thoughts wént back to the time "when Lilllan, to save me from suffer- ing because of my mispnderstanding of her friendship with Dicky, had told me of the terrible ordeal to which ‘Will Morton, her first husband, had subjected her, His own escapades a y-word, he had cunningly plotted to make her perfectly innocent friend- ship with Dicky appear a disgraceful thing. He had sued her for divarce, and then with diabolical cunning had bargained with her, he to take their only child, the baby girl Lillian ddolized, in return for keeping Dicky's name out of the suit. Lilllan’s high | sense of honor would not allow her to sacrifice Dicky, then a mere boy, and she agreed ta give up the child. I kissed her happily. “Do you feel that you can tell me about it?” I asked, “You and Dicky are the two people MmER’q ; ‘,, /4 | i ! BesT Cocoa Is the prize that willre- | | Gordon at merrily. 2| GARRISON I want most to know,” she returned. “Will confessed everything to me, and better still, to his mother. I would have been glad to have spared the poor ‘old woman, for she idolizes her son, but you remember I told you that although she loved me, he had made her believe the vile things he said of me. It was necessary that she should know the truth, if after Will's death I was to have any peace in my child’s companionship. “Marion loves her grandmother dearly, and the old woman fairly idolizes the child, although her feeble- ness has compelled her to leave most of the care of the child to hired nurses. There is where I am going to ha\e my chance with my little girl. I ! never shall separate her from her grandmother while the old woman lives, but from the moment she comes to me, no hireling’s hand shall cai for her—she shall be mine, all mine! Her voice was a paean of trium- phant love, "My heart thrilled in sym- pathy with hers, but underneath it all I was conscious of a strong desire to have Harry Underwood reconciled to this new plan of Lillian’s, The calm- ness with which she had spoken of their parting had not deceived me. I knew that Lillian's pride, already dragged in the dust by her first un- happy marital experience, would suffer greatly if she had to acknow- ledge that her second venture had also failed. I tried to think of some manner in which I could remedy mat- ters. Unconsciously Lillian played di- rectly into my hands. Two Gallant Cavaliers. *“But here I am bothering you with all of my troubles,” she said, “when all the time gallant cavaliers walt without, anxious to pay their devoir: Her voice was as gay, as uncon- cerned, as if she had not just been sounding the depths of terrible mem- | ories. I paid a silent tribute to her powers of self-discipline before an- swering curiously. “Gallant cavaliers?” I repeated. “Two of them,” she returned, deftly arranging my hair so that it would hide the scar upon my cheek and neck, which we had been assured would after awhile disappear alto- gether, and slipping my prettiest matinee over my shoulders. ‘There” —she stood off and surveyed me—*“L think you are a sufficiently interest- ing invalid to be allowed ta receive visitors.” . “But tell me who thev “are,” I per- sisted. “Well, Harry is at the door, and Mr, the gate,” she returned “In other words, Harry downstairs, waiting patiently for me to. ®ive him permission to « see you, while Mr. Gordon took up quarters at a country inn riear here the day after your accident, and has called or telephoned almost hourly since. He begged me this morning to let him know when you would be able to see him. If Harry's call does not tire you, I think I would better him to come over.” “Lillian!"” 1 spoke imperatively, as a sudden recollection flashed throuzh my mind. “Was I delirious, or did 1 hear Mr. Gordon exclaim something very foolish the night of my acci- dent?” She looked at me searchingly. “He said, ‘My darling, have I found vou only to lose you again!” answered. “What did he mean?" I gasped. “That he must tell you himself, Madge,” she said gravely. “For me to guess his meaning would be futile. Shall I telephone him to come over, and will you see Harry for a moment or two now?” “Yes! to both questions,” swered. I an- Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Sugar and Cream Frizzled Beef Bread and Butter Coftee Cereal Honey Lunch Baked Potatoes Chocolate Cake Tea Dinner Breaded Chops Scalloped Tomatoes Potato Boulettes Lemon Pie Coftee Peas Chocolate Cake—Cream half cupful butter, add gradually one and a half cupful sugar, then beat the yolks of four eggs, add two cupfuls of 'flour, three teaspoonfuls baking powder, a quarter teaspoonful salt, one teaspoon- ful vanilla, a quarter pound grated chocolate mixed with five tablespoon- fuls boiling water, a half cupful milk. Mix well and fold in the beaten whites of the eggs. Pour into a buttered and floured cake tin and bake in a moder- ate oven for forty-flve minutes. ward your searchforthe ideal table beverage. ! It is a rare blend of four dif- : fetent kinds of superior, sun- ripened Cocoa beans. Purity—Flavor—Economy Order from YOUR Grocer W. H. Miner Chocolate Co. { then set aside to cool. Potato Boulettes—To a pint of hot mashed potato whip in one large tablespoonful butter, the beaten ' yolks of two eggs, a dash of cayenne, salt to taste, a few drops of onion | Juice, and one tablespoonful chopped parsley. Stir all over the fire until the mixture leaves the sides of the pan Form them into medium-sized balls, dip each into slightly beaten egg, roll in fine crumbs and fry golden brown in smoking hot fat. A good coat for a girl has a straight plain back with full skirt joined on at the waist and concealed by a belt. is | ’phone she | HERAI:D. MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1917. SIDE TALKS BY RUTH CAMERON Deferred Enjoyment All life is full of conflicts. We want to be good and we want to be bad at the same moment. We want our way and we want to' be unselfish. We want to be cultured and educated, yet we aren't willing to make the re- quisite effort. We would not play false and yet would wrongly win. We want to spend our money and we want to save it. And in the case of the average human being, I don't believe there is any conflict that rages more con- stantly or more flercely than that last- Miserliness is know. A Sin We Might Well Try. to Commit. Most of us cohd try our hardest to sin -in that direction with advantage. There are always so many easily justifiable ways of spending money. Good looking, becoming clothes are a justifiable expenditure,—*personal publicity,” you know. Only the rich can afford to be shabby. And an attractive home,—what's the use of living if you can’t have your surroundings reasonably attrac- tive? And then there are books and mag- azines and theaters and good music, —these, too, are duties we owe our- selves. Of Course We Must Have Vacations. And we must have vacations or we can’t work -efficiently. And so it goes. We want to bave, but we want so | A SUMMER SPIRIT FOR DRESSY ONES the rarest sin I PEEK-A-BOO! Lace brim and top of wide white satin ‘ribbon, a huge bow atop folds for a band, such is this dashing hat. The jade green silk parasol has one sector picked out with a conventional triangle in gay beads, They are using tatting on the edges of children’s collars and cuffs, the tat- ting often of a contrasting color. SICK WOMAN HAD CRYING SPELLS Restored to Health by Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Enhaut, Pa.—“I wasall run do d weak inwardly. I had female fib‘lnfl and nervous feell; ] spells and f”lcrying I was not safe. If many other things, and usually want them more keenly. To be sure, there is a great satis- faction .in the act of putting money into the bank, in going proudly, to the receiving teller’s window and in seeing him write down the figures in your book. But alas, to most of us it is only a calm, placid enjoy- ment. It bears about the same relation- ship to the exhilaration of going out and spending money that calm strong, splendidly worthwhile friendship does to passionate love. Regularity Is the Backbone of Saving There is one thing sure on this subject—if you are going to try to Save money, don’t do it spasmodical- lv: Regularity is the backbone of saving. And some kind of compul- sion is a great thing to stiffen up that backbone. Buy a house and make monthly payments on it. Take out Co-operative or -insurance,—anything that has to be paid at a certain time and hence can put in a previous claim before the many things thg one ‘owes it to oneself’ to buy. Or save a certain proportion _of each raise. You lived on your salary before you got the raise. You can surely live on your salary plus half the raise. “Deferred enjoyment’ is what Political economists call saving. member that, when the way hard and thorny- T Comionenn NEW $10,000 ORGAN NOW IN ORCHESTRA the Re- seems Keeney's new $10,000 organ, work on the installation of which has been in progress for several days will be played tonight for the first time, ac- cording to the announcement made today by the . management. Prof. Pollack of New York, will give a recital on the instrument during the showing of the’ feature flm. The orchestra will continue to furnish music for the vaudeville performers and will also play during the film program, the organ being an added instrument. The big feature this week is to be Charlie Chaplin in his greatest com- edy success, “The Cure.” Another big attraction to be offered the first half of the week is “Great Expecta- tions,” picturized from Charles Dick- ens’ novel of the same name. Jack Pickford will be seen in the leading role. “The Purple Mask’ is also a part of the Monday and Tuesday pro- gram. Wednesday and Thursday there will be a new chapter in “The Double Cross,” and on Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday, Mpyrtle Stedman will be seen in “The Happiness of Three Women.” There wiil be the usual vaudeville in addition. SEE “SIGHT SEERS” AT GRAND THEATER ‘Will J.- Kennedy, one of the trio of stars in “Sightseers,” this week’s at- traction at the Grand theater, claims the distinction of never springing a “Ford Joke” on the stage. “The Sightseers” ig a burlesque act that has made a hit in every city on the Columbia circuit. It comes to Hart- ford with fresh laurels won in Bos- ton, Cleveland, Providence and even New York. The show is here for a week, with daily matinees. There is a good looking chorus. This is next to the last show of the season at the Grand, there being but one more week of the present very successful seasin. “UNCLE SAM AWAKE” AT RUSSWIN LYCEUM “Uncle Sam Awake™ will be the leading photoplay, scheduled for to- day and tomorrow, at the Lyceum, to- gether with many other side attrac- tions on the screen. On Friday will be presented the Pathe stirring pic- ture “Her Beloved Enemy”” and sched- uled for an early production; Geral- dine Farrar in “Joan the Woman.” This film has had a wide presentation and due notice will be given for its appearance at the Lyceum. Household Notes The tresher all food is when it is eaten the better. The chief food value of the potato is its iron and potassium. Little bits of tomato a,dd a delicious flavor to the omelet. A really good wringer should have a place in every laundry. Sponges are great germ collectors and should be scalded frequently. PAY A DOLLAR A WEEK ITS TIME TO CHANGE ‘Winter-weight Clothes are becom: ing ‘'heavy and Come in and secure lighter Suit: and have them —big stock to cpoose from—on fair price to all d NO “‘extr: , charges of any description. MEN’S SUITS Suits at ......... Suits at ...... uncomfortable. S - “CHARGED"— e a $14.00 . Suits at ...........$16.00 And up to $32.00. * HATS SHOES FURNISHINGS Simply Say, “CHARGE IT” THE AMATEUR GARDENER HERALD’S DAILY ADVICE FROM WASHINGTON FOR THOSE PLANTING HOME GARDENS. No other vegetable has increased in { popularity in the past few years as : much as the cabbage, says today’s gar- ‘dpn lesson from the National Emer- | gency Food Garden Commission of ‘Washington, which = is . co-operating with the Herald tQ hring about the heavy planting of ma gardens in New Britain this ‘ Formerly its prlnoipal use was by the German population in the United States. Today it is universally eaten. It is plentiful in the late fall, winter and spring months, when other green vegetables are scarce. Properly cooked cabbage is delicate and digestable. Overcooking of cab- bage makes it indigestable. Young cabbage should never be cooked long- er than thirty minutes, and winter cabbage not over forty-five minutes. Cabbage is a heavy garden feeder and quick gtower. For that reaspn it should have rich soll if possible, and if the planting is done early enough in the spring it is possible to get two crops from the same land. Cabbage does well in heavy soil— particularly late cabbage—and for that reason is likely to thrive on a back yard garden. It is too late now for the early drop unless you can buy seedling plants, but just the right time to be planning for the late crop. Cabbage plants are improved by transplanting. For 'late cabbages, therefore, the seeds should be plant- ed in a small outdoor bed in May. Plant the seeds in rows about three inches apart. A quarter of an ounce of seed will produce enough plants to make 100 feet of row. When the seedlings come up they may need thinning out the excess plants being transplanted in the seed bed if desired. Tn July transplant these seedlings to the gnrden, placing the planu eight- ANAEMIG PEOPLE Need More Iron in the Blood. If you are anaemic, you need more iron in your blood, and the tell-tale symptoms are a pale face,—color- less lips, ashen finger nails, poor eirculation, and short breath, and more serious diseases are easily con- tracted when in this condition. Mr. W. H. Hodges, of Kansas City, Mo., says:—*I suffered from the ef- fects of bad blcod, was " run-down, dizzy, had headaches and did not feel like working. I had tried Beef Iron and Wine without any help. After taking Vinol four days I no- ticed an improvement and its con- tinued use built up my blood and my bad feelings disappeared like magic.” The bad effects of poor, devitalized blood cannot be overestimated, and it is the beef and cod liver peptones, iron and manganesé peptonates and glycerophosphates contained in Vinol that enriches the blood, improves the circulation and in this natural man- ner builds up health and “strength. Try it on our guarantee. The Clark & Brainerd Co., gists; Liggett's, Riker-Hegeman drug store; John J. McBriarty; Nathan Noveds; W. H. Russell, New Britain, Also at the leading drug store in all Connecticut towns. drug- Chocolate cake is one bf the few cakes which may be made without eggs. een inchek | in rows three feet apart or htly less. The. same method of transplanting should be fol- lowed now with the early seedlings’ which you have bought or grown in in- door seed boxes. ete,, doesn’t it make feel, the’ treatment I m’:;y on for HY skin-trouble?” W'hm Rulnol Ointment touches itch- g g Y Sl ickly, leat & ¢l J"fi" huuhy.’ "%'y = NEW BRITAIN MOTHERS PLEASED AND HAPPY No More Fear of Baby Colic. ' The crusade against baby colic and food trouble in this section has had a happy result. The astonishing achievements of Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup which has been so widely recommended } seems beyond belief to the many thankful and pleased mothers, for practically every baby has been cured or benefitted by its use. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup is the long looked for blessing that has sprung Into instant popularity with almost every' mother, actual results verify this. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup is different from anything else in that it aims to get rid of baby colic and in- digestion by neutralizing the aolds, overcoming gas and strengthening the weak, sensitive little stomachs, and mind you it does all this without a particle of ‘dope” or a drop of al- cohol. Good, honorable druggists recom’ mend Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup to all mothers with bables that have colic, indigestion, poor assimilation of food, constipation or teething troubles. Mothers do not fail to test this now famous prescription. Go to your druggist and get a twenty-five cent bottle today and make baby well and happy. For sale in New Britain by Seltzer's Prescription Pharmacy. : =

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